North
Korea releases video of missionary from South accused of spying
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[February 27, 2014]
SEOUL (Reuters) - A South Korean
missionary held in North Korea said he had committed crimes against the
state in a bid to establish an underground church, according to video
footage provided by the North's state news agency on Thursday.
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The South Korean missionary, identified by the North as Kim Jong
Uk, 50, spoke at what appeared to be a stage-managed news conference
from beneath portraits of North Korea's former leaders Kim Jong Il
and Kim Il Sung.
His sudden appearance was a surprise after signs of warming ties
between the two Koreas evidenced by the reunions of families split
by the 1950-53 war between the two sides and Seoul's humanitarian
offer to support vaccines against foot-and-mouth disease for the
North.
"Since I first arrived in Dandong, China, in August 2007, I had
thought a lot about sneaking into Pyongyang," Kim said in the video.
Kim, wearing a dark suit and blue tie, said he had first met North
Koreans while working as a missionary in China.
"I told them we should build God's nation and break down the North's
regime and political system. I gave them an anti-Republic education
and orders to go back and build an underground church," Kim said.
North Korea says Kim is a South Korean spy who was secretly trying
to overthrow the state.
Pyongyang said in November it had arrested a South Korean spy and
was investigating him on charges of espionage, a rare report of a
secret agent being captured by either neighbor.
After the broadcast, the South Korean government urged Pyongyang to
free Kim.
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"It is hard to understand that (North Korea) calls our national, who
is doing purely religious activities, an anti-state criminal," Kim
Eui-do, a spokesman of the South's Unification Ministry that handles
inter-Korea affairs, told a news briefing.
North Korea espouses freedom of religion but ranks as one of the
world's most oppressive regimes in that regard. The United Nations
this month cited a lack of religious freedom in a state whose human
rights abuses it likened to those of Nazi Germany.
North Korea has held Korean-American missionary Kenneth Bae for more
than a year and convicted him of trying to overthrow the state. A
North Korean court sentenced Bae to 15 years' hard labor and efforts
by Washington to secure his release have been thwarted.
Australian missionary John Short was detained this month by North
Korean authorities in Pyongyang for carrying religious materials,
his family said.
(Reporting by Ju-min Park and James Pearson; Editing by Paul Tait
and Clarence Fernandez)
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