Death of U.S. student held by North Korea
shocks fellow ex-detainees
Send a link to a friend
[June 21, 2017]
By Jon Herskovitz
(Reuters) - The death this week of an
American university student held prisoner for 17 months by North Korea
left Ohio municipal worker Jeffrey Fowle shaken.
Fowle, 59, is one of 16 Americans who have been imprisoned by the
reclusive state over the last two decades, including three who remain
detained. Like student Otto Warmbier, he visited North Korea with a tour
group and was taken into custody at the airport when trying to leave.
But Fowle was released in relatively good physical health after a
six-month detention. Warmbier, 22, died at a Cincinnati hospital on
Monday, just days after he was released from captivity in a coma. The
family declined an autopsy.
"Otto Warmbier’s death was a sudden tragedy for all of America," Fowle
said in a telephone interview on Tuesday. "It doesn’t take much to get
in trouble in North Korea."
Both men committed infractions that would be considered minor in most
parts of the world. Fowle left a Bible behind in a nightclub in the
coastal city in Chongjin. Warmbier was convicted for trying to steal a
banner linked to former North Korean leader Kim Jong Il from a Pyongyang
hotel used by foreign tourists.
However, in the eyes of North Korea, where Kim Jong Il is revered as a
demigod and proselytizing is seen as an assault on the state, the two
had committed heinous crimes.
Fowle spent nearly a month of his detention in a hotel for foreigners
and then was moved to a guest house in another part of Pyongyang. Like
others held under varying terms of detention, from cramped, windowless
shacks offering little protection from the country's bitter cold to
hotel rooms, Fowle recalled the sense of isolation he felt.
"The emotional strain was high, especially during the early part of my
detention when I was coached on how to formulate my admission of guilt,"
Fowle said, adding, "I was never physically abused."
[to top of second column] |
Kenneth Bae speaks upon returning from North Korea during a news
conference at U.S. Air Force Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Fort Lewis,
Washington, United States on November 8, 2014. REUTERS/David
Ryder/File Photo
The longest-serving of the American prisoners, Christian missionary
Kenneth Bae, has said he had to shovel coal, haul rocks and had
about 30 guards keeping watch over him as their sole prisoner during
his two years in captivity beginning in 2012.
"Although we don’t know everything about life in North Korea, this
much is sure: innocent people like Otto are suffering," Bae said in
a statement after Warmbier's death.
The news of Warmbier’s death reminded George Hunziker, 59, of his
younger brother Evan’s imprisonment in North Korea after being
charged with spying in 1996. Evan Hunziker, then 26, was held for
three months and committed suicide about a month after his return to
the United States.
George Hunziker said his brother was young like Warmbier and did not
realize the seriousness of his actions. He swam from China across
the border with North Korea and was arrested. He was later charged
with spying.
“You're in America and you think you can do stuff and there's no
consequences, but in North Korea you don't have those same
privileges,” he said. “I wish somebody could do something about
those crazy people over there.”
For a graphic on Americans detained by North Korea click
http://tmsnrt.rs/2pmE3ks
(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz in Austin, Texas and Gina Cherelus in
New York; Editing by Lisa Shumaker; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and
Lisa Shumaker)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |