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News / Northwest

Kin plead for man held in N. Korea

Lynwood family says detention imperils his health

The Columbian
Published: August 7, 2013, 5:00pm
2 Photos
Terri Chung talks about her brother, Kenneth Bae, Wednesday in Lynnwood.
Terri Chung talks about her brother, Kenneth Bae, Wednesday in Lynnwood. Bae, an American tour operator and Christian missionary, is being detained in North Korea. Photo Gallery

LYNNWOOD — The family of an American tour operator and Christian missionary who has been detained in North Korea for the past nine months is renewing calls for his release as concerns about his health mount.

Kenneth Bae was arrested in November, when he was accused of “hostile acts” against the government, and has been sentenced to 15 years of hard labor — farming beans, potatoes and other vegetables.

His recent letters home have portrayed troubling health conditions, including blurred vision that could be associated with his diabetes, his sister, Terri Chung, said Wednesday during an interview at her mother’s home in the north Seattle suburb of Lynnwood.

“He doesn’t know how much longer his body can stand the physical labor,” Chung said. “Eight hours a day, six days a week in the fields — it’s not the kind of thing the average American is used to.”

Bae, a 45-year-old father of three, was born in South Korea and immigrated to the U.S. with his parents and sister in 1985. For the past seven years he has been living in China, and a couple of years ago began leading small tour groups, mostly of American and Canadian citizens, into a “special economic zone” designed to encourage commerce in the northeastern region of Roson in North Korea, Chung said.

Chung said the family has few details about why her brother was imprisoned. She said she is familiar with a video of him taken several years ago, in which he advocates bringing Americans to North Korea for a mass prayer session to bring about the reunification of North and South Korea.

“His personal convictions and his beliefs as a Christian may have been deemed as, I don’t know, perhaps hostile acts, but all I know is that he only had the best of intentions to help the people,” Chung said. “Maybe he was a little bit overzealous, I’m not sure.”

The family has largely remained quiet as State Department officials and others have called for Bae’s release because they were concerned about fouling back-channel efforts to free him, she said.

But with the North Koreans allowing the release of an interview with Bae in his cell last month and with Bae himself urging them in his letters to take a more prominent role, “it seemed like this was the time to speak up.”

Chung and her mother, Myunghee Bae, scheduled a prayer vigil Saturday at a Seattle church and have granted a series of news interviews. They said that in addition to his diabetes, Bae has an enlarged heart and a bad back, and in the video released last month he appeared to have lost 30 to 40 pounds since his imprisonment.

Bae is at least the sixth American detained in North Korea since 2009. The others were eventually allowed to leave without serving out their terms, some after clemency missions by prominent Americans, including former presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter.

North Korea’s young leader, Kim Jong Un, has the power to grant special pardons under the constitution.

There is no sign yet that a high-profile American envoy is set to travel to North Korea, Chung said.

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