North Korea to put American journalists on trial
SEOUL 鈥 North Korea said Friday investigators have all the evidence needed to try two American journalists 鈥渙n the basis of the confirmed crimes committed by them.鈥
That word came via Pyongyang鈥檚 Korean Central News Agency more than five weeks after North Korean soldiers grabbed Laura Ling and Euna Lee of Current TV network as they filmed along the North鈥檚 Tumen River border with China. The agency said a 鈥渃ompetent organ,鈥 meaning probably the pervasive North Korean security network, had 鈥渃oncluded the investigation鈥 and had the documents to bring them to trial.
The inference was that the two had acknowledged 鈥渉ostile acts,鈥 as claimed by North Korea after they were picked up and removed to a 鈥渟tate guest house鈥 near Pyongyang.
North Korean authorities are presumed to be considering espionage charges against Ms. Ling and Ms. Lee as the North begins to make good on its vow to restart its nuclear-weapons program. The journalists were reporting on defectors鈥 tales of human rights abuses 鈥 a taboo topic as far as North Korean officials are concerned.
Eager for recognition as the world鈥檚 ninth nuclear power, North Korea is believed to see the arrests as a powerful tool in eventual negotiations with the US.
In response to condemnation by the UN Security Council on April 14 of its test of a long-range missile on April 5, North Korea said it would 鈥渘ever鈥 return to six-nation talks on its nuclear weapons. Still, analysts believe the North may well be open to dialogue with the US alone.
As Yang Moo -jin, professor at the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul, told South Korea鈥檚 Yonhap News, North Korea 鈥渃an decide whether to grant them political pardon depending on the developments in its relations with the US."
North Korea announced what amounted to the indictment of Ling and Lee while Russia鈥檚 foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, was wrapping up two days of talks with North Korean leaders in Pyongyang before flying to Seoul. Mr. Lavrov was reported to have urged North Korea to return to six-nation talks, but the Korean Central News Agency said only that he 鈥減aid attention鈥 to the North鈥檚 view of 鈥渘o need鈥 for such talks.
Lavrov reported on his conversations in Pyongyang when he called Friday evening on South Korea鈥檚 foreign minister, Yu Myung-hwan . He will visit South Korean President Lee Myung Bak on Saturday.