The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US Army deserter who spent decades in N. Korea dies at 77

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TOKYO: Charles Jenkins, a US Army deserter who spent four decades in communist North Korea and married a Japanese woman abducted by Pyongyang, has died at the age of 77, officials said yesterday.

According to the Asahi Shimbun daily, his daughter found him collapsed outside their house on Monday and called the emergency services.

He later died of heart problems at a hospital in the northern city of Sado, according to the local government.

He deserted during a drunken night in 1965, crossing the heavily fortified border into North Korea from the South.

He said later he was scared of being sent to Vietnam and thought North Korea would send him home.

Instead, he spent 39 years in Pyongyang, where he taught English to spy cadets in his North Carolina drawl and played a Yankee villain in propaganda films.

In 1980, he married Hitomi Soga, who was kidnapped by North Korean agents in the Cold-War era.

She was allowed to leave North Korea for Japan in 2002 and Jenkins followed her two years later with their two Korean-born daughters.

The Japanese government granted him permanent residency and he lived in Soga’s hometown on Sado, a picturesqu­e island in the Sea of Japan.

Soga said in a statement released by the city government VIENNA: An explosion rocked one of Europe’s biggest gas pipeline hubs in Austria yesterday, leaving one person dead and 18 injured, emergency services said.

The incident happened at Baumgarten east of Vienna, Austria’s largest reception point and the main distributi­on hub for gas imports from Russia, Norway and elsewhere.

“An explosion occurred at 8.45am (0745 GMT), followed by a fire,” police spokesman Edmund Tragschitz told AFP, adding that the cause was not immediatel­y clear.

“Things are under control,” he said.

He later put the number of people hurt, including one seriously as well as those with minor injuries, at around 60. — AFP yesterday she was ‘very surprised’ by his death and ‘cannot think of anything’.

Sado mayor Motohiro Miura expressed condolence­s in a statement, saying that Jenkins ‘worked at a souvenir shop and contribute­d to local tourism’.

After heading to Japan, Jenkins was court-martialled by the US military for deserting but given only a 30-day confinemen­t.

North Korean agents kidnapped Soga and a number of other ordinary Japanese citizens in the 1970s and 1980s in order to train its spies in the Japanese language and culture.

In 2002, North Korea admitted kidnapping 13 Japanese civilians but the government in Tokyo believes at least 17 were taken.

A month later, five including Soga were allowed to return to Japan. Pyongyang insists the other eight are dead but has not produced cast-iron evidence.

The issue sours already strained Japan-North Korea relations and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe often wears a blue ribbon to remind him of their abduction.

Last month, during a trip to Tokyo,USPresiden­tDonaldTru­mp met Soga and the now elderly families of those abducted.

There are strong suspicions in Japan that dozens of other citizens were also snatched by the North.

James Joseph Dresnok, the only US soldier known still to have been living in North Korea after defecting more than five decades ago, died in November 2016, his sons confirmed in August. — AFP

Explosion at major Austrian gas hub, one dead

 ??  ?? Jenkins waves upon arriving at a Jakarta hotel from North Korea in file photo. — Reuters photo
Jenkins waves upon arriving at a Jakarta hotel from North Korea in file photo. — Reuters photo

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