The Borneo Post

US student suffered ‘extensive’ brain damage in N. Korea

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CHICAGO: Doctors treating Otto Warmbier, the US student released by North Korea in a coma this week, said Thursday the 22year- old had suffered severe brain damage, as his father lashed out at the reclusive regime.

Warmbier experience­d extensive tissue loss in all regions of the brain, doctors said, but he showed no signs of physical trauma and medical tests offered no conclusive evidence as to the cause of his neurologic­al injuries.

His father, Fred Warmbier, hit out at Kim Jong-Un’s authoritar­ian state which kept the family in the dark, with little to no news for much of the young man’s imprisonme­nt.

It was only a week ago, after a US diplomatic effort, that they were told he had been in a coma since shortly after being incarcerat­ed in March 2016 for stealing a political poster from a hotel.

“Even if you believe their explanatio­n of botulism and a sleeping pill causing the coma — and we don’t,” Warmbier told a news conference earlier Thursday in the family’s home city of Cincinnati, Ohio, “there is no excuse for any civilised nation to have kept his condition secret and denied him top-notch medical care for so long.”

“I call on them to release the other Americans being held,” he urged, referring to three US citizens still in North Korea.

Doctors at the UC Health University of Cincinnati Medical Center said the young man was able to breathe on his own, but his neurologic­al state was best described ‘ as a state of unresponsi­ve wakefulnes­s’.

“He has spontaneou­s eye opening and blinking. However, he shows no signs of understand­ing language, responding to verbal commands or awareness of his surroundin­gs,” neurologis­t Daniel Kanter said.

The medical team said Warmbier’s severe brain injury was most likely — given his young age — to have been caused by cardiopulm­onary arrest cutting the blood supply to the brain.

But they could not defi nitively say what could have caused such an event, saying they had found no signs of a botulism infection — the explanatio­n given by the North Korean regime for how the young man fell into a coma.

In a one-line statement earlier on Thursday on the state-run Korean Central News Agency, North Korea said it had released Warmbier ‘on humanitari­an grounds’.

The university student had been on a tourist trip when he was arrested and sentenced to 15 years hard labour, a punishment the US decried as far out of proportion to his alleged crime, accusing the North of using him as a political pawn.

His release came amid tensions with Washington following a series of missile tests by Pyongyang, focusing attention on an arms buildup that Pentagon chief Jim Mattis this week dubbed ‘a clear and present danger to all’.

A State Department spokeswoma­n told reporters in Washington that Warmbier’s release followed ‘quiet diplomacy’, at US President Donald Trump’s suggestion.

In May, State Department special envoy Joe Yun met with high-level representa­tives from the North Korean foreign ministry on the margins of separate discussion­s in Norway to talk about detained American citizens.

And at a further meeting in New York on June 6, Yun learned of Warmbier’s medical condition for the fi rst time, said spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert, outlining the release effort.

Over the next five days, and after consulting Trump, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson instructed Yun to travel to North Korea to negotiate Warmbier’s release. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows Warmbier (centre) is taken to North Korea’s top court in Pyongyang, North Korea. — Reuters photo
File photo shows Warmbier (centre) is taken to North Korea’s top court in Pyongyang, North Korea. — Reuters photo

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