Arab News

Death of American detained in N. Korea baffles experts

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SEOUL: North Korea’s missile and nuclear tests, its carefully scripted propaganda bluster, even its military threats: Far from the scattersho­t workings of a madman, most of this fits the playbook of a small, proud country well used to stoking tensions to get concession­s it would otherwise not receive from surroundin­g big powers.

What happened to Otto Warmbier, an American college student who died just days after North Korea released him from detention in a coma, is far more difficult to make sense of.

It jars so strikingly with the fates of most past detained Americans that outside observers are left struggling not only with the mystery of what killed Warmbier but also with what his death means for attempts by Washington and its allies to stop North Korea’s pursuit of a nuclear-tipped ICBM that can target the US mainland.

“The treatment of Otto Warmbier is beyond the pale of North Korea’s usual standards,” said John Delury, an Asia expert at Seoul’s Yonsei University. “It’s worth a forceful response. The US government should not just throw up its hands and say, ‘This is just how North Korea is.’ But how do you do that in a smart way where there is some modicum of accountabi­lity?”

What follows is a closer examinatio­n of one of the more perplexing and heartrendi­ng developmen­ts in North Korea’s long, antagonist­ic standoff with its neighbors and Washington.

It may never be known, but there are some clues — as well as widespread speculatio­n.

The University of Virginia student was medically evacuated from North Korea last week, more than a year after a court sentenced him to 15 years in prison with hard labor for allegedly trying to steal a propaganda banner.

North Korean diplomats at the UN had urgently requested a face-to-face meeting with US officials in New York. During the June 6 meeting, Washington learned of Warmbier’s condition.

His family said it was told he fell into a coma soon after his March 2016 sentencing after contractin­g botulism and taking a sleeping pill. Doctors in Cincinnati said they found no active sign of botulism or evidence of beatings. They say he had severe brain damage but they don’t know what caused it.

Some observers believe that North Korea became worried because Warmbier’s condition suddenly worsened.

“North Korea sent him back to the US before he died because more questions would have been raised about his death and the situation would have gotten worse if it had returned his dead body,” said Cheong Seong-jang, an analyst at the private Sejong Institute in South Korea.

Others believe it is unlikely that North Korea intentiona­lly harmed Warmbier because he was valuable as a political pawn. Poor hygienic conditions, diet or bad medical care may have been responsibl­e for a coma that North Korean doctors couldn’t handle.

Or maybe North Korea concealed his medical condition for so long in the hopes that he would recover.

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