Freed student dies at 22
Family: North Korea made ‘no other outcome’ possible
Otto Warmbier, the American student imprisoned by North Korea for 17 months and freed last week in a coma, died Monday afternoon, according to a statement by his family.
The 22-year-old University of Virginia student died “surrounded by his loving family,” said the statement, which was signed by Warmbier’s parents, Fred and Cindy Warmbier, and released by the University of Cincinnati Medical Center, where Warmbier was receiving treatment.
North Korean authorities detained Warmbier in March 2016 as he visited the isolated, authoritarian state as a tourist. Soon afterward, the country’s high court accused him of attempting to steal a propaganda poster from his Pyongyang hotel, and sentenced him to 15 years of hard labor for crimes against the state.
Fred and Cindy Warmbier received no information about their son’s condition while he was in detention. Last Wednesday, he was medically evacuated to the U.S.; on Thursday, North Korea said that it released him “on humanitarian grounds.” Doctors in Cincinnati declared that he had extensive loss of brain tissue and was in a state of “unresponsive wakefulness.”
“Unfortunately, the awful torturous mistreatment our son received at the hands of the North Koreans ensured that no other outcome was possible beyond the sad one we experienced today,” said the Warmbiers’ statement.
“Although we would never hear his voice again, within a day the countenance of his face changed — he was at peace,” it continued. “He was home and we believe he could sense that.”
Pyongyang said Warmbier fell into a coma after he contracted botulism and took a sleeping pill soon after his sentencing. Yet U.S. doctors have cast doubt on the expla
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nation, and Warmbier’s parents lashed out at the isolated state.
“There’s no meaning here,” Fred Warmbier told Fox News last week. “This is a rogue, pariah regime. They’re terrorists. They’re brutal. There’s no sense to anything here.”
The reasons for Warmbier’s detention, the cause of his coma and the circumstances of his release remain unclear.
“It would be easy at a moment like this to focus on all that we lost — future time that won’t be spent with a warm, engaging, brilliant young man whose curiosity and enthusiasm for life knew no bounds,” the Warmbier family said in the Monday statement. “But we choose to focus on the time we were given to be with this remarkable person.”
Warmbier was the 2013 salutatorian at Wyoming High School in his hometown of Wyoming, Ohio.
Analysts say North Korea often attempts to use foreign detainees to wrest outside concessions. Yet Warmbier’s treatment has only deepened animosity between Pyongyang and Washington.
Warmbier’s death could chill efforts to restart a dialogue with North Korea. An academic who serves as an adviser to South Korea’s newly elected president, Moon Jae-in, cited the Warmbier case as one reason Moon was moving cautiously with Pyongyang.
“Otto Warmbier had this tragic return. Therefore the atmosphere in Washington is extremely hostile against North Korea,” said the professor, Moon Chung-in, who was speaking at New York’s Asia Society on Monday morning before Warmbier’s death was announced. “With this kind of behavior, it would be extremely difficult for President Moon to consider going to Pyongyang.”
Three American citizens remain in detention in North Korea: Kim Sang Dok, an accounting instructor at a university in Pyongyang; Kim Haksong, another worker at the university; and Kim Dong Chul, 62, who is serving a 10-year term for alleged espionage.