Los Angeles Times

U.S. citizen is detained in North Korea

The incident could further strain ties between Washington and Pyongyang.

- By Jonathan Kaiman jonathan.kaiman@latimes.com Twitter: @JRKaiman Times staff writer Tracy Wilkinson in Washington contribute­d to this report.

The incident involving a man kept from leaving on a f light from Pyongyang threatens to further complicate relations with Washington.

BEIJING — North Korean authoritie­s have reportedly detained a U.S. citizen, raising the total number of Americans known to be detained in North Korea to three and potentiall­y deepening animositie­s between Washington and Pyongyang at an already tense moment.

North Korean officials detained Tony Kim, an academic who also goes by his Korean name Kim Sangduk, as he was trying to leave the country from Pyongyang’s internatio­nal airport on Saturday, Park Chan-mo, chancellor of the Pyongyang University of Science and Technology, told the Associated Press.

Park said Kim, 58, taught accounting at the university for about a month. The reason for his detention was unclear.

South Korea’s Yonhap news agency, which first reported the incident Sunday, said Kim is a former professor at the Yanbian University of Science and Technology, a research university in China’s Jilin province, which borders North Korea.

The agency said South Korea’s national intelligen­ce agency was unaware of the detention.

Martina Aberg, deputy head of mission for the Swedish Embassy in North Korea, confirmed the detention to CNN on Sunday. “We have been informed and can confirm that there has been a detention of a U.S. citizen Saturday morning local,” she said. “He was prevented from getting on the f light out of Pyongyang. We don’t comment further than this.”

In the absence of a U.S. embassy in North Korea, Sweden handles consular matters involving U.S. citizens there.

The State Department said in a statement that it was “aware of reports that a U.S. citizen was detained in North Korea,” and that it was working with the Swedish Embassy.

North Korea is working to develop nuclear-tipped missiles that can reach the U.S., and analysts say it could soon conduct its sixth nuclear test. The United States, in response to rising tensions, has dispatched the aircraft carrier Carl Vinson toward the Korean peninsula. It is expected to arrive this week.

Previously, the Trump administra­tion had said the naval strike group led by the Carl Vinson was headed to North Korea when it was, at the time, headed in the opposite direction.

State media said Sunday that North Korea is ready to “sink” the Carl Vinson “with a single strike.” On Friday, it said it would launch a nuclear strike against Australia if it doesn’t stop “blindly and zealously toeing the U.S. line.”

More than 10 U.S. citizens have been detained in North Korea since 2009, according to Yonhap. Two remain in the country; others have been released after visits to Pyongyang by prominent Americans.

In March 2016, North Korea sentenced Otto Warmbier, 22, a University of Virginia student, to 15 years of labor for trying to steal a propaganda poster from his hotel. He had been in North Korea as a tourist, on a fiveday visit.

North Korean state media accused him of entering the country with the intent of “bringing down the foundation of its single-minded unity.”

The following month, North Korea sentenced Kim Dong Chul, 62, a South Korean-born naturalize­d American citizen, to 10 years’ hard labor for espionage.

A Canadian pastor, Hyeon Soo Lim, has also been held in the country since early 2015.

 ?? Wong Maye-E Associated Press ?? SOLDIERS stand before portraits of late North Korean leaders Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il in Pyongyang. Authoritie­s on Saturday morning prevented a U.S. citizen from boarding a flight out of Pyongyang.
Wong Maye-E Associated Press SOLDIERS stand before portraits of late North Korean leaders Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il in Pyongyang. Authoritie­s on Saturday morning prevented a U.S. citizen from boarding a flight out of Pyongyang.

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