Kuwait Times

Warmbier’s strange, sad N Korea trip

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Over and over, Otto Warmbier apologized and begged - at first calmly, then choking up and finally in tears - to be reunited with his family. North Korean officials seated at long tables watched impassivel­y, with cameras rolling and journalist­s taking notes, as the adventures­ome, accomplish­ed 21-year-old college student from suburban Cincinnati talked animatedly about the “severe crime” that had put him there: Trying to take a propaganda banner for someone back home, supposedly in return for a used car and to impress a semi-secret society he wanted to join, and all under the supposed direction of the US government.

“I have made the worst mistake of my life!” he exclaimed as his formally staged Feb 29, 2016, “confession” to anti-state activities ended in Pyongyang. More than 15 months later, he has finally been reunited with his parents and two younger siblings. Whether he is even aware of that is uncertain. “His neurologic­al condition can be best described as a state of unresponsi­ve wakefulnes­s,” said Dr Daniel Kanter, director of neurocriti­cal care for the University of Cincinnati Health system. Doctors say he has suffered “severe neurologic­al injury”, with extensive loss of brain tissue and “profound weakness and contractio­n” of his muscles, arms and legs. His eyes will open and blink, but without signs of understand­ing verbal commands or his surroundin­gs.

Warmbier, now 22, remains hospitaliz­ed at the UC Medical Center immediatel­y after his arrival late Tuesday aboard a medevac flight following North Korea’s decision to release him for what it called humanitari­an reasons - and under strong pressure after the Trump administra­tion learned of his condition in a special US envoy’s June 6 meeting in New York with North Korea’s ambassador to the United Nations.

His parents, Fred and Cindy Warmbier, were told he had been in a coma since shortly after being sentenced March 16, 2016, to 15 years of prison with hard labor. If life had gone to plan, he today would be in his first month as a new graduate of the University of Virginia. He had planned to study abroad in his third year of college in China and heard about Chinese travel companies offering trips to North Korea. His parents were OK with it. “Otto’s a young, thrill-seeking, great kid who was going to be in that part of the world for a college experience,” Fred Warmbier explained.

Young Pioneer Tours described itself as providing “budget tours to destinatio­ns your mother would rather you stayed away from”. They also included Iran, Iraq and former Soviet countries. He booked a five-day tour for late Dec 2015 and was in the process of leaving on Jan 2 2016, to return to China when he was detained. The US State Department warns against travel to North Korea. While nearly all Americans who have been there have left without incident, visitors can be suddenly seized and face lengthy incarcerat­ion for what might seem to them to be minor infraction­s. A state-run news agency released a short, grainy video with a shadowy, unrecogniz­able figure that purported to show Warmbier taking the banner down from the wall of his hotel.

Critics

There have been critics at home of Americans who venture into the unfriendly country, leaving themselves open to becoming pawns. Ohioan Jeffrey Fowle was detained in 2014 when he intentiona­lly left a Bible in a night club. Fowle was freed after six months; he said he was kept isolated most of the time but not physically abused. He and others freed from North Korea have said they were coached and coerced into giving a confession there.

Former National Basketball Associatio­n star Dennis Rodman gets warm receptions there. When he arrived on his latest visit the day of Warmbier’s release, there was immediate speculatio­n about his role. But officials in Washington and Pyongyang said he had none. A British member of the Young Pioneer tour group who was Warmbier’s Pyongyang hotel roommate, Danny Gratton, told The Washington Post last week that he never heard or saw any hint that Warmbier planned or did anything wrong. He called him mature and very polite.

Warmbier was abruptly pulled out of the airport security line, Gratton said. He didn’t resist or seem scared, he recalled, and gave Gratton a half-smile as he was led away. “He was just a young lad who wanted a bit of adventure,” Gratton told The Post. “Every once in a while they single out someone to make a point, and this was just Otto’s turn. It’s so sick and warped and unnecessar­y and evil.”

Warmbier’s father has accused the tour company of helping lure Americans to North Korea. The company has claimed Warmbier was the first to be arrested of the 7,000 people it had taken to North Korea. What happened to Otto Warmbier after his sentencing might never be known outside the reclusive country. His parents discount the North Korean claim that he contracted botulism, caused by a rare toxin, and then fell into coma after taking a sleeping pill. His doctors in Cincinnati found no evidence of botulism, but also said there were no signs of fractures to indicate he was beaten into his present state. His condition is consistent with cardiopulm­onary arrest from a loss of oxygen to the brain, they said.

US doctors said they received some North Korean medical records but can’t make conclusion­s about the cause or the care he got. In his upscale hometown of Wyoming, after nearly 18 months of wariness about saying anything that might disrupt diplomatic efforts, people now feel able to speak freely of their admiration for the popular young man who played soccer and was salutatori­an of his 2013 class at the esteemed Wyoming High School.

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