The Freeman

Japan nabs NKorean spy

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TOKYO — Japanese police yesterday said its special unit that deals with alleged espionage arrested an ethnic Korean resident on suspicion of fraud — as local media reported he was acting as a spy for North Korea.

Japan is particular­ly sensitive to North Korean espionage activities in the country as operatives from and with links to the country have been blamed for abductions of Japanese citizens who were taken there to serve as language teachers for its spies.

Japan also has a large population of residents with Korean nationalit­y, the descendant­s of people from the Korean peninsula who either immigrated to Japan or were brought as forced laborers when Tokyo controlled the region as a colony from 1910-1945.

The 49- year- old man was arrested Tuesday by the Tokyo Metropolit­an Police public safety department — which deals with crimes linked to spies and violent political and religious groups — spokesman Kazufumi Suzuki told AFP.

Suzuki offered a phonetic rendering of the man's name but had no romanized spelling, which was reported as Pak Chae-Hun by Kyodo News agency.

Pak's nationalit­y was registered as "Korean", meaning he has ancestral roots on the Korean peninsula, according to Suzuki.

He added that Pak is suspected of using a credit card which he obtained illegally to make purchases from an online shopping company i n Tokyo, Suzuki said.

Pak is a former associate professor at the pro-Pyongyang Korea University in Tokyo and was engaged in espionage activities aimed at spreading North Korean ideology in South Korea and China, Kyodo reported.

He is suspected of having purchased six computer equipment items online, the report said, adding that police found written instructio­ns and encrypted e-mail messages from North Korea's spy agency on his confiscate­d computer.

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