Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Parents say N. Korea let son go, but he’s in coma

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TOKYO — University of Virginia student Otto Warmbier has been medically evacuated from North Korea in a coma after being detained for 17 months, his parents said Tuesday.

Warmbier, 22, was to arrive home Tuesday evening in Cincinnati, after a stop at a U.S. military facility near Sapporo, Japan.

Fred and Cindy Warmbier said they were informed that North Korean officials had told U. S. envoys that Warmbier became ill from botulism sometime after his March trial and fell into a coma after taking a sleeping pill. The Warmbiers said they were told their son has remained in a coma since then.

“We want the world to know how we and our son have been brutalized and terrorized by the pariah regime” in North Korea, they said. “We are so grateful that he will finally be with people who love him.”

There was no immediate confirmati­on from U.S. officials of North Korea’s version of events — notably whether Warmbier was stricken with botulism, a potentiall­y fatal illness that is caused by a toxin but is not usually associated with loss of consciousn­ess.

“Our son is coming home,” Fred Warmbier said Tuesday morning after Otto Warmbier was evacuated. “At the moment, we’re just treating this like he’s been in an accident. We get to see our son Otto tonight.”

His release was announced in Washington by U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson. Tillerson did not discuss Warmbier’s medical condition.

Tillerson called President Donald Trump at 8:35 a.m. Tuesday to inform him that Warmbier was on an airplane en route to the United States, according to a senior administra­tion official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the details. The last instructio­n the president left Tillerson was: “Take care of Otto,” the official said.

Warmbier was on a tour in North Korea, on the way to Hong Kong where he was to do a study-abroad trip in January 2016.

But on his final night in Pyongyang, Warmbier apparently went to a staff-only floor of his hotel and attempted to take down a large propaganda sign lauding the regime.

He was charged with “hostile acts against the state,” and after an hourlong trial in March

2016, he was sentenced to

15 years in prison with hard labor.

He had not been seen in public since. Swedish diplomats, who represent U. S. interests in North Korea because the United States has no diplomatic relations with the country, were denied access to him.

Then suddenly, last week, North Korean representa­tives contacted U. S. counterpar­ts and told them that the student was in a coma.

Trump was immediatel­y informed and ordered Otto’s medical evacuation, with the agreement of the North Koreans, according to people with knowledge of the process. “This is a Trump-led effort,” one said.

The logistics were in place by Thursday.

Joseph Yun, the State Department’s special representa­tive for North Korea policy, met with North Korean Foreign Ministry representa­tives in Norway last month, a White House official said. At the meeting, North Korea agreed that Swedish diplomats could visit all four American detainees, who at that time included Warmbier. Yun then met last week with the North Korean ambassador at the United Nations in New York, where Yun learned about Warmbier’s condition.

Yun was then dispatched to North Korea and visited Warmbier with two doctors on Monday, and he demanded the student’s release on humanitari­an grounds.

State Department officials are accompanyi­ng Warmbier from Sapporo to Cincinnati.

It is not clear how North Korean doctors had been caring for Warmbier while he was in an unconsciou­s state.

Warmbier is the second American freed from overseas detention after interventi­on by the Trump administra­tion. In April, an Egyptian court acquitted Aya Hijazi, an Egyptian-American charity worker held for nearly three years, after Trump raised her case with the Egyptian president.

In the past, North Korea has held out until senior U. S. officials or statesmen arrived to personally bail out detainees, all the way up to former President Bill Clinton, whose visit in 2009 secured the freedom of American journalist­s Euna Lee and Laura Ling.

In November 2014, U. S. spy chief James Clapper went to Pyongyang to bring home Matthew Miller, who had ripped up his visa when entering the country and was serving a six-year sentence on an espionage charge, and Korean-American missionary Kenneth Bae, who had been sentenced to 15 years for alleged anti-government activities.

Jeffrey Fowle, another U. S. tourist from Ohio detained for six months at about the same time as Miller, was released just before that and sent home on a U.S. government plane. Fowle left a Bible in a club hoping a North Korean would find it, which is considered a criminal offense in North Korea.

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Anna Fifield, David Nakamura, Jenna Portnoy and Susan Svrluga of The Washington Post and by Matthew Lee, Matthew Pennington, Josh Lederman, Ken Thomas, Eric Talmadge, Daniel Sewell and Sara Gillesby of The Associated Press.

 ?? AP/JOHN MINCHILLO ?? Alison Lebrun helps tie blue-and-white ribbons Tuesday in Wyoming, Ohio, a Cincinnati suburb near the family home of Otto Warmbier, whom North Korea released after a 17-month detention.
AP/JOHN MINCHILLO Alison Lebrun helps tie blue-and-white ribbons Tuesday in Wyoming, Ohio, a Cincinnati suburb near the family home of Otto Warmbier, whom North Korea released after a 17-month detention.
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Warmbier

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