Nkorea accuses expelled student of spying
SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea said Saturday that Alek Sigley, the Australian student the country deported this past week, had been a spy who admitted to “systematically” collecting information about the isolated country, with a state news agency reporting that he had been “caught red-handed.”
Sigley, 29, a graduate student in Korean literature at Kim Il Sung University in Pyongyang, was freed in North Korea on Thursday and deported the same day.
On Saturday, North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency, using the initials for the North’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, said Sigley was caught Tuesday while “committing anti-dprk incitement through the internet.”
“He honestly admitted his spying acts of systematically collecting and offering data about the domestic situation of the DPRK and repeatedly asked for pardon, apologizing for encroachment upon the sovereignty of the DPRK,” the news agency said. North Korea expelled him with “humanitarian leniency,” it said.
Sigley could not be reached for comment. But after his release, he said Thursday, “I’m OK, I’m good.” He declined then to address a question about why he had been detained.
While studying in Pyongyang, he had contributed columns about his life in the North to media, including NK News, which is based in Seoul, the South Korean capital and specializes in news about North Korea.
The Korean Central News Agency said Sigley had acted at the instigation of NK News and other “anti-dprk” news outlets, providing them with information and photos he had collected in Pyongyang by making use of his foreign student card.
Chad O’carroll, head of NK News, said in response to the North Korean claim, “Alek Sigley’s well-read columns presented an apolitical and insightful view of life in Pyongyang, which we published in a bid to show vignettes of ordinary daily life in the capital.”
Prime Minister Scott Morrison of Australia and Sigley have thanked Swedish diplomats for working on Australia’s behalf to help free him.