Carter helps free American held in North Korea
Last Updated: Friday, August 27, 2010 | 10:34 AM ET
The Associated Press
A smile flickered across Aijalon Gomes's face as he hugged former U.S. president Jimmy Carter and boarded a plane for Boston on Friday, seven months after his arrest in North Korea.
Carter flew to the North Korean capital, Pyongyang, this week on a private mission to secure a pardon for the 31-year-old American.
Former U.S. president Jimmy Carter, seen in this photo from April of this year, flew to Pyongyang on a private humanitarian mission to help secure the release of an American Aijalon Gomes, who had been detained in North Korea. (John Amis/Associated Press) North Korean leader Kim Jong Il granted Carter's request to "leniently forgive" Gomes, the official Korean Central News Agency reported, and Carter and Gomes were due back in Boston later Friday for a reunion with his mother, Carter's spokeswoman Deanna Congileo said in Atlanta.
There was no indication that Kim — who was making a surprise trip to China this week — met with Carter as widely anticipated.
In Washington, the State Department welcomed the news of Gomes's release. We "are relieved that he will soon be safely reunited with his family," spokesman P.J. Crowley said.
Gomes was the fourth American in a year arrested for trespassing in North Korea, a communist nation that fought against the U.S. during the 1950-53 Korean War and does not have diplomatic relations with Washington.
Journalists Laura Ling and Euna Lee were arrested last March and released only after former U.S. president Bill Clinton made a similar trip to Pyongyang to plead for their freedom. Activist Robert Park deliberately crossed into the country from China in December but was expelled some 40 days later after issuing an apology carried by North Korean state media.
Gomes, who had been teaching English in South Korea, attended rallies in Seoul in January calling for Park's release. He was arrested in North Korea just two weeks later.
In April, he was sentenced to eight years of hard labor and fined 70 million won — more than $600,000 US — for sneaking into the country illegally and committing a "hostile act."
There were concerns about Gomes's health. Last month, North Korean media said Gomes attempted suicide, "driven by his strong guilty conscience, disappointment and despair at the U.S. government that has not taken any measure for his freedom."
A U.S. delegation tried unsuccessfully in a secret visit to Pyongyang earlier this month to secure his release, Crowley said last week.
This week's decision to "set free the illegal entrant is a manifestation of [North Korea's] humanitarianism and peace-loving policy," KCNA said.
On Friday, Gomes looked markedly thin but relieved. He was dressed in a striped polo shirt and slacks in footage from the tarmac aired by broadcaster APTN in Pyongyang.
Footage showed a young North Korean girl giving Carter a snappy salute and a bouquet. Carter returned the salute, gave her a hug and kiss, and paused to pose with her for a photo.
Top North Korean nuclear envoy Kim Kye Gwan and senior diplomat Ri Gun shook Carter's hand and then waved as the plane took off in a drizzling rain.
Private humanitarian mission
The Carter Center, the Atlanta-based organization founded by Carter and his wife, Roslynn, and U.S. officials have emphasized that the former president's trip was a private humanitarian mission.
Still, such visits have in the past provided an opportunity for unofficial diplomacy.
KCNA said Carter met with North Korea's No. 2 official, Kim Yong Nam, who relayed Pyongyang's interest in resuming the six-nation disarmament talks and reiterated the regime's commitment to denuclearization.
Carter and his party also held "an open-hearted discussion" with North Korea's foreign minister and the vice foreign minister for U.S. affairs, on their countries' relations as well as denuclearization, the news agency said.
Six-nation nuclear talks have been stalled since North Korea walked away from the disarmament process last year.
Pyongyang, believed to have enough weaponized plutonium for a half-dozen atomic bombs in addition to a uranium-enrichment program, routinely cites the U.S. military and nuclear threat as a main reason behind its need for nuclear weapons.
Washington maintains 28,500 troops in South Korea to protect the longtime ally.
Carter met with Kim's father, late President Kim Il Sung, during a 1994 visit — friendly talks that led to a landmark nuclear disarmament pact.
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- Ottawa wins appeal to block RCMP union
- Ontario's Court of Appeal has overturned a 2009 ruling that said it was unconstitutional to prevent members of the RCMP from forming a labour association. more »
- 2,000 jobs cut as GM to close Oshawa plant
- The Canadian Auto Workers union says General Motors is going ahead with plans to close its consolidated plant in Oshawa, Ont. more »
- Diamond Jubilee: Your photos of royal encounters
- The CBC Community team asked you to submit your best photos of the Queen's visits to Canada, or visits by any member of the Royal Family. The result was tremendous! more »
- Helicopter crash reported near Terrace B.C. with 3 aboard
- Search and rescue crews have been dispatched to an area west of Terrace, B.C., after a helicopter crashed with three people aboard. more »
Latest World News Headlines
- Gaza border clash kills Palestinian militant, Israeli soldier
- A Palestinian militant infiltrated into Israel and set off a shootout that left the infiltrator and one Israeli soldier dead, the military says. more »
- Mistrial declared in John Edwards case
- The campaign fraud trial of disgraced former U.S. senator John Edwards ended on Thursday with an acquittal on one of six counts and a mistrial declared on the remaining charges. more »
- Diamond Jubilee: Your photos of royal encounters
- The CBC Community team asked you to submit your best photos of the Queen's visits to Canada, or visits by any member of the Royal Family. The result was tremendous! more »
- How manhunts work
- A nation-wide manhunt, like the one being undertaken to find suspected killer Luka Rocco Magnotta, is a highly co-ordinated exercise that isn't quite as gritty or dramatic as it may seem in TV police shows. more »
Dispatches »
- Child "bomberitos" on Peru's most dangerous highway May. 31, 2012 3:34 PM The bomberito children of the Andes hitch homemade carts to passing transport trucks -- to aid motorists and victims of disasters in mountains that were once the domain of Peru's Shining Path rebels. They risk their lives for tips that help feed their families.
Connect Newsroom Blog
The Hunt for Magnotta and #bullyPROOF May. 31, 2012 7:32 PM Tonight we'll take you deep inside the dark recesses of the internet for a closer look what's being posted and who watching it.
- Body-parts victim ID'd as Chinese student in Montreal
- Edmonton teacher suspended for giving 0s
- Owner defends 'gore' site connected to Luka Magnotta
- New duty-free limits will challenge Canadian retailers
- Flooding closes Toronto subway hub Union station
- Copyright board to charge for music at weddings, parades
- Quebec student talks collapse and more protests loom
- Tree faller plunges to death as bucket breaks
- Alberta boy hospitalized after fight involving dozens of students

