As tensions on the Korean peninsula continued
to rise and Seoul and Washington officials discussed the potential deployment
of more troops to South Korea, officials in Pyongyang gave CNN exclusive access
to a man North Korea claims is a U.S. citizen arrested on espionage
charges.
Speaking to CNN's Will Ripley, the man
identified himself as Kim Dong Chul, a naturalized American, who said he used
to live in Fairfax, Virginia.
"I'm asking the U.S. or South Korean
government to rescue me," Kim said during an interview at a hotel in the
North Korean capital.
Kim, 62, was frogmarched into the room by
stony-faced guards, who insisted that the interview be conducted in Korean,
through an official translator.
The translation was later independently
corroborated by CNN.
A U.S. passport for Kim Dong Chul provided to
CNN by North Korean officials.
Kim told CNN that in 2001 he moved to Yanji, a
city near the Chinese-North Korean border that acts as a trade hub between the
two countries.
From Yanji, Kim said he commuted daily to
Rason, a special economic zone on the North Korean side of the border, where he
served as president of a company involved in international trade and hotel
services.
According to Kim, he spied on behalf of
"South Korean conservative elements," for which he was arrested in
October 2015.
"I was tasked with taking photos of
military secrets and 'scandalous' scenes," he said.
Kim named a number of South Koreans he said
"injected me with a hatred towards North Korea."
"They asked me to help destroy the (North
Korean) system and spread propaganda against the government."
According to
Kim, North Korean officials said they had been monitoring his activities since
2009, two years after he established his cross-border business.
He started
working as a spy in April 2013, bribing local residents to "gather
important materials," which he smuggled into China or South Korea.
Asked
whether he worked for the U.S. at any time, Kim said categorically that he did
not.
Kim was
arrested in October 2015 while he was meeting a source to obtain a USB stick
and camera used to gather military secrets.
The source,
a 35-year-old former North Korean soldier, was also arrested. Kim said he did
not know the other man's fate.
During the
almost two years of spying in North Korea, Kim only made around $5,300 (35,000
yuan).
Asked why he
would risk his freedom for such a relatively paltry sum of money, Kim said that
"it wasn't about the money."
Kim left a
wife and two daughters behind in China, with whom he has had no contact since
his detention. Repeated attempts to reach his wife using a phone number
provided by Kim were unsuccessful.
Kim's claims were
made in the presence of North Korean officials and CNN cannot determine whether
they were made under duress.
If true, Kim would
be the only U.S. citizen held prisoner in North Korea, a fact not revealed
until today.
Americans Kenneth
Bae and Matthew Miller were released by Pyongyang in November 2014. By that
point, Bae had spent more than two years in prison in North Korea.
Hours after the
interview with CNN's crew, North Korean authorities provided his passport for
inspection.
The U.S. State
Department said they could not confirm whether Kim is a U.S. citizen, telling
CNN that "speaking publicly about specific purported cases of detained
Americans can complicate our tireless efforts to secure their freedom."
Kim appeared in good
health, and said he was getting proper nourishment and three meals a day.
As is the norm for
international prisoners who haven't yet been charged, Kim said he was being
held in a Pyongyang hotel, where he has access to local newspapers and
television.
He was aware of
North Korea's purported hydrogen bomb test, carried out on January 6, saying
that it meant it was now time "for the U.S. government to drop its hostile
policies against North Korea."
"Seeing that
this H-bomb test has succeeded, now is the time to abandon hostile policies and
work to help North Korea," he said.
"The U.S. needs
to find a way to reconcile with North Korea. I think the main way to do that is
with a peace treaty."
Asked about the
similarity of his statements to North Korean propaganda and whether any of them
had been rehearsed or pre-scripted, Kim said that they had not, and accused
Western media of "misunderstanding" the situation in the country.
Westerners held
previously in North Korea have said their confessions were given under pressure
from the state.


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