Skip to main content

Obama Welcomes Return of Journalists Jailed in N. Korea







05 August 2009

Pres. Barack Obama speaks at the White House, 05 Aug 2009, about the release of two American journalists in N. Korea
Pres. Barack Obama speaks at the White House, 05 Aug 2009, about the release of two American journalists in N. Korea
U.S. President Barack Obama is welcoming the release of two American journalists who were detained in North Korea, but U.S. officials say the move will not necessarily result in a warming of relations between the two countries. Euna Lee and Laura Ling returned home to the United States early Wednesday after being pardoned by the North Korean government, during a visit to Pyongyang by former President Bill Clinton.


A humanitarian mission to bring two U.S journalists home ended successfully with a plane carrying Euna Lee and Laura Ling arriving California early Wednesday.

President Barack Obama expressed relief in remarks to reporters in Washington.

Freed journalists Laura Ling, left, and Euna Lee, are met by family members as they return home to Los Angeles, 5 Aug 2009
Freed journalists Laura Ling, left, and Euna Lee, are met by family members as they return home to Los Angeles, 5 Aug 2009
"The reunion that we've all seen on television I think is a source of happiness not only for the families but for the entire country," he said.


President Obama made no mention of the the tense relations between the U.S. and North Korea over Pyongyang's nuclear test in May and its test-firing of long and short-range missiles.
U.S. administration officials have repeatedly said Mr. Clinton's mission was private and his meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Il did not involve any issues beyond the release of the U.S. journalists, including the stalled talks on North Korean nuclear disarmament.

Earlier on Wednesday, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told NBC News she did not want people to confuse her husband's humanitarian mission with U.S. policy -- one that continues to offer choices to North Korea.







"They can either continue on the path they are on, or perhaps they will now be willing to start talking to us within the context of six party talks about the international desire to see them de-nuclearized," she said.

Former US President Bill Clinton (R) meets with N. Korean Leader Kim Jong Il (L) in Pyonggyang, 04 Aug 2009
Former US President Bill Clinton (R) meets with N. Korean Leader Kim Jong Il (L) in Pyonggyang, 04 Aug 2009
Mr. Clinton is the second former U.S. president to travel to Pyongyang, after Jimmy Carter's visit in 1994.


Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton was critical of the Clinton mission and says the trip may have sent a signal to North Korea that the U.S. is willing to negotiate with terrorists. He says the former president's humanitarian mission to Pyongyang may also give a domestic political boost to Kim Jong Il but he acknowledges it may open the door for renewed dialogue between the U.S. and North Korea.

"I think it's possible that this could lead to the six-party talks resuming or more direct bilateral conversations with the United States. That's been North Korea's goal for over a decade now, to get back to the bilateral deals that they made during the Clinton administration," he said.

Officials with the current U.S. administration now will wait to see how this week's developments play out in efforts to normalize ties between the two countries.


source: http://www.voanews.com




Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Iranian Clerics Protest Election Results

By VOA News 05 July 2009 A group of leading Iranian clerics has criticized the results of the country's disputed presidential election. In a statement released Sunday, clerics from the Association of Researchers and Teachers of Qom said Iran's official electoral watchdog, the Guardian Council, failed to adequately investigate claims of vote rigging by the opposition. The pro-reform group questioned whether the Council's validation is enough to legitimize the vote. Last week, the 12-member Council upheld the re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. I ranian reformist presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi during a press conference after polls closed in Tehran, 12 June 2009 Defeated presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi has criticized the outcome. In a 24-page report posted to his Web site Saturday, Mr. Mousavi accuses supporters of Mr. Ahmadinejad of handing out cash to voters in the run-up to...

Military chief promotes 35 generals

Indonesian Military (TNI) chief Gen. Djoko Santoso has promoted 35 generals, consisting of 16 army generals, 11 navy admirals and 8 air force marshals. “It is expected that this time promotion will further enhance and improve the military performance so that we could give out the best output,” he said on Friday. Among those generals who receive the promotion is Rear Adm. Gunadi who is now posted as inspector general at the Defense Ministry, Maj. Gen. Langgeng Sulistyono, who is now posted as Diponegoro Military Commander and Rear Marshal Agus Dwi Putranto, who is installed as Abdulrahman Saleh Air Force Base Commander.

Chinese

Identifying someone in Indonesia as a member of the Chinese ( orang Tionghoa ) ethnic group is not an easy matter, because physical characteristics, language, name, geographical location, and life-style of Chinese Indonesians are not always distinct from those of the rest of the population. Census figures do not record Chinese as a special group, and there are no simple racial criteria for membership in this group. There are some people who are considered Chinese by themselves and others, despite generations of intermarriage with the local population, resulting in offspring who are less than one-quarter Chinese in ancestry. On the other hand, there are some people who by ancestry could be considered halfChinese or more, but who regard themselves as fully Indonesian. Furthermore, many people who identify themselves as Chinese Indonesians cannot read or write the Chinese language. Alth...