SEOUL (Reuters) - The South
Korean government urged North Korea on Sunday to release a South Korean
missionary, Kim Jong Uk, who was sentenced to life with hard labor by a
North Korean court on Friday.
"It is regrettable that North Korea went ahead with perfunctory trial
procedures in a unilateral manner and gave our citizen severe
punishment. We strongly urge North Korea to release and repatriate our
citizen to South Korea as soon as possible," South Korea's Unification
Ministry said in a statement.
North Korea sentenced Kim to life with hard labor on Friday after
convicting him of espionage and setting up an underground church. North
Korea's official KCNA news agency reported that the missionary had
admitted his guilt at the court.
"We have demanded North Korea
free and repatriate Kim on several occasions, but it has not responded
to our and the international community's legitimate demand. This clearly
violates the international norms as well as universal value of
humanitarian spirit," the statement added.
In an apparent stage-managed confession, Kim admitted in February to
spying for the South Korean intelligence agency as well as trying to
topple North Korea's isolated regime.
Pyongyang has rejected calls from Seoul for his release and for his family to visit him."We once again urge North Korea to provide him with safety and convenience and allow his family and lawyers to visit him until he is repatriated," the South Korean statement said.
North Korea is still holding Kenneth Bae, a Korean-American missionary sentenced to 15 years of hard labor on charges of trying to use religion to overthrow its political system.
(Reporting by Narae Kim; Editing by Matt Driskill)
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