Travis King: North Korea says US soldier accused of discrimination

  • By Christy Cooney
  • BBC News

North Korea says US soldier Travis King entered its territory last month because of “inhumane abuse and racial discrimination” in the military.

The 23-year-old private from South Korea crossed the border on July 18 during a guided tour.

The country’s state media earlier reported that the private king “expressed his desire to seek refuge” in the north.

Washington said it could not verify the claims, which were Pyongyang’s first public comments on the case.

A Pentagon official said the US priority was to bring Mr King home safely “through all available channels”.

US officials have previously said they believe Privateer King crossed the border on purpose. He has not been seen since.

He is an intelligence specialist in the Army since January 2021 and was in South Korea as part of his rotation.

He spent two months in South Korea on assault charges before crossing the border and was released on July 10.

He had to fly back to the US to face disciplinary action, but was able to leave the airport and join a tour of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) that separates North and South Korea.

During the trial, Travis King admitted that he decided to come to DPRK [North Korea] “He had a bad feeling against the inhumane abuse and racial discrimination within the US military,” North Korean state news agency KCNA said.

North Korea is one of the few countries still nominally under communist rule and has long been a highly secretive and isolated society. Its government, led by Kim Jong-un, has been accused of systematic human rights abuses.

The DMZ is one of the most heavily defended areas in the world, filled with landmines, surrounded by electric and barbed wire fences, and monitored by surveillance cameras. Armed guards are on 24-hour alert.

A person who said they were on the same tour of the South Korean side of the area described how the group went to a building in the area, “and this guy ran between some buildings yelling ‘ha ha ha’.”

“At first I thought it was a bad joke, but when he didn’t come back, I realized it wasn’t a joke and then everyone reacted and things got crazy,” the unnamed witness told the BBC’s US partner. CBS News.

No North Korean soldiers were seen when the man crossed, they said.

“It was on the way back in the bus and we came to one of the checkpoints… one said we have 43 going in and 42 coming back,” they said.

Concerns about the welfare of US military personnel are growing. Negotiations are ongoing between North Korean officials and the UN Command on the Korean Peninsula.

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