Case could increase tensions between US and North Korea
Russia may approve sanctions on North Korea
US envoy says North will not be rewarded
The journalists, Euna Lee (left) and Laura Ling (right), of US media outlet Current TV, will be tried at one of the North's highest courts. -- PHOTO: AP
SEOUL - NORTH Korea put two US journalists on trial on Thursday on charges of illegally entering the state with 'hostile intent', in a case that could worsen tension with Washington after Pyongyang's nuclear test last week.
WASHINGTON - SUPPORTERS of two journalists detained in North Korea held rallies across the United States calling for their release as their trial was set to start across the Pacific on Thursday.
Friends, family and colleagues of the two women - Laura Ling and Euna Lee - held candlelight vigils in Washington and seven other US cities on Wednesday evening to coincide with the start of their trial day in North Korea.
LITTLE has been heard of the two journalists since their arrest but they were seen last month by Sweden's ambassador to Pyongyang on behalf of Washington, which has no diplomatic ties with North Korea.
'When I first got here, I cried so much. Now, I cry less,' Ling was quoted as saying in a letter sent to her sister in May.
The journalists, Euna Lee and Laura Ling of the US media outlet Current TV, were arrested in March near the border between China and North Korea while working on a story. The TV network was co-founded by former US Vice President Al Gore.
North Korea's KCNA news agency said in a one-sentence dispatch that the trial would begin at 0600 GMT (2pm Singapore time) at one of the country's highest courts.
Experts say the pair could face a sentence of 10 years or more of hard labour in the reclusive state. They add a guilty verdict is almost certain in a North Korean justice system that protects the unquestioned rule of leader Kim Jong-il. Analysts said the two had become bargaining chips in high-stakes negotiations with the United States, which has long sought to end the North's nuclear ambitions.
'The country is being very careful in dealing with the two US citizens and is aware of international attention and the implications of the case,' said Park Jeong-woo, a law professor at Kookmin University and an expert in the North's legal system.
Russia, which wields veto power at the UN Security Council, has suggested it may back economic sanctions to push Pyongyang into scrapping its nuclear arms programme.
Diplomats in New York have been in closed-door negotiations for more than a week on a Security Council resolution that would broaden sanctions imposed on North Korea after its only prior nuclear test in October 2006.
North Korea also appears ready to increase tension through tests of a long-range missile that could reach US territory and of a mid-range missile that can hit all of South Korea and most of Japan. The North was punished by the United Nations for an April rocket launch, seen as a disguised missile test.
Deputy US Secretary of State James Steinberg said after meeting South Korean President Lee Myung-bak that Washington would not repeat a previous mistake of rewarding the North with negotiations for making provocations.
Pyongyang also needed to realise that China, the closest North Korea can claim as a major ally, had been shifting from its previous reluctance to join international censure of the North's nuclear and missile tests, Steinberg said in comments provided by Mr Lee's office. -- REUTERS