North Korea slams US for protecting raiders of Spain embassy in 2019 case
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
The North Korean embassy in Madrid demanding the US to provide a formal apology, compensation and arrest, and to extradite the raiders.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Follow topic:
SEOUL – North Korea criticised the United States for refusing to extradite a man who was accused of staging a break-in at North Korea’s embassy in Spain in 2019
The North Korean embassy in Madrid issued a statement marking the fourth anniversary of the raid, during which a group of men bound and gagged staff for hours before driving off with computers and other devices.
Pyongyang denounced the incident as a “grave breach of sovereignty and terrorist attack”, but accused the US of not investigating the group thoroughly and refusing to extradite its leader, Christopher Ahn, calling it a violation of international law.
Ahn, a former US Marine who had worked as a human rights activist, was arrested in Los Angeles in April 2019
“Ahn must be severely punished as he inflicted severe mental, physical and material damage on the members of the diplomatic staff and their families,” the embassy said in a statement carried by KCNA.
“But the US is openly protecting and encouraging acts of terrorism against our citizens abroad based on groundless claims,” it added.
The embassy called Washington’s behaviour “daylight robbery” and “gangster,” demanding it to provide a formal apology, compensation and arrest, and to extradite the raiders.
The Spanish authorities identified the intruders as members of a group called Cheollima Civil Defence, or Free Joseon, which seeks the overthrow of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, and sought Ahn’s extradition.
The group had acknowledged it was behind the break-in but said that its members were invited inside.
US court documents showed that the raiders took computers, hard drives and a mobile phone from the embassy and handed them over to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) after fleeing to the US.
The FBI gave the items to the Spanish authorities, who eventually returned them to the embassy. REUTERS

