RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘Pyongyang’

N Korea calls Clinton ‘pensioner going shopping’

Exchange of insults reflects lack of progress at regional summit over country’s nuclear programme

The stand-off over North Korea’s nuclear programme took a turn for the petty today, with the country’s leadership claiming Hillary Clinton looked like a “primary schoolgirl” or “a pensioner going shopping”, after Clinton compared them to “small children”.

The exchange of jibes reflected the lack of progress at a regional summit being held in Phuket, Thailand.

North Korea, attending the talks, said it had no intention of re-entering six-nation talks on its nuclear programme, because of the “deep-rooted anti-North Korean policy” of the US.

“The six-party talks are over,” the spokesman for the North Korean delegation, Ri Hung Sik, said at the Association of South East Asian Nations (Asean) security forum.

Clinton said North Korea had “no friends left that will protect them” from international determination that the regime dismantle its nuclear programme.

She called on North Korea to dismantle its weapons programme verifiably and irreversibly or face further isolation and the “unrelenting pressure” of international sanctions. She said the international community was prepared to offer a package of incentives if Pyongyang complied, including the normalisation of diplomatic relations.

A 2007 six-party agreement in which North Korea began dismantling its nuclear complex at Yongbyon in return for fuel oil deliveries broke down in April this year, when North Korea threw out UN inspectors and restarted its weapons programme. It has since raised tensions by conducting an apparent nuclear test (some experts say it could have been a hoax using huge quantities of high explosive) and a series of missile tests.

In an interview on Monday, Clinton said the US should not over-react to North Korean provocation. She told ABC television: “Maybe it’s the mother in me, the experience I’ve had with small children and teenagers and people who are demanding attention: Don’t give it to them.”

Pyongyang’s reaction took three days to come, but the delay did not lessen its evident fury.

“We cannot but regard Mrs Clinton as a funny lady as she likes to utter such rhetoric, unaware of the elementary etiquette in the international community,” a foreign ministry statement said. “Sometimes she looks like a primary schoolgirl and sometimes a pensioner going shopping.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


North Korea ‘has no friends left’

Hillary Clinton in Phuket, Thailand - 23 July 2009

North Korea has no friends to protect it from international efforts to end its nuclear programme, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said.

At an Asian regional forum in Thailand she said there was widespread agreement that North Korea could not be allowed to maintain nuclear weapons.

North Korea’s envoy at the meeting said his nation would not re-enter six-party talks on ending its nuclear programme.

A spokesman in Pyongyang added that Mrs Clinton was "not intelligent".

Mrs Clinton said there was widespread concern among the members of the Association of South East Asian Nations (Asean) over North Korea’s recent "provocative behaviour".

"Sometimes [Mrs Clinton] looks like a primary schoolgirl and sometimes a pensioner going shopping"

North Korean spokesman

North Korea dropped out of the six-party talks after the UN censured its long-range missile test in April.

An underground nuclear test and further missile tests followed, provoking new UN Security Council sanctions, allowing for inspections of North Korean vessels suspected of carrying banned arms and tighter financial pressure on the already isolated state.

‘No place to go’

At the Asean forum on the resort island of Phuket, Mrs Clinton said North Korea’s nuclear ambitions threatened regional security and risked triggering an arms race.

"The United States and its allies and partners cannot accept a North Korea that tries to maintain nuclear weapons, to launch ballistic missiles or to proliferate nuclear materials," Mrs Clinton said in Phuket.

"And we are committed to the verifiable denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula in a peaceful manner."

North Korean spokesman Ri Hung Sik in Phuket, Thailand - 23 July 2009

"There is no place to go for North Korea; they have no friends left that will protect them from the international community’s efforts to move towards denuclearisation."

Even Burma had said it intended to implement the new UN resolution, she said.

Mrs Clinton outlined benefits for North Korea if it ends its nuclear activity.

"Full normalisation of relations, a permanent peace regime and significant energy and economic assistance are all possible in the context of full and verifiable denuclearisation."

Before she spoke, the spokesman for North Korea’s delegation in Phuket, Ri Hung Sik, attacked Washington’s "deep-rooted hostile policy" and said there would be no return to the six-party talks until US policy changes.

Separately, a spokesman in Pyongyang described Mrs Clinton as a "funny lady" – responding to her comments that North Korea’s behaviour was that of an unruly child.

"Her words suggest that she is by no means intelligent," the spokesman said, quoted by state news agency KCNA.

"Sometimes she looks like a primary schoolgirl and sometimes a pensioner going shopping. Anyone making misstatements has to pay for them."</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Fears of Burma-N Korea nuclear link

• Hillary Clinton warns of military co-operation between regimes
• Proliferation experts track purchases of suspicious equipment

Hillary Clinton today expressed concern over military links between North Korea and Burma, after evidence emerged that the Burmese junta may be trying to acquire nuclear technology from Pyongyang.

Experts said there is no proof of a Burmese nuclear programme but pointed to worrying signs. The Burmese military has been doing business with a North Korean company that specialises in nuclear technology. The junta has also made suspicious purchases of sophisticated dual-use equipment. A North Korean ship suspected of heading to Burma with an unknown cargo turned back after being shadowed by American warships earlier this month. Finally, reports have emerged of a secret visit by senior Burmese officials to North Korea late last year.

“We know that there are also growing concerns about military co-operation between North Korea and Burma, which we take very seriously,” Clinton, the US secretary of state, told journalists in Bangkok. “It would be destabilising for the region. It would pose a direct threat to Burma’s neighbours.”

David Albright, the head of the Washington-based Institute for Science and International Security, which specialises in monitoring nuclear proliferation, said: “There’s no hard evidence, just suspicions right now. We’re watching it.”

Albright said one of the principal causes of suspicion was the link between the Burmese military and a North Korean firm, Namchongang Trading Corp (NCG), which is under UN and US sanctions for its role in trading in nuclear technology. NCG set up an office in Damascus, and western officials have alleged the company channelled equipment and materials towards the construction of a nuclear reactor in Syria which was destroyed by an Israeli air raid in September 2007. NCG’s chief executive is Yun Ho-jin, a nuclear expert who was once North Korea’s delegate to the International Atomic Energy Agency.

Albright said Burma had also attempted to acquire suspicious technology. “This is hi-tech equipment, capable of making very high precision components. It has other end uses, but it’s hard to see why else Burma would be buying it,” he said.

Last month, Japan arrested one North Korean and two Japanese businessmen for attempting to export a magnetometer (a device for measuring magnetic fields) to Burma. Magnetometers can be used in archaeology and geophysics, but they are also a critical component in missile guidance systems.

Two years ago, the Burmese junta made an overt attempt to begin a nuclear programme. It signed an agreement with Russian atomic agency Rosatom for the construction of a 10-megawatt research reactor, but the deal stalled, possibly as a result of diplomatic pressure on Moscow. US officials fear Burma may have decided to pursue a covert route through Pyongyang.

Earlier this month, a North Korean freighter, the Kang Nam I, which had made previous trips to Burma, was shadowed at sea by the US navy until it reversed course. It remains unclear what its freight was, and US officials were reluctant to board it, fearing it might be an empty decoy designed to embarrass Washington.

The Associated Press today quoted a South Korean intelligence expert as saying satellite images suggested the Kang Nam I was carrying equipment for a nuclear programme and Scud-type missiles.

Recent reports in Burmese exile media have spoken of a military pact late last year between the two countries, including the construction of underground installations, but the existence of such a pact has yet to be publicly confirmed.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


July 21, 1904: All Aboard for Siberia, Tovarich

1904: Decreed by a czar, built by thousands of workers over a period of more than a decade, the Trans-Siberian Railway is officially completed. As you’d expect with a project of this size, complexity and scope, “officially completed” is a relative term. Trains have already been operating on parts of the line for some time, [...]

S Korean ex-leader on respirator

Kim Dae-jung attended the funeral of former President Roh Moo-hyun in a wheelchair - 29 May 2009

Former South Korean President Kim Dae-jung is in an intensive care unit in a Seoul hospital being treated for pneumonia, medical officials have said.

Mr Kim, 85, was put on a respirator after complications arose, but is not in a critical condition, hospital official Park Chang-il said.

He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2000 for brokering the first summit of leaders from divided Korea.

He served as South Korean president from 1998-2003.

"He became short of breath on Wednesday night and was put on a respirator around 0300 this morning," an official at Yonsei Severance Hospital was quoted as saying by Yonhap news agency.

"His condition has improved since. He is conscious, and his pulse, breathing and body temperature are normal."

Mr Kim was taken to the hospital on Monday with a fever and cold symptoms.

He dedicated his career to promoting democracy and human rights during the decades of authoritarian rule in South Korea.

His Sunshine Policy improved ties with the North during his presidency, but successors have taken a tougher line with Pyongyang and North-South relations have since soured.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Cenk Uygur: Who Was on the Assassination List?

I have now learned not to question Sy Hersh. When I heard he was working on a story on an “executive assassination ring” run by…

Lost in translation

By John Sudworth
BBC News, Seoul

The Pyongyang Times of North Korea

South Korea has even begun to keep count.

A government official recently claimed that North Korea’s official state media has insulted the South Korean president more than 1,700 times this year alone.

That is an average of 10 insults a day.

He is variously called "a lackey", "a stooge", "a dictator" and the leader of "a gang of traitors".

The official admitted that the jibes were sometimes "downright silly".

But the language chosen by North Korea to attack its opponents can border on the terrifying.

Last year, for example, it threatened to reduce South Korea "to ashes" and, more recently, warned of a "fire shower" of nuclear retaliation.

So, just how much attention should we be paying to this kind of rhetoric

Is it mere bluster, or is there a real risk that the bombastic outbursts will be translated into action

‘Wolf in sheep’s clothing’

Michael Harrold has an unusual claim to fame.

In 1987 he became the first British citizen to be employed by the North Korean government in Pyongyang.

SELECTION OF N KOREAN QUOTES

  • The American Yankee is a wolf in sheep’s clothing
  • About the US:Even piles of manure in the fields are fuming out smoke of hatred
  • [S Korean leader Lee Myung-bak] is a political charlatan, an absent-minded traitor and a US sycophant
  • US imperialists are the greatest threat to humanity [in the 20th Century]
  • We will tear the limbs from the United States, which is an empire of evil
  • The situation is inching close to the brink of war due to the brigandish moves of the US

His mission was to offer advice on the correct use of English for the translations of North Korean propaganda.

At the start of his seven-year posting, having arrived in a strange and bewildering city, he remembers buying himself a Korean phrase book.

"The second from last chapter was called ‘useful phrases’," he tells me.

It included such choice essentials as: "The American Yankee is a wolf in sheep’s clothing", and "the US imperialists are the greatest threat to humanity in the 20th Century".

Unlikely to trip off a beginner’s tongue perhaps, but the run-of-the-mill phrase book was his first lesson in how all pervasive this kind of language is inside the reclusive country.

External enemy

So does the average North Korean go about his daily life peppering his speech with such casual insults Is North Korea really one of the angriest places on the planet

"At times when the relationship with the outside world is more peaceful they use softer language. But when relations get worse, that’s when it gets much tougher"

Prof Paik Hak-soon

Professor Paik Hak-soon of the Sejong Institute

Joo Sung-ha, who defected from North Korea seven years ago, thinks it might be.

He is now a journalist working on the foreign desk of the Dong-A Ilbo, a South Korean broadsheet, with regular cause to analyse the propaganda coming out of Pyongyang.

"It is a unique aspect of socialist societies in general," he tells me.

"People learn to use this kind of strong language, even in everyday life. It is instilled into society."

The state-run newspapers are certainly full of it, a constant hard-blowing of warnings and threats aimed at an external enemy kept constantly in the forefront of people’s minds.

But if the rhetoric is designed to rally citizens to the leadership’s cause, it may have limited effect, according to Mr Joo.

"People are too used to it. They learn to read between the lines for the real meaning, and the often repeated words like ‘war’ don’t even register."

‘Nuclear maniac’

They register in South Korea though.

So much so that North Korean propaganda is still illegal here, banned under the country’s national security laws.

To read a North Korean newspaper you need special permission to access one of the secure collections, like the one held at the Sejong Institute, a private think-tank, located just outside Seoul.

Professor Paik Hak-soon shows me round, and pulling a large volume of the Pyongyang Times off the shelves, it falls open at an edition from March 1988.

North Korean missile launch - photo released April 2009

Little has changed, it seems.

Right there in the first paragraph is the talk of the "US imperialists" and the South Korean "military fascist clique".

The individual words might not tell you much, but according to Professor Paik, it is worth trying to follow the trend, the rising and falling tone of North Korean rhetoric.

"There are ups and downs," he says. "At times when the relationship with the outside world is more peaceful, they use softer language. But when relations get worse, that’s when it gets much tougher."

North Korean propaganda, the theory goes, can be used like a barometer, giving clues about the current thinking of the leadership in Pyongyang.

President George W Bush was "a gangster" and "a nuclear maniac", but despite the abuse heaped on current US policy, no personal insult has yet been levelled at President Barack Obama.

If and when it comes, it might tell us something about North Korea’s assessment of the prospects for dialogue and engagement with his administration.

‘Piles of manure’

At times of extreme hostility the language turns flamboyant, even poetic.

America sank so low in 2003, according to state radio, that even the "piles of manure in the fields" were "fuming out the smoke of hatred."

It is strong stuff, no doubt, but sometimes the outside world can be tempted to analyse too deeply.

Michael Harrold

Michael Harrold has written a book about his seven years in Pyongyang, entitled Comrades and Strangers: Behind the Closed Doors of North Korea.

"One very senior translator once asked me whether using the title Great Leader every time we referred to Kim Il-sung was perhaps too repetitive and limited its impact, and I agreed," he tells me.

So, for a time, the term was occasionally dropped from North Korea’s English language news reports, much to the excitement of foreign journalists.

Speculation began to run rife, Mr Harrold recalls, that the leader was losing his grip on power.

"I think they were somewhat disappointed when I told them it was simply a translation issue," he says.

Brigandish

The anecdote helps explain why North Korea’s statements sometimes read so strangely.

Mr Harrold was employed as a proof-reader, but the English translation itself is always done in-house by North Korean nationals.

Joo Sung-ha, North Korean defector, now journalist in Seoul

And it is the English language news reports from the country’s state-run news agency that make up the bulk of what appears in the foreign press.

Joo Sung-ha, the defector turned South Korean journalist, says there is an easy explanation for North Korea’s use of seemingly antiquated words like "brigandish" to refer to its opponents.

"They’re using old dictionaries," he says.

"Many were published in the 1960s with meanings that have now fallen out of use, and there are very few first-language English speakers available to make the necessary corrections."

So, while North Korea’s rhetoric is certainly worthy of analysis, perhaps we shouldn’t be too alarmed by every outburst.

To be fair, even its most inflammatory statements are not always what they seem.

That "fire shower" of nuclear attack made a great headline for journalists, but many gave less emphasis to an important proviso: as so often with North Korea, the warning was conditional, to be acted upon only if someone else started the fight.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Havana welcomes Royal Ballet

Visits will be among most high-profile cultural exchanges since Fidel Castro took power in 1959

Cuba has blended diplomacy and art by inviting two flagship western cultural institutions, Britain’s Royal Ballet and the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, to perform in Havana.

The visits will be among the most high-profile cultural exchanges with the west since Fidel Castro’s guerrillas seized power in 1959, turning the island into a communist outpost which has outlasted the cold war.

Royal Ballet dancers are due tomorrow to start a five-day programme which the Cuban government has billed as a landmark cultural event. Tickets are sold out and at least three of the performances will be shown on big screens outside the Gran Teatro in central Havana. Officials from the New York Philharmonic visited the city in recent days to investigate performance venues and logistics following an invitation from the culture ministry, a rare opening to a high-profile US institution.

“With these invitations the Cuban leadership is indicating a desire to expand the field of contact with musical and cultural leaders from the US and EU, which may lead to greater diplomatic contact down the road,” said Dan Erikson, author of the Cuba Wars and an analyst at the Inter-American Dialogue.

The Obama administration has responded in kind by granting the orchestra an exemption from the draconian US embargo, a four-decade old policy designed to isolate the island. Vice-president Joe Biden said the proposed trip was a “wonderful project”, Zubin Mehta, the orchestra’s president, told the New York Times.

That marked a departure from the Bush-era policy of “squelching” cultural contacts and could presage further relaxations, said Erikson. “There is likely to be a reopening of cultural exchanges as occurred during Bill Clinton’s presidency. Obama will certainly be more open to initiatives with ‘ping-pong’ diplomacy, and we may soon see the administration support basketball diplomacy.”

Cuba, once an international pariah, has been welcomed back into the diplomatic fold by Latin America and has been courted by Chinese, Russian and European governments and corporations, not least because of its offshore oil reserves.

Since succeeding his ailing older brother last year President Raúl Castro has mooted economic reforms and cultural openings to break the Caribbean island’s sense of stagnation. Economic reforms have stalled and renewed austerity mean less fruit, vegetables and electricity for an impoverished population.

But European diplomats in Havana said there was marginally more cultural tolerance. “It’s a bit more relaxed,” said one. Despite the financial crunch arts subsidies still support selected performers and keep opera, cinema and theatre available to almost all. The irony is that Fidel Castro has a tin ear and is one of the few Cubans who cannot sing or dance.

The Royal Ballet’s 150-strong team of dancers and technicians is reportedly the first ballet company to visit Havana since the Bolshoi, emissaries from the government’s Soviet ally, performed almost three decades ago.

The shows, three in the Gran Teatro, two in the Teatro Karl Marx, are part of a tribute to the legendary grand dame of Cuban dance, Alicia Alonso, who at 88 remains head of the National Ballet of Cuba.

Carlos Acosta, Cuba’s globetrotting ballet star, helped broker the visit and will perform alongside his British colleagues. The programme will include Swan Lake, Don Quixote, Wayne McGregor’s Chroma and Kenneth MacMillan’s Manon.

With Havana and Washington both giving the green light the New York Philharmonic said it hoped to accept Cuba’s invitation within weeks after inspecting concert halls and nailing down details such as budgets and equipment storage.

Mehta said there were provisional plans to perform on 31 October and 1 November at the 900-seat Teatro Amadeo Roldan, with the philharmonic’s incoming music director, Alan Gilbert, conducting.

The institution made history last year by performing in Pyongyang, one of the most striking examples of “orchestra diplomacy”.

Relations between the US and North Korea did not then improve – actually they nosedived – but the visit continued a tradition of classical music leaping political barriers.

In 1956 the Boston Symphony Orchestra became the first major US ensemble to visit the Soviet Union during the cold war. The New York Philharmonic, under conductor Leonard Bernstein, followed three years later. London’s Philharmonic Orchestra brought Beethoven, Brahms, Dvorak and Haydn to capacity crowds in Mao’s China in 1973.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Kim Jong Il Has Pancreatic Cancer: Report

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korean leader Kim Jong Il has life-threatening pancreatic cancer, a news report said Monday, days after new images of him looking gaunt spurred speculation that his health might be worsening following a reporte…

America engages

By Michael Zubrow

Barack Obama shakes hands after addressing Ghana's parliament in Accra, 11 July

With a series of rousing international speeches, President Barack Obama has definitively recast American foreign policy, shunning the Bush administration’s leadership-centric diplomacy and engaging directly with the people of the world.

In Prague, in Cairo, in Moscow and now in Accra, Mr Obama has translated his campaign message of shared values, hopes and dreams into an ambitious foreign policy agenda.

He has rejected calls from within the US for an inward turn.

Even as the international economy deteriorates and challenges to American power loom ever larger, Mr Obama has chosen to vigorously push for two grand goals – a world free of nuclear weapons, and the spread of good governance and development.

This, then, is the bold but simple approach of the Obama administration – rally the people of the world to take on the most challenging issues of our generation.

Public diplomacy

Barack Obama’s weapon of choice is public diplomacy, speaking plainly and persuasively, directly to the people.

While President George W Bush was well known for relying on close relationships with heads of state, President Obama’s rhetoric is aimed at the ruling elite and the common citizen alike.

In Cairo and Moscow, Obama spoke at prestigious local universities to highlight the importance of future generations that are growing more interconnected and interdependent by the day.

In Prague he referred to the strength of the people of a different generation, exclaiming: "That’s why I’m speaking to you in the centre of a Europe that is peaceful, united and free – because ordinary people believed that divisions could be bridged, even when their leaders did not."

Mr Obama’s outreach has not been limited to international speeches.

His use of public diplomacy has included a message to the Iranian people on Nowruz (the New Year holiday) and the vastly expanded use of technology to communicate with the world.

New emphasis

The focus of Mr Obama’s ambitions is also a marked change from the Bush administration.

While the Bush administration was consumed by the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Mr Obama’s major international speeches have largely ignored those deeply unpopular conflicts, instead focusing on the grand vision of reducing nuclear weapons and spreading good governance.

In Prague, Mr Obama spoke of the path to a nuclear-free world and his determination to foster "the right of people everywhere to live free from fear in the 21st Century".

"President Obama has made one thing overwhelmingly clear – America’s participation in solving the most challenging issues of our day is not optional"

In Cairo, he directly took on the issue of an Iranian nuclear programme, linking non-proliferation to America’s responsibility to draw down its own nuclear arsenal.

In Moscow, Mr Obama turned his words into action, securing further progress on joint Russian-American nuclear reductions.

The challenge of nuclear proliferation is hardly new, but rarely has it received such sustained presidential attention since the Reagan-Gorbachev era.

Mr Obama’s attention to global governance is another departure from President Bush’s freedom agenda.

Instead of the former administration’s overwhelming focus on elections as a panacea for better governance, Mr Obama stresses the importance of institutions.

In Accra, Mr Obama called for institutions that are transparent and reliable, noting that good governance is "about more than holding elections – it’s also about what happens between them".

Indeed, the administration’s choice of Ghana for the president’s first trip to sub-Saharan Africa was instructive.

Bypassing Kenya, the homeland of his father, Mr Obama cited Ghana’s institutions and stability as a model for Africa.

Shared values

Even without these two bold goals, Mr Obama’s plate is more than full.

He faces two wars, nuclear challenges from Pyongyang and Tehran, a continually evolving extremist threat and a daunting set of domestic problems.

The administration’s ambition (and focus) extends beyond these challenges to diverse issues like Middle East peace and global climate change.

But President Obama has made one thing overwhelmingly clear – America’s participation in solving the most challenging issues of our day is not optional.

These problems threaten the peace and stability of the world and we simply cannot pass them off to the next generation.

The future President Obama describes is one where America leads through example, not intervention.

His approach emphasises the emergence and importance of local organisations and institutions contributing to solving global problems.

With the US tied down in two wars and beset by economic hardship, Mr Obama envisions a different type of American leadership.

By emphasising shared values and interests he hopes to spark a renewed interest in mutual responsibility and coordinated global action. In these complex times only global action can bring global results.

Michael Zubrow is a foreign policy expert at the Center for a New American Security, a non-partisan, independent, national security think tank in Washington, DC.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

North Korea Army, Lab 110, Suspected Over Cyber Attacks

SEOUL, South Korea — A North Korean army lab of hackers was ordered to “destroy” South Korean communications networks _ evidence the isolated regime was behind cyberattacks that paralyzed South Korean and American Web sites _ news report…

Clinton plea for N Korea captives

By Kim Ghattas
BBC News, Washington

Journalists Euna Lee (L) and Laura Ling

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said she hopes North Korea will free two jailed American reporters.

Laura Ling and Euna Lee were imprisoned after apparently illegally entering North Korea from China in March.

The were sentenced to 12 years of hard labour for illegal border crossing and an unspecified "grave crime".

The US had so far appealed for their release on humanitarian grounds, but has now also acknowledged possible wrongdoing by the journalists.

‘Very sorry’

This is the first time that Mrs Clinton has appealed for amnesty for Ms Ling and Ms Lee.

She said the two reporters had expressed "great remorse for the incident", adding that "everyone is very sorry that it happened".

The secretary of state had so far dismissed the North Korean charges against the women as baseless.

Her comments came a day after the pair admitted they had broken North Korean law and said they needed help from their government, in a telephone call to Lisa Ling, Laura’s sister.

Mrs Clinton’s comments also coincide with a signal from North Korea that it would release the two journalists if the US made a formal apology.

Han Park, a Korea-born professor at an American university, made the suggestion after a trip to Pyongyang.

He also said North Korea had delayed sending the two journalists to a prison labour camp and was keeping them in a guest house.

Professor Park has in the past acted as a link between North Korea and Washington, in an unofficial capacity.

When asked whether Washington had sent Professor Park to Pyongyang, Secretary Clinton said she had no comment to make.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.