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Clinton leaves North Korea with two journalists after Kim pardon

Last Updated 05 August 2009, 06:24 IST
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Clinton, Laura Ling and Euna Lee were on their way to Los Angeles, where the two women are to meet their families, CNN quoted Clinton spokesman Matt McKenna as saying.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Il granted pardons to the two American journalists who have been held in the country for months, South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported early Wednesday, shortly after former US president Bill Clinton arrived in the Stalinist state to secure their release.

The report came shortly after North Korea's state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) caused confusion by retracting its report that Clinton had left the country.

The agency did not give a reason for the retraction a few hours after the initial story had moved, South Korea's Yonhap News Agency said.
Clinton arrived unexpectedly in Pyongyang Tuesday and met with North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, who pardoned Ling and Lee, KCNA said.

The former president also met the journalists, who were arrested in March at the Chinese-North Korean border. They were accused of sneaking into North Korea illegally and sentenced last month to 12-year prison terms.
The United States has continuously called on Pyongyang to release the journalists on humanitarian grounds.

Yonhap, quoting the North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency, reported that Kim had agreed to pardon the journalists.
"Kim Jong Il issued an order of the Chairman of the National Defence Commission on granting a special pardon to the two American journalists who had been sentenced to hard labour ... releasing them," the report said.

During the visit, Clinton posed for pictures with Kim, whose health has been in question since he reportedly suffered from a stroke last year, and the reclusive North Korea leader hosted a dinner for him in the evening.

Clinton's private plane was reportedly still in North Korea, and FOX News cited a US government source as saying the journalists would likely return with the former president.
The White House had confirmed Clinton's trip to win the release of the hostages, but would provide no details, not wanting to say anything that could jeopardize the effort.
"This is obviously a very sensitive topic," White House spokesman Robert Gibbs told reporters earlier in Washington. "We will hope to provide some more detail at a later point. Our focus right now is ensuring the safety of the two journalists that are in North Korea right now."
Clinton was greeted by high-ranking North Korean officials upon his arrival, including Kim Kye Gwan, North Korea's top nuclear negotiator, state-run Central Television said. Some analysts speculated that Clinton's trip could be a catalyst for thawing relations and resuming negotiations on Pyongyang's contentious nuclear programme.
North Korean media reported that Clinton and Kim Jong Il engaged in "serious conversation." The White House flatly denied a North Korean media report that Clinton had delivered a personal message from President Barack Obama to Kim.

There was hope that Clinton's visit could pave the way for the US and North Korea to begin making progress on stalled negotiations over Pyongyang's nuclear activities.
The talks have been at an impasse since last year, and North Korea announced in January it would no longer participate in the six-nation talks aimed at resolving the nuclear dispute. The other countries are China, Japan, Russia and South Korea.

North Korea recently signalled its interest in one-on-one discussions with the US. Washington said it would be willing for direct communication in the context of the six-nation format, but not until Pyongyang takes steps to live up to its obligations in a 2005 disarmament agreement.

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(Published 05 August 2009, 06:18 IST)

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