NYU student ‘wanted to be arrested’
SEOUL: A South Korean student held in North Korea for illegal entry has told CNN in an interview from Pyongyang that he wanted to be arrested.Joo Won-Moon, 21, who attends New York University and has permanent US residency, said he had hoped to create an “event” that could improve relations
By our correspondents
May 06, 2015
SEOUL: A South Korean student held in North Korea for illegal entry has told CNN in an interview from Pyongyang that he wanted to be arrested.
Joo Won-Moon, 21, who attends New York University and has permanent US residency, said he had hoped to create an “event” that could improve relations between North and South Korea.
It was unclear whether he was speaking freely or had been told by North Korean authorities what to say.
“I wanted to be arrested,” Joo told a CNN reporter, looking relaxed and even smiling as he walked into a conference room at Pyongyang’s Koryo Hotel for the interview.
Joo was arrested after crossing the Yalu River into the North from the Chinese border city of Dandong on April 22, Pyongyang’s official KCNA news agency said Saturday.
He told CNN he had crossed two barbed-wire fences and walked through farmland until he reached a large river. He followed the river until soldiers arrested him.
“I thought that by my entrance to the DPRK (North Korea), illegally I acknowledge, I thought that some great event could happen and hopefully that event could have a good effect on the relations between the North and (South Korea),” Joo said, without elaborating on the event.
“I hope that I will be able to tell the world how an ordinary college student entered the DPRK illegally but however with the generous treatment of the DPRK that I will be able to return home safely,” he said.
Joo was born in Seoul, moved to Wisconsin with his family in 2001 and then moved again to Rhode Island.
Joo Won-Moon, 21, who attends New York University and has permanent US residency, said he had hoped to create an “event” that could improve relations between North and South Korea.
It was unclear whether he was speaking freely or had been told by North Korean authorities what to say.
“I wanted to be arrested,” Joo told a CNN reporter, looking relaxed and even smiling as he walked into a conference room at Pyongyang’s Koryo Hotel for the interview.
Joo was arrested after crossing the Yalu River into the North from the Chinese border city of Dandong on April 22, Pyongyang’s official KCNA news agency said Saturday.
He told CNN he had crossed two barbed-wire fences and walked through farmland until he reached a large river. He followed the river until soldiers arrested him.
“I thought that by my entrance to the DPRK (North Korea), illegally I acknowledge, I thought that some great event could happen and hopefully that event could have a good effect on the relations between the North and (South Korea),” Joo said, without elaborating on the event.
“I hope that I will be able to tell the world how an ordinary college student entered the DPRK illegally but however with the generous treatment of the DPRK that I will be able to return home safely,” he said.
Joo was born in Seoul, moved to Wisconsin with his family in 2001 and then moved again to Rhode Island.
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