Advertisement
Advertisement
North Korea
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
US student Otto Warmbier in 2016. Photo: AFP/KCNA via KNS

Donald Trump says US student Otto Warmbier’s death wasn’t in vain as it lead to the North Korean summit

Trump says: ‘It was a terrible thing, it was brutal, but a lot of people started to focus on what was going on, including North Korea’

North Korea

US college student Otto Warmbier’s death days after he was released from North Korean custody in 2017 was not in vain as it helped initiate a process that led to Tuesday’s historic summit with North Korea, US President Donald Trump said.

“Without Otto this would not have happened,” Trump told a post-summit news conference in Singapore. “Something happened from that day. It was a terrible thing, it was brutal, but a lot of people started to focus on what was going on, including North Korea.”

“I really think that Otto is someone who did not die in vain.”

Otto Warmbier is escorted at the supreme court in Pyongyang, North Korea in 2016. Photo: AP Photo

Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un pledged, in the first ever meeting between leaders of the long-time foes, to work toward complete denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula while Washington committed to providing security guarantees.

Although human rights was not included in the joint statement signed by Trump and Kim, the US president said he raised the issue and he believed the North Korean leader wanted to “do the right thing.”

Trump said the negotiations he has initiated should help improve conditions in the isolated country, which successive US administrations have targeted for gross human rights violations. Trump has in the past condemned it as one of the world’s most brutal governments.

Warmbier’s parents, Fred and Cindy Warmbier said they appreciated Trump’s comments.

“We are proud of Otto and miss him,” the parents said in a statement. “Hopefully something positive can come from this.”

The Warmbiers declined through the law firm representing them in a wrongful-death lawsuit to comment beyond the statement.

Warmbier, from Wyoming, Ohio, and a student at the University of Virginia, died at the age of 22 days after he was returned to the United States in a coma.

Trump and Kim’s body language was a complex display of power and politeness

He had been imprisoned in North Korea from January 2016 after being sentenced to 15 years of hard labour for trying to steal an item bearing a propaganda slogan from his hotel, North Korea state media said.

An Ohio coroner said the cause of his death was lack of oxygen and blood to the brain. North Korea blamed botulism and ingestion of a sleeping pill and dismissed torture claims.

Cindy and Fred Warmbier, parents of Otto Warmbier, wait for a meeting in May at the United Nations headquarters. Photo: AP

US Senator Rob Portman of Ohio said on Tuesday that the day he joined Warmbier’s parents to welcome their son home nearly a year ago “is a constant reminder to me about the evil nature of this regime.”

How safe is North Korea – and is it an ethical tourist destination?

“Following this historic summit, I remain sceptical but hopeful that this new dialogue can translate into meaningful progress,” Portman said in a statement.

In a 2014 report, UN investigators said that 80,000 to 120,000 people were thought to be held in prison labour camps in North Korea.

Post