North Korean labour camp gave US citizen ‘greater understanding’ of the country, he says

Kenneth Bae knew he was in trouble when he opened his briefcase for a North Korean customs official and saw a computer hard drive he meant to leave in China.
He had no idea how much trouble: he would go on to spend the next two years in detention, including in a labour camp where he was ordered to plant soybeans in sweltering heat and dig sewage lines in frozen ground.
As difficult as it was, the US citizen says, it also gave him a greater understanding of the isolated nation.
North Korea says jailed American Kenneth Bae not a ‘bargaining chip’
“Even though I was in and out of North Korea 17 times prior to that, I only stayed a short period,” he said in an interview ahead of the Tuesday release of his memoir. “By staying as a prisoner for two years, I learned their culture, their way of thinking, how the ordinary people live in their day-to-day lives.”
Not Forgotten: The True Story of My Imprisonment in North Korea is appearing as North Korea holds two other Americans in custody. One, Kim Dong-chul, was sentenced last Friday to 10 years of hard labour on charges of espionage and subversion.

North Korea regularly accuses Washington and Seoul of sending spies to overthrow its government. Outsiders say North Korea seeks to use its US detainees to wring concessions from Washington.