Australian student goes MISSING in North Korea
Australia on Thursday (Jun 27) said it was ‘urgently seeking clarification.’ on the fate of a citizen feared detained in North Korea.
The department of foreign affairs said it was in contact with the family of a man “who has been reported as being detained in North Korea”.
Korean-language media named him as Alek Sigley, one of only a handful of Western students at Kim Il Sung University, where he studies Korean literature.
He also runs a company specializing in tours of North Korea and has written articles about Pyongyang’s dining scene and other issues for NK News and other outlets.
His last social media posts came three days ago.
“The Department is urgently seeking clarification,” a statement from Canberra read. “Owing to our privacy obligations we will not provide further comment.”
Australia has no diplomatic mission of its own in Pyongyang and is represented in North Korea by the Swedish embassy.
Canberra advises against non-essential travel to North Korea – where several foreigners have been detained in the past.
Consular advice recommends Australians “stay as short a time as possible, eliminate unnecessary activities, and review your security arrangements”.
In 2016, Otto Warmbier, a University of Virginia student, was imprisoned during a tour of the authoritarian state after being accused of taking down a propaganda poster.
Doctors said he suffered severe brain damage while in detention, fell into a coma and died days after arriving back in the United States in June 2017. He was 22.
In a post in January this year, Sigley describes a strong interest in East Asia and “socialism” and recounts his first trip to North Korea in 2012.
The son of an anglo-Australian man and Chinese mother, he previously studied at Fudan University in Shanghai and in South Korea before moving to Pyongyang, according to his post.
“I’m enrolled in a master’s degree in Korean literature in the university’s postgraduate school. Because I am the only foreign student in this particular program, my courses are all conducted one-on-one with the teacher,” he wrote.
Steering clear of politics, Sigley describes a life chatting with Chinese exchange students, drinking with Russian students and playing video games and going to restaurants with students from Canada and Sweden.
In an article for the Guardian newspaper published in late March, Sigley said he had “nearly unprecedented access” to Pyongyang as a long-term foreign resident.
“I’m free to wander around the city, without anyone accompanying me. Interaction with locals can be limited at times, but I can shop and dine almost anywhere I want,” he wrote.