Alek Sigley is a Korean/English-Australian student studying the Korean language at Kim Il Sung University. He also led tours there and had more access to the population than a westerner would typically have. He isn’t the only one, either.
The majority of foreign students studying in North Korea, because it’s cheap, are from China, which has a not-entirely terrible relationship with North Korea.
The relationship between North Korea and Australia?
I don’t think this should be allowed, but it’s not like anything can be done about it. If someone really wants to go to North Korea and live there you can’t stop them. I don’t feel the government should try anything beyond diplomacy to free him.
But I really hope he’s just sick for a couple of days, explaining why he’s not on social media.
Seriously. My first thought was that this was a kind of collaborative scare tactic, that he was posing as someone joking about it to be made a public example of, while behind the scenes it was all pre-arranged with his cooperation and he’s actually deep in the propaganda side of things.
That’s almost more believable than that he could be that oblivious
This is part of the unnerving thing about dealing with totalitarian regimes -
The executive director of a center for peace is talking about nuking NYC. War is peace, freedom is slavery, ignorance is strength.
I hope this student is OK, and that the North Koreans haven’t beaten him into a coma and are preparing to send a bill for it to the Aussie government. I hope it. I don’t know if I expect it, but I hope it.
Yeah, somebody’s got to be pretty dumb to be from a Western country and study in North Korea.
However, I do think that Australia should do what it can to see to his safety and release. Also, if someone sets their house on fire because they were, say, smoking in bed or some other dumb thing, I think the fire department should do their best to make sure that dummy doesn’t die.
“Peace is our Profession” – Motto of the United States Air Force Strategic Air Command, 1947 - 1992, a time when they operated a significant fraction of the world’s entire nuclear weapons capacity in a state of hair-trigger readiness.