A 29-year-old Australian student detained
in North Korea arrived in Tokyo on Thursday, hours after surfacing in
Beijing where he said he felt "great" after being released.
Alek Sigley -- one of a handful of Westerners living and studying in
North Korea -- disappeared without a trace around June 23, prompting a
week of deep concern and frantic speculation about his fate.
For days Sigley's family received no word about his whereabouts or
wellbeing, stoking fears he may have been the latest in a long line of
foreigners to become entangled in North Korea's police state.
But on Thursday afternoon, he emerged suddenly in Beijing.
"I'm ok, I'm ok, yeah, yeah, I'm good. I'm very good," he said upon
arriving at Beijing's international airport. Asked how he felt, he
responded: "Great."
He went to the Australian embassy and was later seen again at the airport, where he smiled again and waved at reporters.
Hours later he flew to Japan, where his wife lives. He landed shortly
after 10:00 pm (1300 GMT), smiling broadly, but declined to answer media
questions as he arrived at Haneda airport.
Earlier, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison told lawmakers that
Sigley had "been released from detention in the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea" and was "safe and well".
Sigley's father Gary, a professor of Chinese and Asian studies, told
media in Australia that the family was "extremely pleased he is safe and
sound".
The father admitted he had missed a call from his son because he had
been busy "shopping", but hoped to give him a "big hug and kiss" soon.
- 'Demystify' North Korea -
Sigley detention came just days before a G20 summit and a landmark
meeting between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong
Un.
Trump was intimately involved in the case of University of Virginia
student Otto Warmbier, who was imprisoned during a tour of the
authoritarian state in 2016.
Doctors said Warmbier suffered severe brain damage while in detention,
fell into a coma and died days after arriving back in the United States,
aged 22.
Sigley was much more familiar with the country and spoke fluent Korean.
He ran tours to North Korea and a number of social media sites, which
usually had a stream of apolitical content about life in one of the
world's most secretive nations.
His blog posts focused on everyday Pyongyang -- everything from the city's dining scene to North Korean app reviews.
"He is always trying to demystify North Korea, unlike the typical
Western media. He tries to understand the people there," his 26-year-old
Japanese wife, Yuka Morinaga, had said.
The pair married in a ceremony in Pyongyang last year.
The case was complicated by Australia's lack of diplomatic representation in North Korea.
Morrison thanked Sweden for its help in securing Sigley's release.
Earlier this week Swedish special envoy Kent Harstedt travelled to
Pyongyang, where he raised the issue with North Korean authorities.
"I would like to extend my deepest gratitude to Swedish authorities for
their invaluable assistance in securing Alek's prompt release," Morrison
said, hailing it as a triumph of "behind the scenes" diplomacy.
The Swedish Foreign Ministry said Thursday that the Korean authorities assisted with "speedy actions".
"I welcome that Alek Sigley has been released and is in good health," said Foreign Minister Margot Wallstrom.
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