Google – AFP, Neil Connor (AFP), 3 Sep 2013
![]() |
Former NBA
basketball player Dennis Rodman (C) makes his way
through Beijing's
international airport, September 3, 2013 (AFP, Wang Zhao)
|
BEIJING —
Flamboyant former NBA star Dennis Rodman returned to North Korea Tuesday to
visit his "friend" leader Kim Jong-Un, playing down speculation he
would try to help free a jailed American.
Kenneth Bae,
44, has been held prisoner in the North since November, and Rodman had said
last week that he might seek the man's release.
But
speaking to reporters at Beijing airport en route to the North Korean capital,
Rodman said "I haven't been promised anything" on Bae.
"I'm
just going to meet my friend Kim the marshal to start a new basketball league
going," Rodman said. "I'm just trying to keep the communication job
going."
![]() |
Kim Jong-Un
hugs former NBA star
Dennis Rodman during a dinner in
Pyongyang on February 28,
2013
(KCNA/AFP/File)
|
"I am
happy to come back here again, to meet my friend," Rodman was quoted by
China's Xinhua news agency as saying in Pyongyang.
But the
agency quoted a North Korean sports ministry source as saying the visit
"has nothing to do" with Bae.
The source
said the delegation would give a basketball clinic, watch a taekwondo
performance and a women's football match, and travel to the Mount Kumgang
resort during its four-day stay.
Xinhua said
Rodman had been invited by the North's sports authority and his entourage
included Michael Spavor, a Canadian who runs an education exchange scheme
called the Pyongyang Project. Also accompanying him was Joseph Terwilliger, an
associate professor of neuroscience at Columbia University in New York.
Terwilliger's
webpage on a Columbia site shows him in evening dress playing the tuba, and
says he teaches workshops on "Logical Reasoning in Human Genetics".
The
Swiss-educated Kim, who is around 30, is reported to be a huge fan of
basketball and especially of the Chicago Bulls, with whom Rodman won three NBA
titles alongside Michael Jordan in the 1990s.
![]() |
North
Korean leader Kim Jong-Un (C-L)
and former NBA star Dennis Rodman
watch basketball in Pyongyang,
February 28, 2013 (KCNA/AFP/File)
|
Rodman
faced ridicule from many US commentators over that trip, which came during high
tensions over rocket launches and atomic tests by Kim's isolated regime.
At the
time, in an enthusiastic commentary on the Kim-Rodman meeting, the North's news
agency quoted Rodman -- nicknamed "The Worm" -- as saying the impasse
in US-North Korean relations was "regrettable".
North Korea
and the United States have never had diplomatic ties.
A US envoy
had been due to travel to North Korea last week to seek Bae's release, but
Pyongyang cancelled the invitation at short notice. The North said joint
US-South Korean military drills had "beclouded the atmosphere".
Bae, a
Korean-American tour operator, was arrested in November 2012 as he entered the
hardline communist state's northeastern port city of Rason.
North
Korea, which bans religious proselytising, said Bae was a Christian evangelist
who brought in "inflammatory" material.
He was
sentenced to 15 years' hard labour earlier this year on charges of trying to
topple the North Korea regime. Speculation had mounted that Rodman would try to
use his budding friendship with Kim to help free the jailed American.
![]() |
Dennis
Rodman (C) makes his way
through Beijing's international airport on
September
3, 2013 (AFP, Wang Zhao)
|
He also
appealed for Bae's release on Twitter, posting: "I'm calling on the
Supreme Leader of North Korea or as I call him 'Kim', to do me a solid and cut
Kenneth Bae loose."
A spokesman
for the current trip's sponsors, bookmakers Paddy Power, told AFP that Rodman
was "not going to North Korea to discuss freeing Kenneth Bae" but
that the visit was "another basketball diplomacy tour".
Seoul-based
activist Do Hee-Yoon has told AFP he suspects Bae was arrested because he had
taken photographs of emaciated children in North Korea as part of efforts to
appeal for more outside aid.
The
specialist news site NK News, headquartered in Washington, reported that Bae
was using his tour company to bring Christian missionaries into North Korea.




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