Detention Of Alek Sigley
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Alek Sigley () is an Australian national who was detained in North Korea in 2019 on espionage charges.


Early life

Sigley's father is Australian and his mother is Chinese. He finished school in Perth, Australia.


North Korea

Sigley visited the country as an exchange student in 2012. Sigley decided to start his own tour company on his fifth visit to North Korea in 2013. Sigley's tour company set itself apart from others by offering language classes from 2016 onwards. The first was held after the detention of Otto Warmbier, with Sigley in attendance as one of the participants. In May, 2018, he married his Japanese wife in Pyongyang. Guests of the wedding included South Korean celebrities Nikolai Johnsen and
Carlos Gorito Carlos Augusto Cardoso Gorito (born May 17, 1986) is a Brazilian who lives and performs in South Korea as a television personality and embassy worker. He is currently a cast member in the talk show ''Non-Summit''. In 2015, he wrote a column for t ...
and Russian scholar Andrei Lankov. Sigley is said to have travelled to North Korea at least ten times before electing to enroll in tertiary education there. In an article written for The Guardian, Sigley recounted that on Tuesday 25 June, he was approached in the internet room of the university's dormitory while he was finishing off homework about a North Korean short story ahead of an afternoon class, and ordered to attend a meeting. He was then ushered into a black Mercedes Benz, which took him to an undisclosed location, where he was detained for nine days in a room with no clock, completely cut off from the outside world, where he was made to write forced confessions to "crimes” he allegedly committed during his time studying in the country. When he was finally released from detention, he was made to read a “letter of apology” confessing to “threatening world peace”, “infringing upon the sovereignty of the DPRK”, among other heinous acts, while acknowledging that his human rights had been respected. Swedish politician Kent Härstedt was responsible for negotiating the release of Sigley. Upon being released from detention, Sigley travelled to Beijing, then Tokyo. Before his expulsion from North Korea, Sigley was particularly keen on sharing photos of his trips on his tour company website and blogging about his experiences on the same website as well as news outlets such as '' The Guardians opinion section and
NK News NK News is an American subscription-based news website that provides stories and analysis about North Korea. Established in 2011, it is headquartered in Seoul, South Korea with reporters in Washington, D.C. and London. Reporting is based on infor ...
. It has been suggested his contributions to
NK News NK News is an American subscription-based news website that provides stories and analysis about North Korea. Established in 2011, it is headquartered in Seoul, South Korea with reporters in Washington, D.C. and London. Reporting is based on infor ...
might have been the reason for his detention. NK News have denied this. After being released from detention, Sigley announced that his tour company would no longer be offering tours to the country. His business partner Michelle Joyce noted that their tour company hoped to re-establish tours to the country in the future. She also believed Sigley intends to return to North Korea.


See also

* Otto Warmbier *
Troy Collings Troy Michael Collings (1986 or 1987 – February or March 2020) was a New Zealand businessman and tour guide. In 2008, he co-founded Young Pioneer Tours, a company known for specialising in low-cost tours of North Korea and other remote places ...
*
John Short (missionary) John Alexander Short (, born 26 January 1939 in Barmera) is a Hong Kong-based Australian Christian missionary noted for his 2014 arrest in North Korea and subsequent release 15 days later. Early life and education Short was born to working class ...
* List of foreign nationals detained in North Korea * Tourism in North Korea *
Australia–North Korea relations Current and historical bilateral relations ( ko, 오스트랄리아-조선민주주의인민공화국 관계) exist between Australia and North Korea. The two countries nominally have different relations, though as of 2013 neither Australia or ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Sigley, Alek 1989 births Living people 2019 in North Korea Prisoners and detainees of North Korea Australian people imprisoned abroad