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U.S. Army deserter to reunite with wife
By Associated Press
Published July 8, 2004
TOKYO - For nearly 40 years, Charles Robert Jenkins has been a wanted man, unable to leave his adopted home of North Korea for fear of being court-martialed for allegedly deserting his Army unit.
On Friday, that will change - at least temporarily.
After months of intense negotiations, a jet chartered by the Japanese government is to whisk 64-year-old Jenkins out of the North Korean capital of Pyongyang. The plane will fly Jenkins and his two daughters to Jakarta, Indonesia - again out of the reach of U.S. authorities - for a reunion watched by all of Japan.
Japan's interest isn't in Jenkins but in his wife, who was kidnapped by North Korean spies in 1978 after shopping with her mother on the tiny islet of Sado off Japan's main island.
Her mother has never been accounted for. But Hitomi Soga was allowed to return to Japan with several other abductees after North Korean leader Kim Jong Il ended decades of denial and confessed during a summit in 2002 with Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi that under his late father's leadership his country had carried out at least a dozen kidnappings.
Soga's husband, formerly of Rich Square, N.C., complicates her case.
Koizumi hoped to win the return of Jenkins and his daughters - Belinda, 20, and Mika, 18 - when he visited North Korea on May 22. But he failed in an hourlong meeting to persuade Jenkins to come to Japan, where he would almost certainly be turned over to American custody.
Responding to an outpouring of sympathy for Soga, the Japanese government negotiated a reunion in Indonesia, which has no extradition treaty with Washington. Soga flies to Jakarta today, and her husband the next day.
Washington is lukewarm.
Koizumi raised the issue with President Bush last month and got sympathy but no concessions.
Secretary of State Colin Powell was also firm.
"The Japanese are approaching this as a humanitarian issue and we understand and accept that," he said. "Sgt. Jenkins is, of course, a deserter from the U.S. Army and those charges remain outstanding."
Little is known about Jenkins' life in North Korea, or his motives for his 1965 defection from a unit near the Demilitarized Zone dividing the peninsula. He is known to have taught English and played an American villain in government propaganda movies. Soga, who was a student in his English class, is 20 years his junior.
He has made only one public appearance since Soga returned to Japan, allowing a tearful plea to a TV camera from a hospital bed for her to return.
[Last modified July 8, 2004, 01:00:34]
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