US President Donald Trump on Friday said the United States did not pay any money to North Korea as it sought the release of Otto Warmbier, a day after a report said Trump had approved a $2 million bill from Pyongyang for the American student’s care.
“No money was paid to North Korea for Otto Warmbier, not two Million Dollars, not anything else,” Trump wrote in a tweet.
The Washington Post reported on Thursday that Trump had approved payment of a $2 million bill from Pyongyang to cover its care of the comatose college student, who was held in a North Korean prison for 17 months until June 2017.
The Treasury Department received the bill from North Korea and it remained unpaid through 2017, the Post reported.
It was not clear whether the administration paid the invoice later.
Trump’s tweet did not address whether any agreement had been made, and representatives for the White House and the State Department did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Warmbier, a University of Virginia student from Ohio visiting North Korea as a tourist, was imprisoned in January 2016. He was sentenced to 15 years of hard labour for allegedly trying to steal an item with a propaganda slogan from his hotel, North Korean state media said.
Warmbier died six days after his release from North Korea.
An Ohio coroner said Warmbier died from a lack of oxygen and blood to his brain.
North Korea, which has dismissed claims that it tortured the student, blamed food poisoning and a sleeping pill.
Last December, a US court ordered North Korea to pay $501 million in damages for the torture and death of Warmbier.
In his tweet on Friday morning, Trump defended his handling of hostage negotiations and slammed efforts by his Democratic predecessor Barack Obama.
He noted that the Obama administration had swapped five Taliban prisoners to secure the release of Bowe Bergdahl, a US Army sergeant who has since been dishonourably discharged. Trump also accused Obama officials of paying ransom money in exchange for the return of four detained Americans in 2016, a charge the Obama administration has denied.
The Obama administration had said the payment of $400 million to Iran settled a longstanding Iranian claim at the Hague that coincided with four detained Americans’ return but was not a ransom.
Obama had also defended the deal that led to Bergdahl’s release and later changed the way the US government handles cases in which Americans are detained by militant groups following a six-month review of the issue.
A spokeswoman for Obama’s office had no immediate comment on Trump’s tweet.
Trump also praised Russian President Vladimir Putin’s comments on North Korea this week following the Russian leader’s summit with Pyongyang’s Kim Jong Un.
Speaking to reporters at the White House, Trump also said China was helping with efforts aimed at the denuclearisation of North Korea.
Putin said after holding his first face-to-face talks with that US security guarantees would probably not be enough to persuade Pyongyang to shut its nuclear programme.
The talks between Putin and Kim did not appear to have yielded any major breakthrough.
But Putin, keen to use the summit to burnish Russia’s diplomatic credentials as a global player, said he believed any US guarantees might need to be supported by the other nations involved in previous six-way talks on the nuclear issue.
That would mean including Russia, China, Japan and South Korea as well as the United States and North Korea, a long-standing format that has been sidelined by unilateral US efforts to broker a deal.
“They (the North Koreans) only need guarantees about their security. That’s it. All of us together need to think about this,” Putin told reporters after talks with Kim.
“I’m deeply convinced that if we get to a situation when some kind of security guarantees are needed from one party, in this case for North Korea, that it won’t be possible to get by without international guarantees. It’s unlikely that any agreements between two countries will be enough.”
Reuters