US student freed from North Korea has severe brain injury

Student was arrested for trying to steal an item bearing propaganda slogan on tour group visit


Reuters June 16, 2017
Otto Frederick Warmbier (C), a University of Virginia student who was detained in North Korea since early January, is taken to North Korea's top court in Pyongyang, North Korea, in this photo released by Kyodo March 16, 2016 PHOTO: REUTERS

WYOMING: An American university student who was returned to the United States this week after being held in North Korea for 17 months has a severe brain injury and is in a state of "unresponsive wakefulness," doctors said on Thursday.

Otto Warmbier, 22, who arrived in the United States on Tuesday, is stable but "shows no sign of understanding language, responding to verbal commands or awareness of his surrounding," said Dr. Daniel Kanter, medical director of the neuroscience intensive care unit at the University of Cincinnati. "He has not spoken," Kanter said at a press conference. "He has not engaged in any purposeful movements or behaviors."

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He said Warmbier was breathing on his own. Warmbier, from Wyoming, Ohio, has been in a coma since March 2016, shortly after he was sentenced to 15 years of hard labor in North Korea, his family said on Tuesday. He was arrested for trying to steal an item bearing a propaganda slogan, North Korean media reported. He was visiting North Korea with a tour group.

On Thursday, North Korea said that it had released Warmbier "on humanitarian grounds." The University of Virginia student's father Fred Warmbier said at an earlier news conference that his son had been "brutalized and terrorized" by the North Korean government. He said the family did not believe North Korea's story that his son had fallen into a coma after contracting botulism and being given a sleeping pill.

Doctors said on Thursday that there was no sign of botulism in Otto Warmbier's system. Kanter said that Warmbier had suffered "extensive loss of brain tissue in all regions of the brain, but he declined to discuss Warmbier's prognosis at the request of his family. On Thursday, the State Department said that US diplomat Joseph Yun, who negotiated Warmbier's release, had also met with three other US citizens being held in North Korea.

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Tensions between the United States and North Korea have been heightened by North Korean missile launches and two nuclear bomb tests. Pyongyang has vowed to develop a nuclear-tipped intercontinental ballistic missile capable of hitting the US mainland.

Fred Warmbier said he was stunned when told of his son's condition one week ago. "I don't know what being in shock is, but I'm pretty sure I was," he said. "There is no excuse for any civilized nation to have kept his condition secret and denied him top-notch medical care for so long." He said his wife, Cindy, had not left their son's side since his return to the United States and that he had spoken with US President Donald Trump on Wednesday night.

In Wyoming, a northern Cincinnati suburb of about 8,000 people, Warmbier's return to the United States was marked by blue and white ribbons, representing the colors of the local high school, tied around trees and telephone polls.

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