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Journalists' Families Appeal To N. Korea

The families of two American journalists sentenced to 12 years in a North Korean labor prison urged its hard-line government to grant them clemency, amid hopes the U.S. government would send an envoy to negotiate their release.

The sentencing of Laura Ling and Euna Lee on Monday is a new challenge for President Obama who last week warned he will take a "very hard look" at tougher measures against North Korea for failing to end its nuclear program and testing a second atomic device on May 25.

"We remain hopeful that the governments of the United States and North Korea can come to an agreement that will result in the release of the (women)," said a joint statement by their families. "We ask the government of North Korea to show compassion and grant Laura and Euna clemency and allow them to return home to their families."

CBS News correspondent Barry Petersen reports that Washington's options for negotiating with the communist regime are limited - the U.S. doesn't even have an embassy in the North, and now there is concern for the health of the two women.

The families' statement noted that Ling, 32, has a serious medical condition, a reference to her ulcer, and that Lee's 4-year-old daughter is showing "signs of anguish over the absence of her mother."

Lee, 36, and Ling - who work for former Vice President Al Gore's Current TV - were arrested March 17 near the China-North Korea border where they were reporting about the trafficking of women. It's unclear whether they tried to sneak into the North or if aggressive border guards crossed into Chinese territory and grabbed them, as has happened before.

The North accused the reporters of unspecified "hostile acts" and illegally entering the country, but the formal charges against them were unclear. Their trial, which was closed to foreigners, began Thursday and they were sentenced Monday to 12 years of "reform through labor."

But many analysts doubt that Pyongyang is interested in having them sent to jail or one of its gulags, where poorly fed inmates often do backbreaking work in factories, coal mines and rice paddies.

Rather, the sentence is a way for Pyongyang to maximize its leverage with Washington, said Roh Jeong-ho, the director of the Center for Korean Legal Studies at Columbia Law School.

"I don't think the reporters will do hard labor. It's simply not in the North Koreans' interests to make them go through that," he said in comments e-mailed to The Associated Press.

He said the whole case appears to be a calculated move by Pyongyang to get Washington's attention. By not accusing the women of espionage it has offered a "face-saving way of resolving the issue," Roh said.

"Essentially, it's a whole package of brinksmanship," he said. "They want to say to the Obama administration 'take us seriously and, in turn, we'll resolve this issue for you."'

North Korea wants to be recognized as a legitimate nuclear state, but Washington has so far refused to endorse such a status for the unpredictable nation, which has a history of terrorism, ripping up agreements and sharing its nuclear know-how with nations hostile to America.

Not all experts on North Korea expressed such resounding optimism over the women's fate. Former Clinton administration negotiator Jack Pritchard, one of the few Americans to actually meet North Korean ruler Kim Jong Il, told CBS News correspondent David Martin, they would likely be held "for quite a while."

"They may even serve out their term," Pritchard told Martin.

The U.N. is debating a new resolution to punish the North for its second nuclear test last month. Pyongyang followed the test with a barrage of missile launches, and is believed to be preparing another long-range missile test at a new launch-pad.

"At this point it looks like they have made their decision . It is to move forward with a full fledged nuclear weapons program," Pritchard told Martin.

Asked Monday if Washington will send an envoy to the North, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said the Obama administration is "pursuing every possible approach that we can consider in order to persuade the North Koreans to release them and send these young women home."

She stressed that the reporters' case and Washington's efforts to punish North Korea for its recent nuclear test are "entirely separate matters."

She did not elaborate but a senior Obama administration official said New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson and Gore had been in contact with the White House and State Department about potential next steps, including possibly sending an envoy to try to negotiate the release of the two women. Petersen reports that both men are possible candidates for the task.

Richardson, who helped win the release of Americans from North Korea in the 1990s, said he was "ready to do anything" the Obama administration asked.

Richardson said on NBC's "Today" show that the journalists were part of a "high-stakes poker game." Now that the legal process has been completed, he said he thinks talks for their release can begin, with some kind of a political pardon as a goal.

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