•  
(3) Jenkins says he can't visit Japan for fear of arrest

(3) Jenkins says he can't visit Japan for fear of arrest

PYONGYNAG, North Korea - Former U.S. Army Sgt. Charles Robert Jenkins, the husband of one of five Japanese citizens abducted to North Korea and now back in Japan, said on Nov. 29 in an interview with Kyodo News at a hospital in Pyongyang he feels sorry that he cannot visit Japan because he thinks he will be arrested quickly on a charge of desertion.

  •  
(2) Jenkins says he can't visit Japan for fear of arrest

(2) Jenkins says he can't visit Japan for fear of arrest

PYONGYNAG, North Korea - Former U.S. Army Sgt. Charles Robert Jenkins, the husband of one of five Japanese citizens abducted to North Korea and now back in Japan, talks to Kyodo News on Nov. 29 in the hospital where he has been since Nov. 26 due to extreme fatigue. The 62-year-old husband of Hitomi Soga is still suffering from insomnia and trembling due to emotional ups and downs.

  •  
(1) Jenkins says he can't visit Japan for fear of arrest

(1) Jenkins says he can't visit Japan for fear of arrest

PYONGYNAG, North Korea - Former U.S. Army Sgt. Charles Robert Jenkins (R), the husband of one of five Japanese citizens abducted to North Korea and now back in Japan, meets a Kyodo News reporter Nov. 29 at a hospital in Pyongyang. Jenkins said he cannot go to Japan for fear of being arrested by U.S. authorities. His doctor is on the left, while the man in the center is an interpreter.

  •  
(6)Koizumi, Kim agree on resumption of normalization talks

(6)Koizumi, Kim agree on resumption of normalization talks

PYONGYANG, North Korea - Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi (L) and North Korean leader Kim Jong Il sign a joint statement at the end of their talks in Pyongynag on Sept. 17. (Pool photo)

  •  
(7)Koizumi, Kim agree on resumption of normalization talks

(7)Koizumi, Kim agree on resumption of normalization talks

PYONGYANG, North Korea - Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi (L) and North Korean leader Kim Jong Il exchange signed joint statements at the end of talks in Pyongynag on Sept. 17. (Pool photo)

  •  
(7)Koizumi, Kim agree on resumption of normalization talks

(7)Koizumi, Kim agree on resumption of normalization talks

PYONGYANG, North Korea - Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi (L) and North Korean leader Kim Jong Il exchange signed joint statements at the end of talks in Pyongynag on Sept. 17. (Pool photo) (Kyodo)

  •  
(1) Jenkins says he can't visit Japan for fear of arrest

(1) Jenkins says he can't visit Japan for fear of arrest

PYONGYNAG, North Korea - Former U.S. Army Sgt. Charles Robert Jenkins (R), the husband of one of five Japanese citizens abducted to North Korea and now back in Japan, meets a Kyodo News reporter Nov. 29 at a hospital in Pyongyang. Jenkins said he cannot go to Japan for fear of being arrested by U.S. authorities. His doctor is on the left, while the man in the center is an interpreter.(Kyodo)

  •  
(3) Jenkins says he can't visit Japan for fear of arrest

(3) Jenkins says he can't visit Japan for fear of arrest

PYONGYNAG, North Korea - Former U.S. Army Sgt. Charles Robert Jenkins, the husband of one of five Japanese citizens abducted to North Korea and now back in Japan, said on Nov. 29 in an interview with Kyodo News at a hospital in Pyongyang he feels sorry that he cannot visit Japan because he thinks he will be arrested quickly on a charge of desertion.(Kyodo)

  •  
(2) Jenkins says he can't visit Japan for fear of arrest

(2) Jenkins says he can't visit Japan for fear of arrest

PYONGYNAG, North Korea - Former U.S. Army Sgt. Charles Robert Jenkins, the husband of one of five Japanese citizens abducted to North Korea and now back in Japan, talks to Kyodo News on Nov. 29 in the hospital where he has been since Nov. 26 due to extreme fatigue. The 62-year-old husband of Hitomi Soga is still suffering from insomnia and trembling due to emotional ups and downs.(Kyodo)

  •  
(6)Koizumi, Kim agree on resumption of normalization talks

(6)Koizumi, Kim agree on resumption of normalization talks

PYONGYANG, North Korea - Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi (L) and North Korean leader Kim Jong Il sign a joint statement at the end of their talks in Pyongynag on Sept. 17. (Pool photo) (Kyodo)

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