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Canadian pastor digs holes alone, sole prisoner of a North Korean labour camp

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Hyeon Soo-lim, who pastors the Light Korean Presbyterian Church in Toronto, is escorted to his sentencing in Pyongyang, in December. Photo: AP

A 60-year-old Canadian pastor, jailed for life with hard labour in North Korea, spends eight hours a day, six days a week digging holes in an orchard in a prison camp where he is the sole inmate.

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In an interview in Pyongyang with CNN, Hyeon Soo-lim said it had been tough adapting to the physical rigours of his internment following his conviction last month on charges of “subversive” acts against the state.

“I wasn’t originally a labourer, so the labour was hard at first,” said Lim, his head shaven and wearing a grey prison outfit with the number 036.

“But now I've gotten used to it.”

I wasn’t originally a labourer, so the labour was hard at first. But now I've gotten used to it.
Hyeon Soo-lim

The interview was conducted in the room of a Pyongyang hotel, where the North Koreans also presented another ethnic Korean prisoner, whom they said was a US citizen arrested for spying in October.

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