AAJA Relieved that Euna Lee and Laura Ling Are Home
Related Links:
Aug. 12: Message from Laura Ling
AAJA Voices: Members show support for detained journalists
AP: Freed reporter: Spread word of others incarcerated
Speakeeasy: Lisa and Laura Ling Shop Book Proposal Together
Statement
from families of Laura Ling and Euna Lee
Current TV: Laura
Ling and Euna Lee Update
New York Times: Bill
Clinton and Journalists in Emotional Return to U.S.
CNN: Freed
journalist: 'We are so happy to be home'
AP: Obama
hails journalists' release from North Korea
SF Gate: 2 journalists freed, many more to go
Emil Amok: Ling and Lee
are free: All it took was a former president
Richard Prince: N.
Korea Pardons U.S. Journalists
Roxana Saberi: Statement
from Roxana Saberi on Laura Ling and Euna Lee Pardon
Committee to Protect Journalists: Ling,
Lee pardoned in North Korea, reports say
KTVU: Friends React to News of Journalists' Release From North Korea by AAJA's Jana Katsuyama
MSNBC: North
Korea frees 2 jailed U.S. journalists
CNN: U.S.
journalists head home from North Korea
New York Times: Clinton
and Two Freed Journalists Leave N. Korea
BBC: North
Korea pardons US reporters
August 5, 2009
AAJA welcomes the news that American journalists Euna Lee and Laura Ling are back in the United States after more than four long long months of detention in North Korea. Its leadership and membership wish them a happy and long-anticipated reunion with their families, friends and colleagues.
"We deeply appreciate the efforts both sides made to bring these two journalists home," said AAJA National President Sharon Chan. "We are grateful to everyone who supported Lee and Ling, and kept their story alive."
Ms. Ling and Ms. Lee are journalists for Current TV, a Web-based television channel founded by former U.S. Vice President Al Gore. They were arrested March 17 for allegedly crossing the border while conducting interviews with North Korean refugees in China. In June, in a North Korean court closed to observers, the two were sentenced to 12 years labor for illegal entry and unspecified “hostile acts.”
Maya Blackmun, AAJA interim executive director, noted that AAJA members have tracked the developments closely.
As working journalists, a number of members have kept the public informed with updated news stories since the detention of Lee and Ling in March. In addition, members not actively covering the story from AAJA chapters in San Francisco, Sacramento, Arizona, Chicago and Washington, D.C., joined with community efforts to advocate for the release of Lee and Ling.
“This is great news for their loved ones and colleagues, ” Blackmun said. “and what it means to journalists everywhere.”

