North Korea gives South Korea "spies" life of hard labour; U.N. rights office opens

By Jack Kim and Ju-min Park SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea's highest court on Tuesday sentenced two South Koreans accused of spying to hard labour for life, its state media said, calling the punishment a lesson for those who conspire with Washington and Seoul. The report of the sentencing came as the United Nations opened a field office in Seoul to investigate rights abuses in North Korea, a plan that has drawn anger from Pyongyang, which denies wrongdoing. North Korea has accused the two men, Kim Kuk Gi and Choe Chun Gil, of working as spies for the South's National Intelligence Service (NIS) from the Chinese border city of Dandong. They were arrested in March. The North's KCNA news agency said the two were convicted of conspiracy to overturn the state, espionage and illegal entry and of working under the control of the U.S. and South Korean governments. The defence counsel requested leniency after the prosecution sought the death penalty, KCNA said. "The crimes of the spies of the puppet intelligence agency prove that the United States and the puppet South are the masterminds of political terror and kingpins of trickery and show what miserable plight awaits those who conspire with them," it said. The NIS has denied the accusations as "groundless". Kim and Choe said in interviews with CNN in May that they had spied for the South. South Korea's Unification Ministry, which handles ties with the North, expressed "strong regret" over sentences and demanded the two men be freed. North and South Korea are still technically at war after their 1950-53 conflict ended in a truce, not a treaty. The reclusive North, which regularly threatens to destroy the United States in a sea of flames, has also been slapped with heavy Western sanctions over its nuclear and missile programmes. "Less than 50 miles (80 km) from here lies another world marked by utmost repression and deprivation," Zeid Ra'ad Al-Hussein, the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, said at the opening of the U.N. office in Seoul. A U.N. Commission of Inquiry report last year detailed abuses that it said were comparable to Nazi-era atrocities. In addition to Kim and Choe, Pyongyang is holding a South Korean man with a U.S. green card who was a student at New York University and a South Korean missionary. Last year, Pyongyang released three detained Americans including Kenneth Bae, a Korean-American missionary who had been held for two years. (Reporting by Jack Kim; Editing by Tony Munroe and Nick Macfie)