Journalists Laura Ling and Euna Lee, dressed in short-sleeved
shirts, appeared healthy as they walked off the plane. Ling raised her
arms in celebration as she walked down the steps. Lee first greeted her
4-year-old daughter Hannah.
"Now we stand
here home and free," Ling said.
Clinton
walked off the private plane a few minutes after the journalists,
shaking hands with the families. He said in a written statement that he
shares their "deep sense of relief" that the reporters have returned
safely.
President Obama said he was "extraordinarily relieved" at their return.
"The
reunion that we've all seen on television I think is a source of
happiness not only for the families but for the entire country," Obama
said, adding that he spoke with the families Tuesday after learning
that Lee and Ling were on the plane home. He thanked Clinton as well as
former Vice President Al Gore, who co-founded the Current TV company
that employed the journalists, for working toward their release. Gore
spoke briefly at the hangar in Burbank, Calif.
The two women were arrested in March
along the China-North Korea border and accused of illegally sneaking into the country and engaging in "hostile acts." They
were sentenced to 12 years in a labor camp in June.
Their return home came after North Korean leader Kim Jong
Il issued a "special pardon" for them. Clinton made a surprise visit to the communist nation Tuesday morning to negotiate
their release.
During the visit, Clinton met with Kim as well as the two reporters.
Ling
said Wednesday that she and Lee were "shocked" when they were first
taken to a room Tuesday and saw Clinton standing there. She said that
just 30 hours ago, the two women feared that they could be taken to a
hard labor camp to serve out their sentence at any moment. She said the
sight of Clinton gave them great relief.
"We knew instantly in our heart that the nightmare of our
lives was finally coming to an end," she said, thanking Clinton's "super cool team."
"The past 140 days have been
the most difficult, heart-wrenching time of our lives," she said. "We are so happy to be home."
The
public breakthrough in talks was reached in the course of a day. But
sources said the framework for the journalists' release had been
negotiated ahead of time.
Administration officials said that the
families were told "sometime in June" that the journalists would be
released if Clinton came to get them. The families told Gore, who
passed on the message to the Obama administration.
"We
worked this issue very hard," an official said, adding that the administration confirmed through "various means" that the
prisoners would be released if Clinton traveled to North Korea.
Officials said Clinton met with Kim for over an
hour and then had a two-hour dinner with him.
They said they don't know whether North Korea's nuclear program, which
the United States wants to rein in, was discussed.
Through a representative, the families of the reporters released
a statement saying they were "overjoyed" at the news.
"We
are so grateful to our government: President Obama, Secretary Clinton
and the U.S. State Department for their dedication to and hard work on
behalf of American citizens," the statement said. "We especially want
to thank President Bill Clinton for taking on such an arduous mission
and Vice President Al Gore for his tireless efforts to bring Laura and
Euna home. We must also thank all the people who have supported our
families through this ordeal, it has meant the world to us."
During their imprisonment, officials said the Swedish government
acted as an intermediary in North Korea and were able to get medicine to Ling and Lee.
Read the rest of the Story