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Former US President Jimmy Carter, left, hugs fellow American Aijalon Gomes at Pyongyang airport, North Korea, on Friday August 27, 2010, after securing his release. Photo: AP

Former prisoner of North Korea found dead, on fire, in California park

American Aijalon Gomes was at the centre of an international rescue mission by Jimmy Carter in 2010

North Korea

Detectives in San Diego are investigating the mystery death of a man who hit the headlines in 2010 when former US president Jimmy Carter helped negotiate his release from North Korea.

An off-duty California Highway Patrol officer found the body of Aijalon Mahli Gomes, 38, ablaze Friday in the city’s Mission Bay Park, police said, adding that he was pronounced dead at the scene.

“The preliminary investigation indicates the death is not a homicide but rather an accidental death or suicide,” said Todd Griffin, a spokesman for the city’s police department.

In this file photo taken on January 12, 2010, American Aijalon Mahli Gomes, participates in a rallydenouncing North Korean's human rights conditions, at the Imjingak Pavilion, near the demilitarised zone (DMZ) of Panmunjom that separates the two Koreas. Photo: AP

Gomes, an English teacher who had recently moved to San Diego from his native Boston, was arrested in North Korea for illegally entering the country from China in January 2010.

He was sentenced to eight years of hard labour and he attempted suicide while in custody, according to North Korean state news agency KCNA.

Carter travelled to the secretive east Asian nation in August of that year to call on its leadership to release the high-profile prisoner and Gomes was granted a rare amnesty by then leader Kim Jong-il.

Gomes, who was working in South Korea prior to his arrest and was described by colleagues as a devout Christian, wrote about his ordeal in a 2015 autobiography entitled Violence and Humanity.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Man freed from North Korea found dead
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