The family organized a prayer vigil at a Seattle church on Saturday night to publicize his case

SEATTLE An American man detained in North Korea for the past nine months has been hospitalized after losing more than 50 pounds, and the need to bring him home is becoming more urgent, his sister said Sunday.

Kenneth Bae, a 45-year-old tour operator and Christian missionary, was arrested in November and accused of subversive activities against the authoritarian government. He was sentenced in May to 15 years hard labor, and in letters to his family in the Seattle area he described working in the fields weeding and planting beans and potatoes.

Bae’s sister, Terri Chung, of Edmonds, said Sunday the family recently learned that he has been transferred from the labor camp to a hospital. Her brother suffers from diabetes, an enlarged heart, liver problems and back pain, she said.

“He’s considerably weaker,” Chung said. “There’s more urgency than ever to bring him home.”

A deputy ambassador from Sweden met with Bae at the hospital Friday, Chung said. Sweden represents American interests in North Korea because the U.S. has no official diplomatic relations with the country.

The U.S. State Department has called for his release on humanitarian grounds.

Bae’s family received a package of letters from him in July, in which he urged them to take a more prominent role in advocating for his release and said he was going blind and suffering failing health due to diabetes and a heart condition.

The family organized a prayer vigil at a Seattle church on Saturday night to publicize his case. About 180 people attended, said Chung.

Bae’s son has started an online petition calling for his freedom.

“All I know is that my brother is a good man,” Chung told CBS News correspondent Margaret Brennan in July. “He’s an idealist, and a man of strong convictions, and he may have been maybe a little overzealous, and maybe made some wrong choices,” she added.

North Korea, analysts say, has previously used detained Americans as bargaining chips in a standoff with the United States, which has long pressed Pyongyang to abandon a nuclear program estimated to have a handful of crude atomic weapons.

Although there have been some tentative recent signs of diplomacy, tensions are still high on the Korean Peninsula after an April and March that saw Pyongyang unleash a torrent of warlike threats at Washington and Seoul in response to tightened U.N. sanctions over a February nuclear test by the North.

North Korea wants to use Bae’s imprisonment and health problems to get a visit from a senior U.S. envoy in the hopes of eventually restarting talks with a reluctant Washington, said Chang Yong Seok, a North Korea expert at Seoul National University.

Bae is at least the sixth American detained in North Korea since 2009. The others were eventually allowed to leave without serving out their terms, some after prominent Americans, including former presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter, visited North Korea.

Days after Bae’s family received the package of letters, a pro-North Korean news agency released a startling video, showing Bae noticeably thin and emotional as he asked his captors for forgiveness.

“The sound my mother made when she watched that video, I will never forget,” Chung told Brennan. “It was just the most heart-wrenching — almost like an animal in pain.”

“We cried a lot,” she continued. “This was my brother speaking from prison and we needed to let people know that his health was failing and we needed to seek help to get him out and get him home.”

While Chung and her parents have a weekly call with the State Department, they told CBS News they were losing faith that the U.S. government would act swiftly enough to get Bae released.

“I don’t see any action. I want to ask them, send an envoy or do something. As a mother, I am really getting angry, really getting angry. What do they do?” Bae’s mother, Myung-Hee, 토토사이트 told Brennan.

The government of young North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, who took power in late 2011 after the death of his father, Kim Jong Il, may also be using Bae’s alleged missionary work in the North to shore up domestic support by highlighting a perceived outside threat to the country.

“This provides a good narrative for the North to show its people that the regime’s very existence is still under threat” from the United States, Chang said.

Bae, a father of three, was born in South Korea and immigrated to the U.S. with his parents and sister in 1985. For the past seven years he has been living in China, and a couple of years ago began leading small tour groups, mostly of American and Canadian citizens, into a “special economic zone” designed to encourage commerce in the northeastern region of Rason in North Korea, Chung said.

Several years ago, Bae gave a sermon in which he advocated bringing Americans to North Korea for a mass prayer session to bring about the reunification of North and South Korea. The charges against him included “hostile acts” against the government.

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there’s a strike at the station” “Those stories weren’t being written, and they certainly weren’t being published in poetry or mainstream publications,” said photographer Lyle Owerko. “So what better way than to communicate a message through sound, which has been done, you know, through the history of music? “The boombox as an image represents community,” he said. “It represents defiance. It represents an outgoing nature. It represents I need to be seen, paid attention to, and defined.” Owerko has his own collection of boomboxes. Their images and stories are documented in his new book, “The Boombox Project.” “You hear stories of back in the day, like on the beach, or people sitting on the subway, going to the beach, and they’re all listening to their own boomboxes, and they all tune them in together, and get that same song going,” Owerko said, “so that it’s like a whole democracy of sound.” Of course, not everyone wanted to join this sonic community … The boombox had its detractors, a sentiment popularized in the 1986 film “Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home,” when Spock used the Vulcan grip to paralyze a boombox-wielding punk. But it was too late – the boombox was everywhere. And it wasn’t just an inner-city thing, says Owerko: “The boombox is borderless. “You know, it extended around the globe, you know, and it was wherever people wanted to listen to music – whether it was a beach cafe, in a mechanic’s shop, in an artist’s studio.” Today the boombox is regarded as a symbol of rebellious spirit and remains a pop culture icon. And though it’s still seen, it’s no longer heard. Looks like the big bad boombox got drowned out . . . by the little bitty Walkman. The boombox was on the wrong side of history, getting bigger as people were plugging into smaller and smaller devices – so small that nowadays, they fit in the palm of your hand. “So this ability to be in your own little bubble and hear music, you know, still get great sonics but just right into your ear as opposed to everybody else’s, it was good for some people and bad for others,” said Fab5Freddy. And though it might be gone, it’s always important to once in a while hit pause. Then rewind. And pay respect. For more info: •  “The Boombox Project: The Machines, the Music, and the Urban Underground” by Lyle Owerko (Abrams)

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