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North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (L) and former NBA star Dennis Rodman watch an exhibition basketball game in Pyongyang, North Korea. REUTERS/VICE/Handout |
Dennis Rodman, the former NBA star known more for his body
piercings and tattoos than international diplomacy skills,
has returned from North Korea with a message from its leader
Kim Jong-un for President Barack Obama - "call me".
Rodman appeared on ABC's "This Week" program a few days after
an unlikely meeting with Kim in the North Korea capital
Pyongyang, where Rodman was working on a documentary about
basketball.
With the international community concerned about North
Korea's nuclear weapons program and continued belligerence,
Kim and Rodman attended a game, where they were seen laughing
and talking, and had dinner together.
"He wants Obama to do one thing - call him," Rodman said. "He
said, 'If you can, Dennis - I don't want (to) do war. I don't
want to do war.' He said that to me."
Rodman said he told Kim, who followed his father and
grandfather as leader of the totalitarian nation in December
2011, that his love of basketball could serve as a foundation
of a relationship with the U.S. president, who also is a
basketball fan and plays regularly.
"(Kim) loves basketball. And I said the same thing. I said,
'Obama loves basketball.' Let's start there," Rodman said.
The U.S. government has disavowed any connection with
Rodman's trip.
Last week, Rodman spoke warmly of Kim, 30, and described him
as "an awesome kid."
On "This Week," he defended his new friendship with a man
considered a violator of human rights and a threat to world
peace by saying, "I'm not apologizing for him. You know, he's
a good guy to me. Guess what? He's my friend. I don't condone
what he does ... (but) as a person to person - he's my
friend."
When pressed on North Korea's human rights record, Rodman
said, "But as far as what he does, you deal with it."
Rodman, appearing in the interview wearing a jacket covered
with images of U.S. dollars, a baseball cap and big
sunglasses, dismissed Kim's comments about wanting to destroy
the United States as rhetoric stemming from his father.
He called him a strong and "very humble" man who "loves
power, he loves control."
Rodman said he intends to return to North Korea someday.
Rodman played on five NBA championship teams during his
basketball career, which ran from 1986 to 2000. He played for
five teams and in his peak years he was the league's top
rebounder and one of its best defenders. He was chosen for
the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2011.
Rodman's basketball skills were matched by his flamboyance -
party lifestyle, multi-colored hair, blankets of tattoos,
piercings in his ears, nose, lips and eyebrows and showing up
in a wedding gown, complete with veil, to promote his
autobiography.
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