WORLD / Victims
Gunman's sister deals with Iraq aid
(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-19 10:25
WASHINGTON - The sister of the gunman responsible for the deadliest
shooting rampage in US history works as a contractor for a State
Department office that oversees billions of dollars in American aid for
Iraq.
Sun-Kyung Cho is employed by the Iraq Reconstruction Management Office,
according to US officials and a State Department staff directory that
says she works from an annex near the department's headquarters in
Washington.
Messages left on her office voicemail, in which she identifies herself as
"Sun Cho," were not immediately returned on Wednesday.
The Virginia Tech gunman was her brother, Cho Seung-Hui. Thirty-three
people died in the rampage Monday, including the 23-year-old student, who
committed suicide.
Spokesman Sean McCormack declined to discuss Sun Cho's status but told
reporters "this person is not a direct-hire employee of the State
Department." He declined to comment further, citing privacy concerns.
Other US officials confirmed she works for a contractor.
The office was set up by President Bush to coordinate the reconstruction
program in Iraq and offers jobs to "highly skilled and motivated United
States citizens" to work at the US Embassy in Baghdad, according to State
Department documents. The office also has several Washington-based
positions.
"Our mission is to support the sovereign, democratic rights of the Iraqi
people to govern themselves, defend their country, and rebuild their
economy," the office says in its recruiting brochure. "This ongoing
mission is one that is unprecedented in size and scope."
Sun Cho's current job is her third stint with the State Department,
according to Princeton University, where she graduated with an economics
major in 2004.
She previously worked as a summer intern at the department's
International Labor Office and held a three-month economics internship in
the summer before her senior year at the US Embassy in Bangkok, Thailand,
sponsored by Princeton's International Internship Program.
"They were the most amazing three months of my life," Cho told the
university's weekly bulletin in Nov. 24, 2003, article about the program,
describing her experiences in the Thai capital.
"I found that the best way to get to know the city was taking the
skytrain to random locations and walking around for a couple of hours,"
it quoted her as saying.
"I think it is always easy for Americans to maintain an American way of
life abroad. The best thing is to avoid these traps and go out there and
immerse yourself in a new culture."
The article described a visit to a border town where she saw deplorable
working conditions for Burmese migrant workers.
"She said the experience was so profound that after returning to campus,
she changed the focus of her senior thesis to a more labor-related
topic," the article said.
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