Japanese Isle May Be Home for Accused U.S. Deserter

MANO, SADO ISLAND, Japan (Reuters) - The shop where 19-year-old Hitomi Soga bought groceries one August evening still stands on the lonely road where she and her mother were kidnapped 26 years ago by North Korean agents.
When the two women vanished from their home town on Sado Island in northern Japan in 1978, no one dreamed they had been snatched and taken by boat to the reclusive communist state.
The family is now living on a U.S. Army base west of Tokyo where Jenkins turned himself in this month while they wait for his case to be resolved.
"It was Hitomi's wish from the start for them all to live here in Sado," said Wakabayashi, speaking at the Mano Library where she works.
"We want to do whatever we can to make her dream come true."