North Korea says it has arrested a US student accused of committing a "hostile act" against the state.
State news agency KCNA identified him as University of Virginia student Otto Frederick Warmbier.
He had entered North Korea as a tourist with the intention "to
destroy the country's unity", said KCNA, which added that the US
government had "tolerated and manipulated" him.
It did not give further details, but said he was now under investigation.
An official at the US embassy in the South Korean capital, Seoul, told Reuters it was aware of the arrest.
North Korea sometimes uses the detention of foreigners as a means of exerting pressure on its adversaries.
Detained on tour
China-based tour agency Young Pioneer Tours released a statement
confirming that Warmbier had been detained while on one of their tours
in Pyongyang, and said his family had been informed.
It had earlier told Reuters that Warmbier was arrested on 2 January.
"We are in contact with the Swedish Embassy... who are working with
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to address the case. We are also
assisting the US Department of State closely with regards to the
situation," it said in the statement.
"In the meantime we would appreciate Otto's and his family's privacy
being respected and we hope his release can be secured as soon as
possible."
Sweden represents US interests in North Korea as Washington and Pyongyang do not have diplomatic relations.
Warmbier, listed by the University of Virginia's directory as an
undergraduate commerce student, is the third Westerner known to be held
in North Korea.
Hyeon Soo Lim, a Canadian pastor of South Korean origin, was
sentenced to life imprisonment in December for an alleged plot to
overthrow the government.
A Korean-American is also thought to be in North Korean detention on charges of spying.
The latest incident comes amid escalating tensions, after the North
said it had successfully tested a hydrogen bomb. The claim has not yet
been confirmed.
South Korea has resumed propaganda broadcasts over the border, while
the North has been dropping propaganda leaflets on the South.
The United States is leading calls for new UN economic penalties against the North in the wake of the nuclear test.
The state department strongly advises Americans against travelling to North Korea.
In 2014, North Korea released three Americans it was holding in detention - Matthew Todd Miller, Kenneth Bae and Jeffrey Fowle.