March 4, 2011
I really want to meet a North Korean defector. And if I meet one now, I hope he could speak English! Recently, four of the 31 North Koreans whose vessel drifted away to the South expressed their desire to remain in the Republic of Korea. Well, they have seen “paradise!” For those of you who don’t know, North Korea is the world’s largest prison cell run by their evil warden Kim Jong-Il! However, the rest of them who decided to be repatriated back to the North also have valid reasons. Their family members would surely get the punishment if they remain in the South. They really don’t have any choice. The article below says that those who will be repatriated soon will anyway go to prison camps. I think the North will punish them for being able to experience life in a democracy, in a capitalist first world, in a country that values liberty and freedom – the exact opposite of DPRK.
North Korea as seen from the border. I took this shot from Mt. Odu in South Korea.
September 22, 2010. Related Post here: Peeking into North Korea.
I wonder what they felt when they saw the video explaining the economic miracle of South Korea. They were even given a guided tour of Seoul, South Korea’s economic and cultural hub and one of the world’s most modern cities. I wonder what their reactions were, when they could order anything they wanted in a restaurant and eat anytime they feel like eating… (In the North, most people rely
on the government’s food ration, not to mention the widespread famine due to food crisis).
on the government’s food ration, not to mention the widespread famine due to food crisis).
Anyhow, check these two interesting reads from Chosun Ilbo Newspaper and Daily NK.I also suggest watching the film Crossing to have a deeper glimpse of life in North Korea.
Why 4 N.Koreans Decided to Stay at the Last Minute
Four out of the 31 North Koreans whose fishing boat drifted across the maritime border in the West Sea on Feb. 5 want to defect to South Korea, the government said Thursday. Seoul is sending the remaining 27 along with their boat back home through the border truce village of Panmunjom on Friday.
According to a government official, the four who wish to defect are the 38-year-old male captain of the ship, another 44-year-old man and two women aged 21 and 22. They apparently did not decide to stay until Wednesday morning, which was the last day of their questioning by the South Korean military. "Four North Koreans stated their clear intention to defect on Wednesday afternoon during questioning," the official said. "It looks like they waited until the last moment to decide."
The captain is apparently afraid of punishment if he is sent back and made his decision when he saw how different life in the South is from the North during his 20 days here. The other man and the 22-year-old woman are said to be close. It is unclear why the 21-year-old woman decided to defect.
An intelligence official with experience in questioning North Korean defectors said, "In many cases, North Koreans who defect to South Korea after drifting across the maritime border either have few family members in the North or are afraid of being punished for going to the South if they're sent back."
Officials from the National Intelligence Service, Defense Security Command, military intelligence and police who questioned the North Koreans apparently showed them videos showing how South Korea has developed. There are even accounts saying they were taken on a tour of Seoul.
The Unification Ministry said they were free to make their own decision whether to defect or return to the North. "North Korea has recently been criticizing the joint U.S.-South Korean military exercises, threatening to launch a nuclear attack, but the North as well as South Korea, the U.S. and China all seem to be looking for a chance to hold talks," an intelligence officer said. "In the circumstances we have no reason to make a great effort to persuade them to defect. As far as I know, all the defectors have their own reasons for choosing to stay in the South."
According to the Unification Ministry, North Koreans have drifted into South Korean waters on 30 occasions since 2004, and in only two cases did some of them choose to stay in the South. In February 2008, in the final years of the Roh Moo-hyun administration, 22 North Koreans drifted across the Northern Limit Line and all of them were sent back after just a day of questioning.
"The North Koreans who returned were initially used for ideological propaganda but were eventually sent to political prison camps for having experienced life in South Korea or ended up being placed under constant surveillance," A North Korean source said.
The 27 North Koreans who return home Friday are expected to be thoroughly interrogated about what they saw, heard and ate in South Korea and why four of their companions decided not to return.
North Korea's Red Cross in a statement Thursday demanded all of the 31 must be returned. "All of our people must be repatriated in accordance with human rights and humanitarian causes. This is crucial to inter-Korean relations," it said. "South Korea's handling of this matter will change our perception of it." It was apparently a roundabout threat to link the matter to inter-Korean political issues.
Judging by that statement alone, the defection of the four is likely to have a significant impact on cross-border relations. Pyongyang has vehemently protested and accused the South of coercion whenever some members of a group of North Korean drifters decided to stay in South Korea.
"Inter-Korean relations could become even more strained if the 27 North Koreans who return to the North appear on state television and accuse South Korean intelligence officers of persuading the four to stay," said Kim Yong-hyun, a North Korea expert at Dongguk University.
According to a government official, the four who wish to defect are the 38-year-old male captain of the ship, another 44-year-old man and two women aged 21 and 22. They apparently did not decide to stay until Wednesday morning, which was the last day of their questioning by the South Korean military. "Four North Koreans stated their clear intention to defect on Wednesday afternoon during questioning," the official said. "It looks like they waited until the last moment to decide."
The captain is apparently afraid of punishment if he is sent back and made his decision when he saw how different life in the South is from the North during his 20 days here. The other man and the 22-year-old woman are said to be close. It is unclear why the 21-year-old woman decided to defect.
An intelligence official with experience in questioning North Korean defectors said, "In many cases, North Koreans who defect to South Korea after drifting across the maritime border either have few family members in the North or are afraid of being punished for going to the South if they're sent back."
Officials from the National Intelligence Service, Defense Security Command, military intelligence and police who questioned the North Koreans apparently showed them videos showing how South Korea has developed. There are even accounts saying they were taken on a tour of Seoul.
The Unification Ministry said they were free to make their own decision whether to defect or return to the North. "North Korea has recently been criticizing the joint U.S.-South Korean military exercises, threatening to launch a nuclear attack, but the North as well as South Korea, the U.S. and China all seem to be looking for a chance to hold talks," an intelligence officer said. "In the circumstances we have no reason to make a great effort to persuade them to defect. As far as I know, all the defectors have their own reasons for choosing to stay in the South."
According to the Unification Ministry, North Koreans have drifted into South Korean waters on 30 occasions since 2004, and in only two cases did some of them choose to stay in the South. In February 2008, in the final years of the Roh Moo-hyun administration, 22 North Koreans drifted across the Northern Limit Line and all of them were sent back after just a day of questioning.
"The North Koreans who returned were initially used for ideological propaganda but were eventually sent to political prison camps for having experienced life in South Korea or ended up being placed under constant surveillance," A North Korean source said.
The 27 North Koreans who return home Friday are expected to be thoroughly interrogated about what they saw, heard and ate in South Korea and why four of their companions decided not to return.
North Korea's Red Cross in a statement Thursday demanded all of the 31 must be returned. "All of our people must be repatriated in accordance with human rights and humanitarian causes. This is crucial to inter-Korean relations," it said. "South Korea's handling of this matter will change our perception of it." It was apparently a roundabout threat to link the matter to inter-Korean political issues.
Judging by that statement alone, the defection of the four is likely to have a significant impact on cross-border relations. Pyongyang has vehemently protested and accused the South of coercion whenever some members of a group of North Korean drifters decided to stay in South Korea.
"Inter-Korean relations could become even more strained if the 27 North Koreans who return to the North appear on state television and accuse South Korean intelligence officers of persuading the four to stay," said Kim Yong-hyun, a North Korea expert at Dongguk University.
englishnews@chosun.com / Mar. 04, 2011 11:32 KST
By Kim Yong Hun, Daily NK
South Korean President Lee Myung-bak
South Korea Rejects Repatriation DemandBy Kim Yong Hun, Daily NK
South Korea has announced it will refuse North Korea’s demand for the repatriation of all 31 North Koreans (11 men, 20 women) who drifted across the Northern Limit Line in the West Sea on February 4th.
Four, including the captain of the fishing vessel they were found in, have said they wish to stay in South Korea, and the government has confirmed that it will honor their request.
South Korea’s National Red Cross (KNRC) reported the decision of the four (two men, two women) to the North through Panmunjeom yesterday, adding that the remaining 27 would be repatriated from there today while their boat would be returned across the NLL.
However, the Chosun Red Cross Society responded on the same evening via Chosun Central News Agency (KCNA), stating, “South Korea must unconditionally and immediately return all 31 of our unfairly detained citizens and their boat via the sea through which they left.”
However, rejecting the call, a Blue House official stated, “North Korea is demanding the repatriation of all 31 people, but as per international principles we will not repatriate them all,” and added, “The humanitarian principle of the international community is to not repatriate a person against his or her will.”
“According to the Armistice Agreement, we did not even repatriate some North Korean POWs who did not want to go back,” he further pointed out. “It is impossible to send civilians back who do not want to be repatriated. If international society learned of the repatriation of people against their will, it would be an international disgrace.”
“As our administration objects when China repatriates defectors against their will, so how could we possibly repatriate those who came our way and revealed their intention to stay here?”
Aside from the captain of the vessel, the other three North Koreans who have expressed a desire not to leave the South are a 44-year old man and two women, one aged 21 and the other 22.
According to the administration, the four did not reveal their intention to defect until Wednesday afternoon, remaining silent while the last group interviews were being carried out but announcing their wishes during later face-to-face Military Armistice Commission interviews.








7 Reactions:
I think that the 4 North Koreans who decided to stay in SoKor have made the best decision in their lives.
I've met a North Korean defector before and he definitely has no good words about North Korea. I pity the 27 who returned because of the punishment that they will eventually face.
Well, they really do not have any choice. Both have negative consequences. Stay and their families back there will suffer the tyranny of Kim Jong-Il... leave and they will be punished there eventually after being used for propaganda because they have already experienced life in the South. So either way, they're doomed. I pity the 31 of them!
@hanneebuff: Where and how did you meet a Korean defector? As far as I know, most of them are living anonymously. I have lived in Korea for 1 and a half years already and I have not met any...
Hi there! I found your blog from the Korea blog list. Do you live in Seoul? You can meet many North Korean defectors/refugees in Seoul or South Korea. Most are living anonymously, though. I worked with some while I was there. I hope you can meet one and hear about their experiences first hand.
Hi! I'm new to your blog. I read that you want to meet N.K. Defectors. I have some of them and dined with them for lunch. In our church in Seoul, we have almost 10 members who are N.K. Defectors. Please take time to read this news article.
http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/n_feature/2011/03/08/73/4901000000AEN20110308002100315F.HTML
Our church has decided to venture into business to provide employment to our N.K. members. They are now running a restaurant in Ansan. I haven't visited the restaurant yet, but hopefully, when time permits, I could visit the place. Anyway, in the restaurant you can meet North Korean Defectors. The chef is kyopo. He's from the US but his father is also North Korean. Maybe if he has time, he can be your interpreter, if you wish to talk to N.K. defectors.
Hi! I randomly discovered your blog, but I also am wanting to meet a NK defector.
I will be travelling to SK either in december or January.
If you find any information about defectors living in South Korea, I would appreciate SO much if you could let me know!
my email is kayessar_kp@hotmail.com
Thank you once again and good luck!
Lauren-
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