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Activists Urge China to Not Repatriate N. Korean Defectors


The mother of a detained North Korean defector (blue jacket) attends a protest outside China’s embassy in Seoul, South Korea, April 30, 2019. (B. Gallo/VOA). The event was organized by former North Korean diplomat Thae Yong-Ho (navy suit, red tie).
The mother of a detained North Korean defector (blue jacket) attends a protest outside China’s embassy in Seoul, South Korea, April 30, 2019. (B. Gallo/VOA). The event was organized by former North Korean diplomat Thae Yong-Ho (navy suit, red tie).

Activists are urging China not to repatriate seven North Koreans who were detained in an eastern Chinese province after leaving their homeland.

The group, which includes a nine-year-old girl, fled North Korea last month but was detained by Chinese authorities in the northeast province of Liaoning, according to activists.

China regularly sends defectors back to North Korea, where they face punishment including forced labor, imprisonment, torture, or execution.

About two dozen activists, including many who also fled North Korea, protested Tuesday in front of the Chinese embassy in Seoul, urging Beijing to release the group.

The nine-year-old girl’s mother, who left North Korea several years ago and now lives in South Korea, also attended the demonstration.

“I’m worried about my young daughter and her safety ... it’s been three years since I’ve seen my daughter,” said the woman, her voice quivering.

The woman, who did not wish to be identified, left a message in the Chinese embassy’s mailbox. An activist also shouted into the intercom outside the embassy entrance, but received no response.

Thae Yong-Ho, a former North Korean diplomat, translates for the family of a nine-year-old girl who was detained in China. (B. Gallo/VOA)
Thae Yong-Ho, a former North Korean diplomat, translates for the family of a nine-year-old girl who was detained in China. (B. Gallo/VOA)

Former senior North Korean diplomat Thae Yong-ho, who defected with his family to South Korea in 2016, helped organize the protest.

“We should not let China’s government repatriate their nine-year-old daughter back to North Korea,” said Thae, who made appeals in Korean, Chinese, and English.

Thae, one of the highest level North Korean officials to defect in years, also urged the U.S. government to “exert its influence” on China to release the North Koreans.

The number of North Korean defectors has declined, in part because of China's expanded crackdown. In 2018, just 1,137 North Koreans defected to South Korea, according to Seoul’s Unification Ministry. In 2009, that figure stood at 2,914.

Though China has signed the United Nations refugee convention, it does not recognize North Koreans as refugees. It instead sees them as illegal economic migrants.

According to a 2017 Human Rights Watch report, China has increased the number of guards and laid more barbed wire fencing along the border.

“China has also expanded CCTV surveillance on the border and increased checkpoints on roads leading away from the border,” the group said.

Though not common, China has in the past released North Korean defectors. In 2018, China freed 30 defectors, following international pressure, according to South Korean media reports.

Many activists complain North Korean human rights have become less of a priority amid negotiations over North Korea’s nuclear weapons program.

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