ยป 12/10/2008 16:39
KOREA
Human rights denied:
North Korean worker defects from Kaesong industrial complex
<http://new.asianews.it/index.php?l=en&art=13972>http://new.asianews.it/index.php?l=en&art=13972

The news, released today, dates back to last 
September. According to a human rights activist, 
the 27-year-old woman has taken refuge in China, 
and is now asking for asylum in South Korea. The 
testimony of a North Korean exile born and raised in a labor camp.

Emacs!


Seoul (AsiaNews/Agencies) - She is the first 
North Korean to have defected from the 
inter-Korean industrial complex of Kaesong: the 
27-year-old woman, whose identity is being kept 
secret for security reasons, has taken refuge in 
China by crossing the Tumen River, in 
anticipation of an expatriate visa to emigrate to 
South Korea. The news was released today by Kim 
Yong-hwa, a human rights activist working in 
defense of the citizens of North Korea who are 
leaving their country because of poverty and the lack of personal freedom.

According to the activist, the woman defected 
because she was denied permission to get married: 
the women who work in Kaesong, in fact, may not 
marry, under penalty of dismissal. "A clear 
violation of human rights," the activist comments.

The news of the defection has not been confirmed 
by the South Korean unification ministry, or by 
the heads of the companies in the South that 
operate across the border, possibly in order to 
avoid angering Pyongyang. It is the first case of 
the defection of a North Korean worker from the 
complex of Kaesong, at which about 36,000 
citizens from the North work under the strict 
control of the Pyongyang regime. The government 
has selected the candidates carefully, choosing 
the ones from "well-off" families in order to 
prevent contact with people from the South from 
becoming an incentive to defect.

In the area of the human rights denied by the 
communist regime of Pyongyang, exemplary 
testimony comes from a refugee born and raised in 
the North Korean concentration camps, who 
defected to China and took refuge in South Korea. 
Shin Dong Hyuk, an activist who now fights for 
democracy and freedom in the North, has recounted 
his experience in a new book entitled "Escape to the Outside World."

Shin, born in 1982, describes life and the brutal 
rules in labor camp 14 in Kaechon, in the 
southern province of Pyongan. His is the first 
case known in the West of a North Korean citizen 
who escaped from the labor camps: during his 
detention, Shin witnessed the killing of his 
mother and brother, because they had tried to run 
away. He was subjected to tortures of all kinds, 
and the only moment of tenderness he remembers is 
when an older prisoner offered him some of his 
food. "Now, all that I want," Shin says, "is a 
normal life, like that of the other South Korean 
citizens." His dream? "To get married and have children."


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Amen.


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