blogs  
 
yournews
   
 
Video Photos Finance Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
| |
 
  Home ›
 
Asia Pacific News

 

NKorea refugees on hunger strike in Thailand
Posted: 25 April 2007 1728 hrs

  Fie pic: North Korean refugees in Bangkok
 
Photos  of

   
 


SEOUL: Some 400 North Korean refugees who fled to Thailand have launched a hunger strike to protest alleged delays in their resettlement in South Korea, an activist group and officials said on Wednesday.

But the group said three teenage defectors detained in Laos, who had feared possible repatriation to their homeland and harsh punishment, have been transferred to the South Korean embassy in the Lao capital Vientiane.

"Some 100 male and 314 female North Korean defectors started a hunger strike (in Thailand) on Tuesday evening," Lee Ho-Taeg, secretary general of the International Campaign to Block the Repatriation of North Korean Refugees, told AFP.

"They are angry at extended delays in bringing them to the South," he said, adding there were unconfirmed reports that the South Korean government refused to grant them air tickets.

He said the North Koreans, who have been confined for up to three months to a detention centre in Bangkok, face harsh living conditions.

"About 300 women are held in the facility, which is barely enough for 100 people. There is only one toilet and more than 300 women have to share it," he said.

Foreign Minister Song Min-Soon confirmed the hunger strike without giving a number, and said Seoul had been in negotiations with Bangkok to "resolve the issue smoothly". He declined to give details.

Lee's group also said the three teenagers in Laos have been released and handed over to Seoul's embassy after being held in custody for more than five months for illegal entry.

Song refused to comment on the three.

They have been identified as Choi Hyang, 13, and her 12-year-old brother Choi Hyok, who lost their mother in 1999 and came to China in 2002.

The third one is 17-year-old Choi Hyang-Mi, who arrived in China in 2001 with her mother but was parted from her after the mother married a Chinese man, Lee's group said.

"We have come this far in search of freedom. We are unfortunate children who may die just because we wanted freedom," wrote Choi Hyang in an appeal for help released by the Japanese group Life Funds for North Korean Refugees.

Tens of thousands of North Koreans, fleeing hunger or repression in the hardline communist state, have travelled across the border to China in recent years.

China has an agreement with its ally North Korea to repatriate them as economic migrants, a policy strongly criticised by refugee aid groups. The refugees often travel on to third countries like Mongolia or Thailand in hopes of winning eventual resettlement in South Korea.

But South Korean diplomats in the past have been accused by refugee groups of being unhelpful to the refugees, in order to avoid provoking Pyongyang.

Many are helped by rights organisations linked with Protestant churches in South Korea.

The number of northerners who had made it to South Korea since the end of the 1950-53 Korean war topped the 10,000 mark in February.

Estimates of the number hiding out in northeast China range from tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands.

Human Rights Watch last month said North Korea has toughened its punishments for people caught trying to flee – including longer prison terms during which they face beatings and starvation.


- AFP/so

 


Other asiapacific News
Pakistan PM's contempt appeal rejected
India hails missile shield test a success
UN envoy to hold talks in Maldives
Protesters in Malaysia denounce Syrian violence
Malaysia to help Philippines identify dead militants
Umar Patek Bali bombings accused on trial Monday
Biden meets Chinese activists ahead of VP visit
Death toll in Philippine quake rises to 39
Aussie abattoir shuts down over animal abuse
2 Tibetan protesters "shot dead"
Malaysian police detain Saudi tweeter
Iran, free trade pact top EU-India summit agenda
Japan institution releases China Security Report
Japan braces for more snow
US recognises new government of Maldives
Japan mayor slams US base deal
'Don't talk to editors', Australia MPs told
'Dr Death' appeals Australia jail sentence
Arrest warrant for Maldives ex-president
Police chief defection rumours spark China intrigue

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions