North Korea's Cruelty
By
Kay Seok
Saturday,
March 17, 2007; Page A19; Washington
Post
SEOUL -- North
Korea is again dominating headlines by
signing a deal to close its main nuclear reactor and allow international
inspectors to return in exchange for energy and economic assistance. As North Korea watchers cautiously welcome this
possible step toward a nuclear-free Korean
Peninsula, a deeply disturbing
development has garnered almost no attention: Pyongyang's hardening policy toward North
Korean border-crossers.
In an ominous
reversal, North Korea has
apparently scrapped its 2000 decree that it would be lenient toward citizens
who "illegally" crossed the border -- in effect, almost everyone
leaving the country -- to China
to find food or earn money to feed their families. According to recent
border-crossers interviewed by Human Rights Watch, Pyongyang has implemented harsher punishments
for those repatriated.
The North
Koreans interviewed recounted the chilling language officials use to describe
the policies the North reinstated perhaps as long ago as late 2004: Those
crossing the border without state permission "won't be forgiven," no
matter why they went to China
or what they did there, including first-time "offenders."
The hardening
policy shows how Pyongyang
is violating the obligations it undertook when it signed major human rights
conventions in the 1990s.
North Korea is denying its citizens
their fundamental rights by preventing them from freely leaving the country;
arresting those who make such an attempt; and arbitrarily detaining,
mistreating, torturing and sometimes even executing border-crossers who are
repatriated. China,
too, regularly flouts its obligations under the 1951 U.N. Refugee Convention by
labeling all North Koreans "illegal economic migrants" and sending
them back.
Many of these
North Koreans crossed the border because the state failed them. North Korea
claims to have a socialist system under which all citizens receive free food,
education, medical care and housing. But the reality is that only the country's
elite enjoy such privileges. The rest of the population is left to fend for
itself. Undertaking the dangerous and difficult journey to China is a form
of self-defense. The North Korean government fails to feed its people but then
persecutes them for trying to survive.
A 59-year-old
North Korean woman told us about her deportation from China and punishment in North Korea. Her crime? She had left without state permission, which is
considered an act of treason. "I went to China because I had no food at
home. But I had to live in hiding there, so I tried to go to South Korea,"
she said. "I was caught. The Chinese police took all the money I saved.
They beat and kicked me. When I was sent back to North Korea,
things got even worse. They made me strip, and a doctor searched my
vagina to see if I hid any money they could confiscate. They treated me like an
animal, because they considered me a traitor." After serving a prison
sentence, she escaped to China
again in September.
A 42-year-old
woman from Haeju said she was deported from China in
December 2003 and served 18 months in a North Korean labor camp. "Every
day, I saw someone dying. We were given a fistful of powdered corn stalk, three
times a day, and people had trouble digesting it. Many people died after having
diarrhea for a week," she said. "They left patients in the hallway
outside toilets. So many people died, they wrapped bodies in plastic sheets and
buried them in a mountain."
North Korean
authorities often subject people who have been detained to cruel and inhuman
treatment, including punitive strip searches, verbal abuse, threats and
beatings. A 50-year-old woman who had a scar on her left cheek shared her story
with Human Rights Watch: "They arrested me for selling clothes, which was
banned. I served nine months in prison for that. They gave prisoners a fistful
of powdered corn stalk for each meal. My health deteriorated so much that I was
once unconscious for 20 days. A doctor revived me. I stole a spoon with which
to kill myself, but they caught me. A guard kicked me in the face." After
she was released from prison, she fled the country.
The world
should pay attention not only to North Korea's
responsibilities under the new nuclear disarmament agreement but also to Pyongyang's
responsibilities to its own people. North Koreans are forced to flee their
country when the state has failed them. The rest of the world should not fail
them as well.
The writer
is North Korea
researcher at Human Rights Watch.
To read the
Human Rights Watch report, please see:
http://hrw.org/backgrounder/asia/northkorea0307/