Updates on the 22 Executed North Koreans

Original post here.

Via the Joongang Ilbo, the South Korean NIS claims that they found oysters in the two boats, and that they notified President-Elect Lee’s transition team of the impending repatriation. (Note that various descriptions of the boats continue to be wildly inconsistent — fishing boats? rubber rafts? powered or unpowered?).

Via the Chosun Ilbo, outraged North Korean refugees are finding their voice, and giving us some factual context:

The [Committee for Democratization of North Korea] slammed the South Korean government’s methods of questioning North Korean defectors. Han Chang-kwon, the head of an organization of North Korean escapees, said, “South Korean investigators kept threatening to return me to North Korea while I was being questioned for six months. The 22 would have been terrified by the questioning and might have not expressed their hope to find asylum here. Han demanded the NIS make records of the questioning public.

– Richardson, who has himself debriefed North Korean defectors, offers a very plausible explanation:

If they were asked as a group [whether they wanted to return home], the interrogators basically ensured they’d answer no; if any answered yes for the rest to hear and somehow they were all sent back to North Korea, that person would have been guaranteed being sent to a concentration camp or executed. This is – or should be – absolute basic knowledge to anyone dealing with potential North Korean defectors.

If that is indeed what happened — it’s only speculation for now — the ratio of malice to incompetence would depend what motivated it.

1 Response

  1. I think you got the [……] mixed up. I looked at the original to make sure……it should be [whether they wanted to stay in the South or not]….