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China deports 5,000 N.Korea refugees annually: activists
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Nov 1, 2011


China repatriates about 5,000 North Korean refugees each year even though they often face harsh punishment on their return, South Korean activists said Tuesday.

North Koreans who make the risky journey across the border into China only to be returned to their homeland face torture, imprisonment and even execution in extreme cases, the activists said.

"It is believed that the number of repatriated North Korean refugees reaches 5,000 per year," said Kim Suk-Woo, a former vice unification minister who now works for a rights group in Seoul.

At a forum on the issue he and other activists distributed a petition signed by 100 former South Korean ambassadors, calling on China to halt the repatriations which they say violate the refugee rights under international conventions.

China treats North Koreans as economic migrants rather than refugees.

More than 21,700 North Koreans have fled their impoverished homeland for South Korea since the 1950-1953 war, the vast majority in recent years.

Almost all escape on foot to China, travel surreptitiously to Southeast Asia and then eventually seek resettlement in South Korea.

"The international community is not begging China for merciful treatment of the refugees, but asking her to duly abide by international laws and obligations," Kim said.

Many orphans born of North Korean refugees and Chinese fathers are in a "miserable" situation without proper care or basic education, he said.

They are abandoned in the streets if their mothers are arrested and sent back, Kim said.

"Punishment back in North Korea is really harsh and beyond your imagination," said Lee Myung-Sook, a female refugee who settled in South Korea in late 2008 after escaping through Thailand.

Lee, 43, fled to China in 2003 and was sold by brokers to a disabled Korean-Chinese man. She escaped three years later but was arrested by China and repatriated.

Female refugees housed in a Chinese camp while awaiting deportation face torture and beatings, she said, claiming some inmates were sexually harassed or raped by Chinese soldiers.

On her return, Lee said, she was detained in a political prison camp for six months before escaping again to China in 2006.

"I was beaten badly, although I was pregnant," Lee said, adding one prisoner died in the camp almost every day.

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Lee leaves for Russia, G20 in France
Seoul (AFP) Nov 1, 2011 - South Korean President Lee Myung-Bak left Tuesday for talks with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev expected to focus on North Korea's nuclear programmes and a proposed gas pipeline via the North.

Lee will go on to France for a Group of 20 summit in Cannes on Thursday and Friday, the presidential Blue House said.

The two leaders, at a meeting in Saint Petersburg Wednesday, "will exchange ideas on issues concerning the Korean peninsula, including the North Korean nuclear problem, and the Northeast Asian region", it said.

Diplomatic efforts have resumed to revive six-party talks on the North's nuclear disarmament, which group the two Koreas, China, Russia, the United States and Japan.

Pyongyang formally quit the six-party forum in April 2009, a month before staging its second atomic weapons test.

It has since repeatedly said it wants to come back without preconditions but Washington and its allies say it must demonstrate its commitment to denuclearisation by deed, not words.

A Seoul presidential official said the leaders are also likely to discuss a longstanding idea to transport Russian natural gas to South Korea via the North.

The project returned to the headlines after it received the blessing of the North's leader Kim Jong-Il during his summit with Medvedev in August.

But a presidential official told Yonhap new agency that discussions between Seoul and Moscow could make meaningful progress only after Russia and the North agree on pipeline transit fees.

Lee, who chaired last year's summit in Seoul of the G20 advanced and developing countries, will then attend the Cannes event.

Its agenda includes ways to tackle the eurozone debt crisis, macroeconomic policy coordination, reform of the international currency system, financial safety nets and other issues facing the global economy.



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NUKEWARS
S. Korea's new nuclear envoy to visit China
Seoul (AFP) Oct 30, 2011
South Korea's foreign ministry said Sunday its new nuclear envoy would visit China this week to discuss ways to revive long-stalled regional talks on North Korea's nuclear disarmament. Lim Sung-Nam will visit Beijing from Tuesday to Wednesday to meet with his counterpart Wu Dawei in his first trip to China as Seoul's chief negotiator for the six-party forum on the North, the ministry said. ... read more


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