How Ellie (엘리) Found Refuge #GivingTuesday2023

In the fall of 2022 we welcomed another refugee into Elim House. We call her “Ellie.” Ellie moved to South Korea in 2005 and scratched out a living as a restaurant worker. Her husband became abusive as a result of a mental illness, according to Ellie. She was so miserable that she attempted suicide. Finally, she asked around if there was any other place for her to live.

“I don’t want to divorce him. I just need a break,” she told our staff when she first arrived at our women’s shelter. Elim House was the resting place she needed. According to Ellie, her husband had psychological problems and was delusional. She also shared  that her husband’s brother had severe mental health issues, which was the cause of his death in North Korea.

As a part of the daily rhythms at Elim House, Ellie began doing Bible studies with our social workers. Ellie’s curiosity about Christianity grew and she even wondered why she didn’t consider the Bible more seriously in the past. Her daughter had previously become a Christian and Ellie was exposed to Christianity but was not convinced.

After spending three months at Elim House and receiving counseling, Ellie’s heart softened. She said that Elim House is like going to her mother’s home, a place where she felt safe. During the week, she would read the Bible with our social worker. She was fascinated by the book of Proverbs and said that it felt like every line was written for her. One Sunday she decided that she wanted to follow Christ and that she wanted to be baptized.

North Koreans like Ellie carry with them a tremendous amount of trauma from their difficult lives in South Korea but also from their time in China, where most have been sold, and their time in North Korea. Ellie carried this trauma into Elim House.

She shared a story about a public execution she saw in person. Often, public executions in North Korea were mandatory viewing. One man was caught with a Bible. Later, a cross was found hanging in his basement. The man’s last words were, "God saved me, not Kim Il Sung.” He barely got his last words out before he was shot dead.

The temporary separation from his wife made Ellie’s husband reconsider how he had treated her. She told us that he was willing to do anything to have her back, even go to counseling. She decided to give their marriage another try. And through most of 2023, it seemed as if they were doing well.

Ellie attended our summer retreat and her life seemed stable. When she came back in September for our Chuseok retreat,it was then that we saw the weight of her marriage on her. She was sad and broken. Shortly after the retreat, Ellie told our social worker that her husband asked for a divorce. She longed for the days when she lived at Elim House and has even considered moving back temporarily.

She is currently going through the legal process of divorce in South Korea. She and her husband are dividing up their assets and her heart is broken. Elim House was a short time in Ellie’s life. It became a place of rest for her amidst the tumult of her life. But most importantly, it was a place where she had a true encounter with the Lord. Though she came to find temporary refuge from her difficult marriage, she found her true refuge in God. Though the circumstances of her life are materially no different from when she first came through our doors, the radical transformation God did in her heart will carry her through the difficulties of her divorce.

This holiday season, please consider making a contribution to this work. Not only will you be providing physical refuge, you will also be providing a platform to share about spiritual refuge in Christ.

Julianne's Respite and Community #GivingTuesday2023

Julianne (center) at Elim House.

Julianne was urgently admitted into Elim House this past July after learning that her husband had committed suicide. She was 41 years old and had been married for about a year.

She came from an affluent family in North Korea. Her father was a high ranking executive and her mother traveled frequently to China for business. Julianne had traveled alone to China during the 2022 Beijing Olympics but due to tightening of Chinese borders, she was unable to return home. Having enough money to get herself to Thailand, she was able to defect to South Korea by way of Bangkok. This defection was both unplanned and unexpected, and it still makes her miss her family and home in North Korea. Julianne’s face lights up and her voice gets excited when she speaks of her home.

Once in Korea, she fell victim to financial fraud, was betrayed by several different men, and experienced much hardship. Julianne was with her husband for three years before they married, which was against the wishes of her in-laws. Her husband had foreign business in Cambodia that had failed recently. After the business closed, they didn't leave their house much over the course of a year, which was extremely trying. She needed to get out and wanted to be alone so she took a solo trip for ten days. Julianne said she intentionally ignored her husband’s calls while on this trip. Her husband was known to be anxious, often thinking she might abandon him and run away. He also became violent when Julianne broached the subject of breaking up. It was during her time away that her husband took his own life. She said they had lived through and endured much hardship together but she never suspected it would end this way.

Julianne believed that if she had returned earlier, her husband would not have died. She says that her husband's death was her fault and that she didn’t think she could go on living with the agony he left her by ending his own life. To make matters worse, her in-laws refused to let her be a part of the funeral because they had always been against their marriage.

We learned that Julianne had regularly listened to sermons and worship music with her husband as he came from a Christian family. Julianne joined our regular Sunday worship services at Elim House during her time with us. Upon arriving at Elim House, Julianne suffered with insomnia, chest pains, lack of energy, no appetite and constantly feeling lethargic. The other women living at Elim House when Julianne arrived cooked for her, spent time hearing her story and encouraged her. Within a couple of weeks, she had found enough stability and strength to go inquire with government agencies about getting emergency financial assistance and even began to look for how she might support herself.

Women like Julianne serve as a reminder that Jesus is our only refuge in times of trouble. We are so thankful for the folks who referred Julianne to Elim House during her turmoil. She was able to find respite and community during her stay with us. Julianne moved out just three short weeks after arriving. Her time with us was brief but we continually pray that the seeds of hope planted in her will be watered by others and that she will one day find her rest in Jesus.

Would you consider partnering with us this Giving Tuesday to help more North Korean refugees who struggle to find help and hope?

Elim House Resident Heidi

Heidi attempted suicide in her despair after discovering her South Korean husband had been unfaithful. After spending time in a psychiatric ward and unable to deal with her grief alone, she was connected to Elim House in the hopes that she could find rest and peace as she figured out next steps. Her grief was apparent as she spoke about her many thoughts, dreams and feelings towards her ex-husband.

Heidi’s father was shot by a firing squad after the North Korean government uncovered his plans to escape from the country. She remembers the day she heard this news and how she never shed a single tear for her father because he had been so abusive towards her all of her life. When she was 20 years old, she escaped from North Korea to China where she lived with a man and had a child. Four times she tried to escape to South Korea from China but she could not bring herself to leave her child. She finally left in 2014.

Once in South Korea, she married another man and currently has two children with him. She caught her husband cheating on her and this led to her attempted suicide.

North Korean refugees who turn to Elim House are often at the end of their rope physically, emotionally, and spiritually. It is our goal to help them deal with the challenges and trauma in their lives in a productive way. This is why we take our residents to medical check ups, provide opportunities to receive professional counseling, and host times of worship for them to join. With Heidi, it was no different. We helped her to find work. We challenged her about her addictions. And we pointed her to God.

One Sunday this summer during our worship time with our Elim House residents, our pastor led the group in praise with the hymn “Fill My Cup, Lord”  (by Richard Eugene Blanchard, Sr). Heidi immediately recognized the song and said her grandfather used to sing it in North Korea whenever he would consume alcohol. Heidi always assumed “Hananeem” (Korean word for God) was the name of one of their ancestors which her grandfather was calling out to during these times and didn’t think much of it. This could have been a way that her grandfather was sneaking gospel messages to his grandchildren. Her grandfather could also have converted the song into a drinking song, asking God to “fill his cup” while he got drunk. We marveled at how Heidi’s ancestors must have been introduced to the gospel in the days before the communist regime took over in North Korea and how Christianity hasn’t yet been eradicated from North Korea.

Heidi is very curious about reading the Bible these days with our social worker. She has commented on how the book of Proverbs offers many truths and warnings that she understands personally through her life experiences. While recently reading about Peter’s betrayal of Jesus, she became very animated and upset as she expressed the same hurt she had felt when her husband cheated on her with another woman.

Heidi suffers from sleepless nights when she is haunted by images of her father appearing in her dreams. She is trying to overcome addictions to alcohol, smoking and online gaming. She dreams of being able to raise her kids on her own and holding down a job to pay off the incredible amount of debt she has fallen under due to her husband’s mishandling of their finances. She has found work but it has been a difficult road for her due to the emotional stress that she is under.

We praise God that Heidi heard the gospel during her stay at Elim House and for her curiosity about Jesus and the Bible.

Top Headlines from North Korea - October 2023

‘LARGE NUMBER’ OF NORTH KOREAN DEFECTORS DEPORTED BY CHINA

  • Seoul announced that recent reports claiming that as many as 600 North Koreans in China’s three northeast provinces have been sent back appear to be true.

  • Human rights groups said that the defectors, who were mostly women, could face imprisonment, sexual violence or even death once they return to the North.

  • Koo Byoung-sam, a spokesman for South Korea’s Unification Ministry, told the press that “The South Korean government regrets the situation and raised this matter with the Chinese side in a serious manner, emphasizing our position,” while former North Korean diplomat and current member of South Korea’s parliament, Tae Yong-ho, called on the foreign ministry to summon the Chinese ambassador to South Korea as a form of protest.

  • Meanwhile, the Chinese foreign ministry claimed that there were no “so-called defectors” in China and that the country would “continue to appropriately handle” issues relating to “economic migrants” according to humanitarian principles as well as domestic and international law.

Source:
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-67098453 
https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/south-korea-says-north-korean-defectors-china-sent-back-north-2023-10-13/ 

RUSSIA AND NORTH KOREA’S COOPERATION DEEPENS

  • The U.S. said that North Korea has delivered more than 1,000 containers of military equipment and munitions to Russia.

  • Analysts speculate that this agreement to refill Moscow’s munition stores was made when North Korean Leader Kim Jong-un traveled to Russia and met President Vladimir Putin.

  • In return, it is believed that Russian weapon technologies were exchanged to enhance North Korea’s military and nuclear program.

  • Meanwhile, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov’s recent visit to Pyongyang is seen as setting the stage for an impending visit by Putin and exploring new opportunities for weapons trade, as well as a step-up in diplomatic relations between the two isolated countries.

Source:
https://apnews.com/article/north-korea-russia-us-munitions-ukraine-war-7091eaba254b680888a9b1ec8a68135f 
https://www.thestandard.com.hk/breaking-news/section/6/209380/Russia%27s-Lavrov-to-arrive-in-North-Korea-as-cooperation-deepens 

NORTH KOREA MAY HAVE SUPPLIED WEAPONS TO HAMAS

  • South Korea’s military identified what it believed to be North Korean weapons from images and videos from the Hamas attacks, including rocket-propelled grenades and 122mm artillery shells that were marked in Korean letters “Bang-122,” which have been used in North Korean artillery attacks on the South.

  • Since Hamas’ attack on Israel, including the use of paragliders and drones, adopted tactics that were previously employed by North Korea, a senior member of the South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff told the press that “Hamas is believed to be directly or indirectly linked to North Korea in various areas, such as the weapons trade, tactical guidance and training,” and “There is a possibility that North Korea could use Hamas’ attack methods [in the event of] a surprise invasion of South Korea.”

  • According to Bruce Bennet, a Senior Fellow at RAND Corporation think tank, a military connection between North Korea and Hamas is very likely as “For many years, North Korea has sent its military personnel overseas to help train foreign military personnel in many countries, so it should be no surprise to find North Korean military trainers in Gaza supporting Hamas.”

  • Meanwhile, Pyongyang’s state media openly supported Hamas and called Israel’s response “ceaseless criminal actions.”

Source:
https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/israel-hamas-war-gaza-palestinians/card/south-korea-says-hamas-attack-may-have-relied-on-north-korean-help-RZnO5KooXp1L2XGOUxeT 
https://www.rfa.org/english/news/korea/nk-hamas-10172023160419.html

NORTH KOREA TO ESTABLISH ‘EMERGENCY TRADE SYSTEM’ TO ACQUIRE FOOD

  • North Korea’s Ministry of External Economic Relations instructed central government-affiliated trade enterprises to establish an “emergency trade system” by the end of this year.

  • The system is aimed at setting up a “safety net” for foreign currency conversions and payments to each country engaged in trade with North Korea.

  • This order was issued along with instructions to expand food imports from China and Russia in order to compensate for its agricultural shortfall this year.

  • In short, this call to enable the North to reliably and conveniently carry out foreign currency-based transactions is fundamentally aimed at circumventing international sanctions and securing safe channels for foreign trade.

  • At present, trade officials at Pyongyang Taehung Fur Trading Company and Yonghung Trade Company have ordered their trade representatives overseas to prepare to convince citizens in China and other countries to set up bank accounts for North Korean companies under their own names.

Source:
https://www.dailynk.com/english/north-koreas-trade-ministry-orders-establishment-of-emergency-trade-system-to-acquire-food/ 
https://thediplomat.com/2023/10/north-korea-orders-establishment-of-emergency-trade-system-to-acquire-food/

North Korea Only Reports Victories from the Asian Games

The 19th Asian Games marked North Korea’s first appearance at a major sports competition since the Covid-19 lockdown in December 2019. Pyongyang prided itself with six new world records, six gold medals, five silvers and two bronze in weightlifting at the Hangzhou Asian Games. In particular, weightlifter Ri Song-gum shocked many by lifting a combined 216kg at the competition, with 2021’s Taiwanese record holder, Kuo Hsing-chun, commenting that “I actually came to watch that day and when I saw it, I said it was just too scary. … They (North Korea) have been strong in the past for many years so it is not too surprising that they would have such results, but it is still pretty scary.”

REFEREE ATTACK AFTER LOSS TO JAPAN

North Korea’s soccer team made headlines during the Games when their captain, Jang Kuk-chol, and teammate, Kim Kyong-sok, furiously protested and shoved the arm of referee Rustam Lutfullin after the latter awarded Japan a late penalty in the quarterfinals. Security officials rushed to the scene to separate the players from Lutfullin at Xiaoshan Sports Centre Stadium after North Korea’s 2-1 loss to Japan. Despite the controversial confrontation, North Korea's coach, Sin Yong-nam, defended his players and insisted that, “I admit that our players were a little bit over excited in the match but it is football … There are confrontations in football matches … I think our behavior is acceptable.”

The North’s loss to Japan continued in women’s football, where they brought home a silver medal after losing 1-4 to Japan. North Korea’s team reportedly lost their rhythm in the match when their forward, An Myong-song, was replaced with Sung Hyang-sim due to a knee injury shortly after Japan scored its first goal 11 minutes into the game.

VICTORY OVER SOUTH KOREAN ‘PUPPETS’

However, the DPRK did not end in total defeat. Most notably, the women’s football team eliminated its long-term rival, South Korea, by 4-1 in the quarterfinals earlier last week. North Korea’s team scored four goals in 94 minutes and successfully sent the South home early, causing the South Korean team’s coach to complain that one of the North’s players pretended to have suffered a painful foul that led to one of his team being sent off. 

In addition, state media in North Korea, including Rodong Sinmun and Korean Central Television, hailed their national women football team’s victory over South Korea’s “puppets” as a form of propaganda victory, stating that “The match ended with our country’s team beating the puppet team by an overwhelming margin of 4-1.” Experts noted that although the use of derogatory terms concerning political and military issues in the South is common, using such expressions in relation to a sporting event is unusual. It is therefore speculated that the reference to “puppets” when describing South Korea at the Games indicates an attempt to instill hostility toward South Korea among North Koreans and that this would likely become a standard label in the future, regardless of the topic. According to Hong Min, Director of North Korean research division at the Korea Institute for National Unification, “It’s part of North Korea’s move to shift away from the previous framework that depicted the North and South relations as a special one and treated the two countries as a unified entity, into a more adversarial relationship.”

The state channels did not publicize North Korea’s defeats against South Korea in basketball by 62-81 and table tennis by 1-4, which may reflect the escalated tensions and current diplomatic positions of the two countries. As Simon Cockerell, the general manager of travel agency Koryo Tours, suggested, only victories are reported in North Korea. It is also interesting to note that during the Games, the DPRK team reportedly showed a cold attitude not only to reporters but also to South Korean players whom they have crossed paths with before. The violent clashes and unfriendly gestures seen on the pitch were therefore viewed by analysts as signs that political tensions had spread to the realm of sport.

North Korea Freedom Week Ahead of Chuseok

Ahead of South Korea’s Thanksgiving holiday of Chuseok, flights to popular travel destinations, including Japan and Thailand, have largely been sold out as people seize the opportunity to escape from complicated family affairs and massive ceremonial activities associated with this festival. However, Chuseok marks a season of isolation and despair for many North Koreans who have settled in the South and are unable to visit their famine-stricken hometowns, pay respect to their ancestors or celebrate the festival with friends and families who are still caught in the North.

Meanwhile, for another group of North Koreans detained in China awaiting forced repatriation as the country begins to ease its border controls after years of stringent Covid-19 lockdown, the holiday season ahead could mean facing punishment for defecting in the form of torture, imprisonment, sexual violence, forced labor in prison camps and even public execution.

WHAT IS THE NORTH KOREA FREEDOM WEEK?

In response to the anticipated mass repatriation of North Korean defectors, civic groups on North Korea’s human rights held a rally near the Chinese Embassy in Seoul, calling on China not to send defectors detained in the country back to the North. The rally was held during the North Korea Freedom Week, which is an annual campaign that seeks to raise public awareness of North Korea’s humanitarian situation in Washington and Seoul, alternating yearly. This year’s freedom week ran from September 17 to 23, 2023, in Seoul. 

The first freedom week was held in April 2004, when human rights activists demonstrated at Capitol Hill in Washington, urging the U.S. Congress to pass the North Korea Human Rights Act. The Act was later signed by President Bush on October 18, 2004, to promote human rights and freedom of North Korean refugees by 

  1. providing humanitarian assistance to North Koreans inside North Korea; 

  2. providing grants to private, non-profit organizations to promote human rights, democracy, rule of law and the development of a market economy in North Korea; 

  3. increasing the availability of information inside North Korea; and

  4. providing humanitarian or legal assistance to North Koreans who have fled North Korea.

“As we observe the 20th annual North Korea Freedom Week, we recognize the courage of the North Korean defector and human rights community, which continues to speak on behalf of the millions of North Koreans suffering abuses who are unable to advocate for themselves,” commented the State Department spokesperson, Matthew Miller, who also expressed concerns about the estimated 2,000 asylum seekers from the DPRK who are detained in China and at risk of repatriation.

FREEDOM WEEK IN 2023

Advocacy groups kicked off the freedom week this year by joining the opening ceremony held at the Daejeon National Cemetery in conjunction with a memorial ceremony for the 13th death anniversary of high-profile defector and former mentor to Kim Jong-il, Hwang Jang-yop, next month. The Unification Ministry’s Human Rights Division Chief also gave a speech declaring that “If we continue to spread information about the realities about the North Korea human rights situation, the DPRK authorities will be pressured to improve it, and I am certain that it will bring about changes that will lead to improving the abysmal human rights situation there.”

The trilateral relationship among the U.S., Japan and South Korea has significantly strengthened in recent years, particularly in relation to their diplomatic stance towards Pyongyang. As a result, Seoul’s Unification Ministry under the Yoon Suk-yeol administration has, since last year, referred to the freedom week events as sponsored by not only the core members – the U.S. and South Korea – but also Japan. As such, both U.S. and Japanese activists were seen participating in the freedom week events this year, which consisted of various activities including demonstrations against the forced repatriation of defectors, a seminar about testimonies against nuclear tests in the DPRK and an opera focusing on the experiences of women defectors.

Top Headlines from North Korea - September 2023

NORTH KOREAN ATHLETES SET TO COMPETE AT THE ASIAN GAMES IN CHINA

  • A team of 191 athletes left Pyongyang on September 14 to take part in the 19th Asian Games held in the Chinese city of Hangzhou this month.

  • North Korea was banned by the International Olympic Committee from participating in the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics for failing to take part in the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, which were pushed back to 2021 because of Covid-19.

  • North Koreans are listed on the Games’ website under sports events including athletics, gymnastics, basketball, football, boxing and weightlifting.

  • North Korea’s first match is against Taiwan in men’s football.

  • The country has traditionally been particularly strong in weightlifting, as seen by its past victory in winning eight golds at the Jakarta Asian Games in 2018.

Source:
https://www.scmp.com/sport/china/article/3234493/north-korea-set-compete-asian-games-after-sporting-isolation-covid-19-emerged
https://www.firstpost.com/sports/asian-games-north-korea-athletes-china-13134352.html

NORTH KOREAN PRISON BREAK AMIDST GROWING PUBLIC UNEASE OF SERIOUS CRIMES

  • On August 28, 2023, five prisoners awaiting trial on charges of robbery, rape, murder and illegal cattle slaughter escaped from a North Korean prison in the northern province of Ryanggang.

  • Prison breaks in North Korea are rare. The jailbreakers reportedly climbed over a barbed wire-topped wall while they were repairing the roof of the social security department building “when security was lax.”

  • A 24-year-old escapee, who was accused of secretly eating a cow that was meant to be used for farm work, turned himself in days later, and a 23-year-old was caught near his home, while the other three are still at large and believed to be trying to escape to China, about 25 kilometers (16 miles) from the prison.

  • The escape came at a time when reports show that there has been a string of serious crimes this year in Chongjin.

  • Five people involved in burglaries and murders in Chongjin were publicly executed in late August.

  • However, many in Chongjin doubted whether the “sound of gunfire will reduce crime” as “Crime is born of hardship from food shortages.”

Source:
https://www.dailynk.com/english/five-alleged-burglars-murderers-publicly-executed-chongjin/
https://www.rfa.org/english/news/korea/prisonbreak-09132023163855.html 

BIDEN CONTINUES TO BAN THE USE OF U.S. PASSPORTS FOR TRAVEL TO NORTH KOREA

  • Biden’s administration recently renewed its ban on the use of American passports for travel to North Korea for a seventh consecutive year.

  • According to a notice posted on the Federal Register, “The Department of State has determined there continues to be serious risk to U.S. citizens and nationals of arrest and long-term detention constituting imminent danger to their physical safety.”

  • The ban was first set in place by Trump’s administration in 2017 following the death of American student, Otto Warmbier, who was imprisoned for stealing a propaganda poster before returning to the U.S. while in a coma.

  • Humanitarian groups expressed concern regarding the impact of the ban on providing relief to North Korea, which has been reportedly suffering from severe food and medical shortages.

  • Cathi Choi, director of Korea Peace Now!, expressed disappointment at the extension of the ban as it “ignores the repeated urging from a broad coalition of advocates and experts to modify the travel ban to at least allow for important people-to-people initiatives and family reunions.”

Source:
https://apnews.com/article/us-north-korea-passport-ban-travis-warmbier-6795d172d60966ae0809c1b951d197b2 
https://www.nknews.org/2023/08/us-extends-ban-on-citizens-travel-to-north-korea-for-seventh-year/ 

NORTH KOREA UNVEILS NEW NUCLEAR MISSILE SUBMARINE

  • North Korean state media announced that the country has just launched its first operational “tactical nuclear attack submarine” to patrol the waters between the Korean Peninsula and Japan.

  • The new submarine, Kim Kun-ok, was named after a North Korean historical figure who led a maritime operation during the 1950-1953 Korean War that sank the USS Baltimore.

  • The North’s latest weapon system was unveiled after its leader, Kim Jong-un, proclaimed that nuclear weapons development would allow the country to develop economically while the U.S. continues to impose sanctions on Pyongyang.

  • Even though some sources describe the new submarine as just a conversion from an existing Soviet-built Romeo-class diesel-electric submarine, the North Korean government claims that it is ready for “both preemptive and retaliatory strikes.”

  • Reports describe that if the Kim Kun-ok is successful, it could give North Korea a longer range for its nuclear arsenal, which is beyond the existing capabilities of the U.S. and South Korean intelligence.

Source:
https://news.rthk.hk/rthk/en/component/k2/1717367-20230908.htm
https://news.yahoo.com/north-korea-just-launched-nuclear-004132661.html

A Desperate North Korea has Finally Reopened

The hermit kingdom has finally reopened its gates to its allies as North Korea’s one and only state airline, Air Koryo, resumed services last month from Pyongyang to Beijing and Russia’s port city of Vladivostok. Flight JS151 landed in Beijing on August 22, 2023, at 9:17 a.m., shortly ahead of its scheduled time. Although it was not clear who was aboard, tour companies that operated in North Korea suggested that the flight was specially arranged to carry back North Koreans trapped in China during the years of border closures. This international border closure marks three and a half years of total cut-off from the outside world. Even though rail trade for desperately needed food and medicine from China had restarted as early as April 2022, passenger travel in 2023 signals that North Korea is prepared to return to its pre-pandemic livelihood.

However, the prolonged isolation has deepened the nation’s chronic food insecurity, and it is worrying as to how its people, including underground entrepreneurs who have grown dependent on Kim Jong-un’s authoritarian leadership when the black-market trade economy was put to a halt, could restore the country’s heavily driven civilian economy.

IT IS NOW OR NEVER

North Korea was “successful” in portraying its achievement in accomplishing its ideology of self-reliance during the lockdown by reportedly stealing hundreds of millions worth of cryptocurrency and other digital assets to fund its worsening economic conditions. However, “The cost of isolation that piled up over the years … has reached a breaking point for Kim,” according to Heo Jeong-pil, a professor of North Korean studies at Dongguk University in Seoul. Similarly, Cho Han-bun, a senior researcher at the Korean Institute of National Unification viewed Pyongyang’s resumption of commercial flights to be motivated by an urgency to resume trade and people-to-people exchanges. Some experts believe that the North may even increase the number of workers sent to Russia’s Far East to replace repatriated laborers amidst the mass forced return of citizens from abroad, as they provide an important source of foreign income for the regime.

In relation to opening the country’s doors to tourists, Heo commented that, “While very careful at this point, North Korean authorities do need opportunities to raise foreign currency, and that is why they ultimately want tourists back.” Although it is unclear when foreigners would be allowed to enter the country, the North Korean parliament recently passed a new law on “revitalizing” and “expanding” the tourism industry, which may indicate that the government now seeks to revive the ailing industry. Rowan Beard, a tour manager at Young Pioneer Tours, described that “It’s a positive sign to see the tourism sector being discussed in parliament – meaning they are expecting foreign tourists to return soon.” Nonetheless, since Covid-19 restrictions are still being implemented in the country, as seen by the one-week quarantine requirement imposed on the first batch of returning citizens in August, prospective tourists should be prepared to accept similar testing and quarantine measures. After all, “The unvaccinated nation is still highly wary of the coronavirus, but it has no choice but to reopen its borders to resume trade and address the ongoing food shortage which has reached a serious level. I’ve heard that the price of rice per kilogram has reached 7,000 North Korean won (KPW) in some places, the highest figure in several years,” according to Park Won-gon, a professor of North Korea studies at Ewha Womans University.

INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY PREPARES TO WELCOME NORTH KOREANS

International competitions also welcomed the first batch of North Korean athletes since the start of the pandemic in early 2020. A group of around 80 male and female taekwondo athletes and officials were seen traveling by sleeper train from the Chinese border city of Dandong and through Beijing’s international airport to Kazakhstan in August 2023. The North’s demonstration team performed for about an hour at the opening ceremony of the ITF Taekwon-Do World Championships held in Astana, during which the chief of the North Korean-led International Taekwondo Federation, Ri Yong-son, told the press that “We’ve gathered here for peace and friendship. There are no failures, we are all champions.” Photos by South Korea’s Yonghap news agency showed large piles of wrapped boxes and luggage as the group checked in for the return flight to Pyongyang from Beijing.

As North Korea begins to ease its traveling restrictions both internally and externally, experts speculate that South Korea is expected to see a growing number of North Korean defectors in the coming months, not only from Pyongyang but also from China and Russia. Park even suggested that “We may see the number (of defectors) return gradually to pre-pandemic levels.”

Food Shortage Concerns after Typhoon Strikes North Korea

In anticipation of tropical storm Khanun, North Korea’s military and the Party were ordered to prepare flood-mitigation measures and salvage crops earlier this month. The effects of the typhoon have been devastating to many parts of the country, particularly in South Hamgyong Province, where “Day after day of continuous rain … caused serious damage to families living in single-story homes who haven’t kept up with repairs on broken tiles.” As a result, “Families with little children have been sending them to sleep in undamaged houses while they stay up all night mopping the water.” Amidst the chaos, signs of greater food insecurity have also emerged with citizens “moaning about their predicament – along with not having enough to eat, they now have to stay up all night to deal with rain leaking through their roofs.”

Even though North Korean state media quoted its leader Kim Jong-un’s seemingly high regard for its people, saying that “For our Party, the life of each and every one of our people is more precious than anything else, and only when the whole people are healthy can there be a Party,” it ordered citizens to prioritize the protection of propaganda statues, monuments and murals of the country’s leaders.

KIM JONG-UN’S PRIORITIES

There were specific instructions passed down by the Party, stating that “Above all, there should be a primary focus on reconfirming the security status of significant objects including portraits, statues, mosaic murals representing the great leader and general, (and) immortality towers.” Other Party slogans, historical sites and museums, which are linked to worship of the Kim family are among the assets that citizens and officials should actively protect by visiting the local areas themselves “rather than giving instructions and receiving reports on the results.” According to Andrei Lankov, Director at Korea Risk Group, “These statues and portraits are not just symbols, but are sacred religious symbols, essentially icons. … Every religion since times immemorial expects its faithful to be ready to die – or at least suffer – in order to save sacred icons.” Moreover, citizens can face execution for damaging their leader’s portrait, even if it was unintentional.

North Korea’s Party-oriented priorities over the health and safety of its people extend to the protection of its crops and forests. Authorities have formed nationwide emergency response committees and mobilized citizens to prevent damage to crops and infrastructure projects from floods at the cost of people’s homes and livelihoods. Factory workers have reportedly been ordered to dig ditches at cooperative farms with non-functioning water pumps, and the operation is expected to last until the end of the monsoon season. Meanwhile, a citizen from South Pyongan complained that the authorities “paid no attention to concerns about the flooding of homes” and asked residents to “deal with it on their own” as water swept into yards and homes, flooding rooms and destroying property, including blankets and televisions. Another source from Hyesan criticized the authorities for issuing mobilization orders to residents to restore trees as she questioned what good trees will do “when we are starving because there is nothing to eat right now.” As a form of punishment, residents who do not take part in the forest restoration must “prepare a lunch box [for others who are mobilized] and pay 10,000 won (US$1.20) in cash.”

SERIOUS FOOD SHORTAGES

The North Korean economy has been trapped in a “vicious cycle” of negative growth for three years from 2020 and 2022 and the people are paying the price. As described by Hong Min of the Korea Institute for National Unification, Pyongyang’s recent emphasis on the agricultural sector is “seemingly out of desperation that food issues could become a serious problem.”

Further, following accusations by the UN Security Council condemning the regime for overspending on its nuclear arms program while neglecting its citizens’ basic needs, state media showed recent images of Kim Jong-un visiting typhoon-hit farms and overseeing military helicopters spray pesticides to save key crops. Kim’s public appearance in paddy fields in Kangwon Province, whereby he was seen inspecting restoration activities at a farm which was recently damaged by a typhoon, sparked speculations that there are serious food shortages across the country, especially amid reports alleging that around 240 North Koreans had starved to death between January and July this year, which was more than double the annual average of 110. Kim praised the rapid response of the military to the typhoon damage as “performing a miracle of recovering flooded farmland in a brief span of time,” but experts questioned how effective the measures would be, claiming that “Kim Jong Un’s order to mobilize air force planes is merely a show.”

How Brokers Take Advantage of Desperate Defectors

North Korean defectors rely heavily on brokers who not only help them escape to China and/or ultimately to South Korea, but also stay connected with their loved ones back in the North. Over the years, brokers have used Chinese cell phones that enable them to make calls close to the China-North Korea border using Chinese relay towers, while an intermediary in China would arrange for money to be sent from South Korea to intended recipients in North Korea after taking a percentage for their services.

However, recent crackdowns by authorities have resulted in reduced communication for desperate families and friends who wait in the unknown through long periods of silence. Due to the broad and unmonitored powers brokers have over defectors and their families, reports indicate that remittance scams are common and the pandemic created a loophole that allows brokers to cheat their clients, particularly those whose families live in inland North Korean cities located far from the border regions.

A BREACH OF TRUST

It is no secret to the international community, let alone brokers working at the heart of the underground network, that North Koreans trying to escape their country have no choice but to trust brokers and their services with an unquestioning attitude. Unfortunately, cases of broker exploitation are not rare, especially since the borders were closed since the beginning of the pandemic in 2020 and people in the North had no way of communicating with the outside world.

Moreover, many defectors who have already escaped to the South were contacted by people posing as brokers. Kim Dan-geum, a North Korean defector who settled in South Korea told Radio Free Asia, described that brokers emotionally manipulate defectors, saying that “‘The family will starve to death if you don’t send the money,’ But we can’t confirm whether that’s true or not. There is no way to confirm.” Kim added that, “One lady I know said she keeps sending money, and the broker plays for her the recorded voices of the family saying ‘I got the money,’ or ‘I did not get the money.’”

According to Seo Jae-pyoung, secretary general of the South Korea-based Association of the North Korean Defectors, brokers take advantage of the fact that they are the only source of communication between defectors and their families. “Border control is now strict, so people from other provinces cannot get near the border. ... I myself got a call yesterday. The broker said my nephew’s name and told me to send money for him. I can’t connect with my nephew so … I can’t even check whether the money I sent actually got to him or not.” At the same time, the inability to discern between actual and fraudulent requests for money can be detrimental to people still living in the North. Seo described that “A defector I know had a younger brother living in Hyeryong, who called her in April last year requesting money … The sister said, ‘You don’t even drink alcohol. Don’t lie,’ and she hung up on him. A few months later news came that her younger brother had died. She began to wail, because what her brother said was true.” Further, Seo explained that brokers fabricate receipts, whereby “Some hand over a smaller amount of money than what was due and force them to sign a receipt.”

A ‘SAFER ROUTE’ TO FREEDOM?

Following widespread rumors about the impending forced repatriation of defectors detained in China, news that defectors whose identities have not been confirmed by their Chinese families are about to be arrested and sent back to the North have also started to spread among the North Korean community. As a result, defectors in China are increasingly anxious and fearful of their illegal statuses, and many are urgently seeking ways to reach South Korea as soon as possible.

According to a recent report, two defectors were arrested by the Chinese police in Jilin Province in mid-July after receiving assurance from a broker that he would “send them safely to South Korea without incident” upon paying an advance payment of 55,000 RMB (around $7,600 USD). A source explained to DailyNK that “some defectors are paying brokers in advance and then getting arrested on their way to South Korea. That’s because brokers are assuring their clients that they can safely make it to South Korea through a ‘newly-developed route’,” which is an outright lie. Consequently, desperate defectors who have chosen to quickly leave China are not only losing their money to deceitful brokers but also getting caught by the Chinese authorities.

The ongoing abuse of a people who are already vulnerable is still happening to this day. While the path to freedom is fraught with bad actors, we heard recently that the number of North Korean defectors entering into (and graduating from) Hanawon in South Korea has slowly grown in recent months, and for that, we are thankful.

Top Headlines from North Korea - August 2023

SEOUL URGES BEIJING TO STOP REPATRIATING NORTH KOREANS IN CHINA

  • The South Korean Unification Minister, Kim Yung-ho, and other senior officials attended a conference in Seoul and called on China to protect thousands of North Koreans defectors from forced repatriation after borders are reopened.

  • Kim stressed that “North Korean defectors in China should be defined as refugees who have the right to protect their lives and human rights.”

  • He added that “The government will accept all North Korean defectors who wish to come to South Korea.”

  • Choe Jae-hyung, a National Assembly parliamentarian with South Korea’s ruling Democratic Party of Korea, commented that “China is ignoring the preference of the migrants and their likely fate if forced to return to the North.”

  • Conference speakers demanded the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees to take action, including urging China to adhere to various human rights conventions it is a signatory to and leveraging with the Chinese officials to avoid negative publicity before hosting the Hangzhou Asian Games in late September 2023.

Source:
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2023/aug/16/forced-deportation-hellish-detention-face-north-ko/ 
https://www.yahoo.com/news/south-korea-calls-china-stop-122106690.html 

NORTH KOREA CLAIMS U.S. SOLDIER DEFECTED TO ESCAPE RACISM

  • Pyongyang made its first public acknowledgement of a U.S. soldier, Travis King’s, deliberate and illegal crossing from the South Korean side of the Joint Security Area into North Korea on July 18.

  • King became the first American confirmed to be detained in the North in nearly five years.

  • According to North Korea state agency KCNA, “During the investigation, Travis King confessed that he had decided to come over to the DPRK as he harboured ill feeling against inhuman maltreatment and racial discrimination within the US Army.”

  • King’s uncle told ABC News that King was experiencing racism during his military deployment and he no longer sounded like himself after spending time in a South Korean jail.

  • Since Pyongyang described King as an illegal entrant, rather than someone who “voluntarily” entered the North, Tae Yong-ho, a former minister at the North Korean Embassy in London before his defection in 2016, speculated that King might eventually be released as North Korea did not express its intentions of accepting him as a refugee and spoke about a third country resettlement.

Source:
https://www.scmp.com/news/asia/east-asia/article/3231215/north-korea-says-border-crossing-us-soldier-travis-king-willing-seek-refuge-there 
https://time.com/6305301/north-korea-travis-king-racial-discrimination/ 

Kim Jong Un leads a meeting of the Central Military Commission in Pyongyang, North Korea, (KCNA)

KIM JONG-UN FIRES TOP GENERAL AND CALLS FOR WAR PREPARATIONS

  • North Korean leader, Kim Jong-un, dismissed his country’s top general and ordered the military to “gird for a war.”

  • According to North Korean state media, Kim held a meeting of the Central Military Commission in Pyongyang on August 9, where he discussed plans against its enemy. However, Kim did not say who the enemy was.

  • During the meeting, Gen. Pak Su-il was fired as Chief of the General Staff and Vice Marshal Ri Yong-gil was appointed in his place. According to a professor of international studies at Ewha Womans University, Leif-Eric Easley, “Ri Yong Gil is a longstanding member of North Korea’s military elite, who before making it to the top, experienced ups and downs during his career. Seven years ago, he was even rumored to have been executed after a personnel reshuffle.”

  • Various other “leading commanding officers” were also dismissed, transferred or appointed during the meeting.

  • Easley explained that “Kim Jong Un frequently rotates leadership posts below him to prevent the emergence in North Korea of anyone like [Wagner Group founder] Yevgeny Prigozhin, who challenged Russian President Vladimir Putin’s authority after amassing personal control of financial assets and loyalty among armed forces.”

Source:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/aug/10/kim-jong-un-fires-dismisses-north-korea-top-military-general-pak-su-il
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/kim-jong-un-fires-top-general-orders-north-korean-military-to-gird-for-war/ar-AA1f4ljh
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/-kim-jong-un-fires-general-north-korea-war-plans-military-rcna99171

U.S., JAPAN AND SOUTH KOREA PLEDGE TO COUNTER THREATS FROM CHINA AND NORTH KOREA

  • U.S. President, Joe Biden, agreed to deepen military and economic cooperation with Japanese Prime MInister, Fumio Kishida, and South Korean President, Yoon Suk-yeol, to condemn China’s growing power and nuclear threats from North Korea.

  • The leaders said in a joint statement that “The purpose of our trilateral security cooperation is and will remain to promote and enhance peace and stability throughout the region.”

  • The three countries would add a new “duty to consult” security pledge and establish a communications hotline to discuss responses to threats or security crises in the Pacific.

  • The pledge acknowledges that a threat to one is “a threat to all,” according to a senior Biden administration official.

  • The nations also agreed to hold military training exercises and trilateral summits annually, as well as to share real-time information on North Korean missile launches by the end of 2023.

Source:
https://apnews.com/article/camp-david-summit-biden-south-korea-japan-0bc36bb3705a3dc1b69dc8cd47b35dd3
https://www.reuters.com/world/us-south-korea-japan-agree-crisis-consultations-camp-david-summit-2023-08-18/

China’s Facial Recognition Technology Drives Up Costs of Defection

Even though China has announced plans to restrict businesses’ use of facial recognition technology, it remains a dominant global player in selling this technology business that empowers the Chinese authorities to monitor and keep track of the population with little restrictions. It is a widely known fact that public cameras are purposefully placed on street corners and train stations in order for photographs and identity information to be generally gathered for the purpose of maintaining public security. Indeed, this facial recognition tool has been proven effective in aiding the police in identifying missing persons or locating wanted criminals in crowds as every Chinese resident is legally obligated to register their face in a government database. However, this is particularly problematic for North Korean defectors hiding in China as they are unregistered and unrecognizable by the system.

According to Seo Jae-pyoung, head of the South Korea-based Association of the North Korea Defectors, North Korean escapees do not show up with a matched profile when scanned by the cameras, and the police are quick to check on the person to determine why, thereby exposing their illegal immigration status. In effect, facial recognition technology in China significantly increases North Korean defectors’ risks of being caught, and as a result, drives up fees charged by smugglers who assist their defections. For instance, it cost about $2,000 USD per defector to escape through China with the help of a broker in the past. However, the price has skyrocketed since the facial recognition system was launched, costing about $10,000 USD to $15,000 USD per defector due to the increased risks taken up by brokers.

SURVEILLANCE LEADS TO ARRESTS?

There is a notable increase in facial recognition operations across Chinese cities, particularly in northern cities near the North Korean border where most defectors first arrive in China. In March 2023, five or six North Korean defectors and a local broker who assisted their move within China were caught by Chinese police near the northeastern city of Dalian. Seo suggested that the surveillance software played a major part in their capture, “It seems that those North Korean escapees were already tracked down.” 

Meanwhile, data from the South Korean Ministry of Unification showed a sharp decrease in the number of successful North Korean defections in recent years. Although the rapid decline could be explained by the prolonged border closure during the Covid-19 pandemic, experts indicated that China’s growing facial recognition advancement also contributed to the fall in numbers. As noted by Ethan Hee-seok Shin, a legal analyst from the South Korea-based Transitional Justice Working Group, “The AI-based facial recognition program has made the North Korean refugees’ internal movement by public transportation within China almost impossible while the authorities have been using surveillance technology to monitor and intercept the escapees attempting to flee China.”

FEARFUL DEFECTORS

Although there is currently no conclusive evidence indicating that North Korean defectors in China are arrested as a result of facial recognition technology, the increased surveillance is spreading fear among the North Korean community in China. As Hanna Song, director of the South Korean-based Database Center for North Korean Human Rights, explained, “China’s increasing use of emerging technology is being used as a tool of repression that affects the most vulnerable groups including North Korean refugees. … Many North Koreans spoke about how the advanced surveillance capabilities, such as facial recognition and biometric systems, are used to monitor and track the movements of those in China.”

The system not only targets defectors, but also actively identifies those who aid their defections and subsequently alerts the authorities. Kim Sung-eun of Caleb Mission, a U.S.-based Christian group that assists defectors in China, added that a number of staff from his organization were arrested before the pandemic as they were passing through facial recognition machines in front of train stations.

Given Beijing has long maintained a diplomatic relationship with Pyongyang, it is suggested by Choo Jaewoo, a professor at Seoul’s Kyung Hee University, that the Chinese authorities would be able to surveil escapees at North Korea’s request. As a result, a streamline process of using facial recognition technology to spot and arrest defectors and associated individuals might soon be developed to speed up the course of forced repatriation pursuant to the 1986 bilateral agreement. In the past, repatriated defectors faced torture, imprisonment, sexual violence, forced labor in prison camps and even public execution.

U.S. Soldier Defects to North Korea: Detained and Might Never Return

A 23-year-old American soldier, became the first U.S. citizen to cross into and be detained in North Korea in nearly five years, triggering a new wave of diplomatic complications between Pyongyang and Washington amidst tensions over the North’s nuclear ambitions. According to U.S. and United Nations officials, Travis King illegally crossed the Military Demarcation Line while he was on a civilian tour of the Joint Security Area at Panmunjom.

Witnesses who also joined the tour described being confused as to what was happening as King “gives out a loud ‘ha ha ha,’ and just runs in between some buildings,” thinking “it was a bad joke at first, but when he didn’t come back, I realized it wasn’t a joke, and then everybody reacted and things got crazy.” 

TROUBLED SOLDIER

The private second class soldier served nearly two months in a South Korean prison for assault. South Korean media reported that King, having received three medals while serving in the military, allegedly punched someone in the face repeatedly while drinking at a club in Seoul last September and broke the door of a police patrol car last October. He was released from the detention facility on July 10 and scheduled to return home to Texas to face additional disciplinary actions. However, after King was escorted to Incheon International Airport, he somehow managed to escape and leave the terminal to join a group with 43 tourists at the Demilitarized Zone (“DMZ”). Since the military escort had no ticket and could only enter as far as the customs checkpoint, King continued into the terminal alone before leaving Incheon altogether. Dressed casually in jeans and a T-shirt, King bolted across the border at the end of the DMZ tour before soldiers standing guard on the South Korean side had time to respond. A witness, Sarah Leslie, commented that she did not see any guards on the North Korean side and was told by her tour guides that the army there had decreased its presence at the DMZ since the beginning of the pandemic.

Although it remains unclear if King planned to defect or if he escaped to North Korea on a whim, experts say that the DMZ trip to Panmunjom takes days of planning and tours require participants to submit their passports in advance in order to secure a permit prior to the day of the tour.

WHERE IS HE NOW?

Not much is known about King’s current state or what sort of consequences he might face in North Korea. Nevertheless, U.S. Defense Secretary, Lloyd Austin, confirmed the incident and stated that, “We believe that he is in [North Korean] custody and so we’re closely monitoring and investigating the situation and working to notify the soldier’s next of kin.” In particular, Austin said that “I’m absolutely foremost concerned about the welfare of our troop” as there has yet to be an announcement made by the North regarding the incident. King’s mother, Claudine Gates, told ABC News that she was shocked when she heard her son had crossed into North Korea as she had last heard from King “a few days ago” when he told her about his imminent return to his base in Fort Bliss, “I can’t see Travis doing anything like that.” Gates pleaded that “I just want him to come home, come back to America.”

Interestingly, four American soldiers – 19-year-old Larry Allen Abshier, 21-year-old James Joseph Dresnok, 19-year-old Jerry Wayne Parrish, and 24-year-old Charles Robert Jenkins – voluntarily defected to North Korea in the 1960s. They managed to survive custody and were eventually used as propaganda puppets in the North, including some of them as actors playing American villains in films. It therefore “wouldn’t be surprising if North Korea tries to score some propaganda points or makes demands in exchange for handing over the soldier,” commented NPR’s Greg Myre, who opined that Kim Jong-un may endeavor to leverage the incident for political gain.

CAN THE U.S. BRING HIM HOME?

Although Peter Ward, a senior researcher on North Korea at Kookmin University in Seoul suggested that “Americans who are detained by North Korea generally get out eventually, whereas South Koreans who are detained generally don’t,” returning to the U.S. from North Korea is no easy matter. Given that North Korean officials “haven’t been engaging with the outside world” in the last few years, any form of negotiation between the two countries, even with the use of captive Americans as bargaining tools, would be deemed a diplomatic challenge. As of today, Washington’s efforts to contact Pyongyang and secure the return of King are met with silence as the nation awaits North Korea’s response.

Top Headlines from North Korea - July 2023

US SOLDIER WILLINGLY CROSSED THE DMZ INTO NORTH KOREA

  • On July 18, 2023, American soldier Travis King, who was recently released from military detention in South Korea and was being escorted out of the country for disciplinary reasons, somehow managed to join a tour group at the border and crossed into North Korea

  • King has been taken into custody by North Korean authorities

  • The White House, Defense Department, State Department and United Nations are working to get more information and resolve the situation

CBS News 
WSJ

RISE IN OVERSEAS DEFECTIONS LEADS TO INCREASED SURVEILLANCE

  • In response to two alleged defections of North Korean diplomats in Russia and Europe respectively, North Korea is ordering diplomatic consulates to make changes to the management system for overseas personnel to ascertain their locations at all times and respond immediately to problems.

  • According to a source from Daily NK, Pyongyang is issuing two or more orders a week regarding policies aimed at preventing defections. As a result, “Overseas personnel are always under an atmosphere of insecurity when these kinds of orders or policies are issued because they never know when they’ll get called back home.”

  • The new orders also include increasing inspections of overseas personnel from once to three times per day.

  • North Korean authorities further discussed the deployment of more Ministry of State Security agents overseas to investigate and monitor its citizens living abroad.

Source:
DailyNK
NK News

JAPAN’S FUKUSHIMA WATER RELEASE CONDEMNED BY NORTH KOREA

  • Pyongyang issued a statement accusing the United Nations nuclear watchdog after the International Atomic Energy Agency (“IAEA”) approved Tokyo’s plan to release around 1.2 million tons of treated water from the Fukushima nuclear plant into the Pacific Ocean this summer.

  • North Korea’s Land and Environment Protection Department stated that, “The just international community must not sit and watch the evil, anti-humanitarian and belligerent action by the corrupt force that is trying to disrupt humanity’s home of the blue planet – and must unite to thoroughly stop and destroy them.”

  • In particular, the North claimed that the IAEA has no legal justification for discharging the nuclear-tainted water.

  • North Korea’s statement came after neighboring countries such as South Korea, China and the Pacific Islands raised concerns relating to potential harm to the environment and public health.

Source:
SCMP
CNN

Far Eastern State Transport University in Khabarovsk, Russia.

NORTH KOREAN STUDENT MISSING IN RUSSIAN FAR EAST

  • A 25-year-old North Korean student studying at the prestigious Far Eastern State Transport University in Khabarovsk, Kim Tae-sung, was found missing in a possible defection attempt on July 8.

  • Sources told Radio Free Asia that Kim might have escaped when the overseas North Korean community was mourning on July 8, the anniversary of the 1994 passing of Kim Il-sung.

  • Kim appeared to have resided in Russia for many years, and as Pyongyang has maintained a strict border closure since the pandemic, many North Koreans living abroad have been unable to return home for years.

  • A poster published on Russian social media platform that helps locate missing persons stated that, “We received a paper copy of the police’s missing person notice and now are working with the police, providing information support.”

  • Although the DPRK consulate’s office in Khabarovsk did not reveal any detail concerning the incident, it appeared to confirm its awareness of the case.

  • Russian public security authorities are continuing to search for Kim.

Source:
RFA
NK News

Hwasong-18 intercontinental ballistic missile launched in North Korea on July 13, 2023. (KCNA)

NORTH KOREA ADMITS AND DEFENDS MISSILE LAUNCH

  • North Korea recently launched a Hwasong-18 intercontinental ballistic missile which flew for more than 70 minutes before landing in waters near to Japan.

  • Despite being under United Nations sanctions for its missile and nuclear programs since 2006, Pyongyang claimed to have exercised its right to self-defense “to deter dangerous military moves of hostile forces and safeguard the security of our state.”

  • North Korean state media reported that the launch was conducted “at a grave period when the military security situation on the Korean Peninsula and in the region has reached the phase of nuclear crisis beyond the Cold War era as the US and its vassal forces’ unprecedented military provocations against the DPRK have been intensified.”

  • China and Russia blamed the United States and South Korea for provoking the North with their joint military drills.

Source:
Reuters
CNN

China’s Expanded Spy Law - New Risks for Foreigners

Crossing Borders has been operating in China since 2003 and we have been doing so without the permission of the Chinese government. Short of China changing its laws to accommodate foreign NGOs, we will continue to operate under the radar. While we have not been directly impacted, we have witnessed China’s shifting stance on foreign organizations doing work in China in recent years. Many companies and workers have been forced out and banned from ever returning to the country without explanation. China also recently changed their laws in order to justify the arrest and detention of foreign workers. 

China revised their spy law that significantly expanded Beijing’s definition of espionage on July 1, 2023, in ways that would include the activities of aid workers like Crossing Borders’ missionaries and local staff. In particular, the new law empowers the current administration to conduct extensive investigation into suspected espionage activities and punish what China interprets as a threat to its national security. 

WHAT HAS CHANGED?

Even though China’s pre-existing espionage law already imposed harsh punishments, including life in jail and execution in extreme cases. The broadened provision now recognizes an espionage offense that is “non-criminal” in nature. This can be a simple meeting with the wrong person or being at the wrong place at the wrong time. According to Jeremy Daum, a senior research fellow at Yale’s Paul Tsai China Center, this expansion in power will likely have a “chilling effect on Chinese citizens who have contact with foreigners and foreign organizations.

Additionally, compared with the existing anti-espionage law in 2014, the 2023 update authorizes state security entities to detain a suspect for up to 15 days and fines for non-criminal acts of espionage. This means that any act can be construed by the Chinese government as espionage if the Chinese government has reason to see it as such. Under this expansion, there is now a clear legal basis for additional administrative measures like suspending businesses or revoking licenses.

The new law also expands the investigative powers of state security arms in investigating espionage activities to inquire into “the relevant property information of persons suspected of acts of espionage,” which could include data and information on personal smartphones and laptops. Moreover, Article 33 allows the authorities to impose exit bans on suspected individuals deemed a potential national security risk, regardless of their nationality. In short, it gives the Chinese government the right to seize, search and even detain with what they deem as probable cause.

WHAT CONSTITUTES ESPIONAGE?

The definition of espionage has also been expanded under the new law. While the previous law mainly focused on state secrets and intelligence, the revised law encompasses any document, data, materials, or cyberattacks related to national security and interests. However, China's national security and interests are not specifically defined, allowing authorities considerable discretion.

Due to China’s holistic view of “national security” and “national interests,” the overall ambiguity of the new espionage law would increase risks for foreign organizations working near the North Korean border. The increased ambiguity and broad scope of the law raise concerns about the potential targeting of individuals and foreign organizations operating near the North Korean border. The true impact of this law on foreign citizens and organizations in China is yet to be seen.

HOW ARE CROSSING BORDERS OPERATIONS AFFECTED?

Throughout our time serving in China, their political and legal reach has only increased in both scope and power. While this latest move may have implications on our ability to reach and help refugees in China, it does not come as a surprise. By God’s grace, Crossing Borders has been able to maintain operations in spite of the ever-evolving landscape in China.  As with any situation, ours can change without notice in China. Our contingency plans try to keep up with China’s fluid laws but our primary objective is to protect North Korean refugees, even if that means walking away. But for now, we are grateful for the work that continues in China.

From the very beginning in 2003, we have taken each day as a gift from God. To think that we have been allowed to continue in this environment is a miracle.

Rare North Korean Defection by Sea

A group of North Koreans who crossed the heavily patrolled inter-Korean maritime border in the Yellow Sea, the Northern Limit Line, boarded a fishing boat earlier last month and defected to South Korea on May 6, 2023. South Korea’s navy patrol boat located and intercepted the North Koreans, including two families with children expressing their intention to defect, as they headed to Yeonpyong Island toward the west of Incheon. If confirmed, it would mark “the first time [a family has defected] since four North Koreans crossed the border on a fishing boat in July 2017.” 

Official data shows that the number of defectors fleeing to the South has significantly decreased from over 1,000 per year for most of the 2000s to around 100 since the pandemic in 2020 due to the closure of the North Korean border. Moreover, the Center for Strategic and International Studies stated in its report that propaganda in the North that publicizes and highlights how difficult life in South Korea is also contributed to the drastic decline in defection figures.

CROSSING BY BOAT

While the South Korean authorities did not disclose the exact number of defectors in this isolated incident, they confirmed that the number did not exceed 10. The group is currently undergoing a joint interrogation by the National Intelligence Service, South Korean military, police and Ministry of Unification in Seoul to verify whether their defection was voluntary. The National Intelligence Service revealed that “In an interagency questioning, the defectors said they had admired our society while watching South Korean television and decided to defect as they grew exhausted of the North Korean regime amid tightened social control stemming from the pandemic.” Once the spy agency verifies their voluntary defection, the group is expected to undergo a 12-week resettlement education program to adjust to life in the South. The current government under Yoon Suk-yeol’s leadership emphasized the principle of accepting all North Korean defectors. Former Moon Jae-in’s administration notably repatriated two North Korean fishermen against their will in 2019 after they were suspected of murdering 16 fellow crew members before crossing the East Sea to South Korea.

It is worth noting that not all crossings are intentional. There had been instances where North Korean fishing boats drifted into the South after experiencing engine trouble or running out of fuel, and it is standard practice for South Korea to return North Korean fishermen in line with their wishes unless they express a desire to defect or are suspected of espionage.

NORTH KOREANS EXPRESS ENVY

News of the group’s defection was reportedly spreading rapidly in the Chinese-North Korean border regions of Hoeryong and Hyesan, as many people who faced tougher crackdowns since the pandemic expressed envy toward those who defected, “People are now facing hard times comparable to the hardships suffered during the Arduous March. Some people might want to defect, but border guards will shoot anyone even approaching the border area, so dreams of defecting stay nothing but dreams.” 

Meanwhile, this recent defection by boat sparked excitement and gave hope to many border residents, “We have heard plenty of rumors about people who risked their lives to cross the border following the outbreak of COVID-19. These attempts were unsuccessful, and those involved were either dragged off to political prison camps or shot and killed by border guards. Everyone was relieved to hear news about not just one or two people but an entire family escaping here successfully.” As expressions of envy like “I feel so happy about it, almost like I was the one who defected,” “I hope we’ll get that kind of opportunity, too” and “For an entire family to go all together, and directly to South Korea at that, makes people quite jealous. Some people are saying they’d be happy if they could even send just their children” span across the region, Daily NK’s reporting partner suggests that many North Koreans may wish to defect.

A Mother's Love - Elim House Summer Retreat 2023

Last summer, we piloted our first summer retreat for current and past residents of Elim House. God graciously provided the group last year with a time of rest, delicious food, hours of laughter, vulnerability and shoulders to cry on. Our team returned to Korea this June for two weeks to serve at Elim House and Elim Community. They taught English and workout classes, spent time cooking for and ministering to the women at Elim House and finished the trip with our second summer retreat. 

This is the second year for Jacob, one of our team members, and his family to make this summer trip. The main difference this year was having his mother-in-law, Hannah, join the team. Hannah has faithfully followed Jesus for many decades and through many trials. She had always wanted to experience being on a missions trip and the Lord finally allowed that to happen this summer. 

Hannah’s presence was immediately felt, not just by the women at Elim House but by our South Korea team as well. She was quick and constant with her words of encouragement and affirmation with everyone she encountered. As a first generation Korean American, Hannah had no trouble communicating with everyone at Elim House. She lovingly held the hands of our Elim House residents and as she heard their stories, prayed over them and consoled them. As an experienced restaurateur while living in the States, Hannah blessed the women by cooking and sharing meals with the women of Elim House.

Eight North Korean women attended this year’s summer retreat. Though it was her first time at one of our retreats, Hannah was intentional in getting to know the women and was often seen spending one-on-one time with many of them. She had heard about North Korean refugees through Jacob and Crossing Borders in the past. But now face to face with this group of women, she was hungry to learn about each of their stories. As she listened, she cried with the women, encouraging them to hope in the Lord with their own lives and with the fate of their loved ones still in China and North Korea.

The second day of the retreat started with Hannah’s home cooking and visits to a few key locations along the Northern Limit Line, which divides the North Korean coast from South Korea’s five coastal islets near Incheon. As the group visited these sites that look towards North Korea, one stop included an unexpected chorus of a well known reunification song while another stop finished with raising hands towards North Korea as the group cried out to God to heal the land.

Looking towards North Korea, the women who attended the retreat prayed together for their homeland.

As their time in Korea drew to a close with the ending of the retreat, with tears in their eyes, each of the women took turns embracing Hannah to say goodbye and insisted that she come back next year. We knew God would use Hannah to show love and compassion to the North Korean women on this trip. Yet, we were still amazed to see how deeply the women were impacted by her loving presence and her steadfast faith.

Elim House Summer Retreat, June 2023

A mother’s love is precious and irreplaceable. We’re so thankful for God’s providence and provision in sending Hannah to Korea this year. We pray Hannah and other moms will bless future trips to Elim House.

Top Headlines from North Korea - June 2023

Looking across the water at North Korean farmland from South Korea

NEW FAMINE STRIKES AS NORTH KOREAN FAMILIES STARVE TO DEATH

  • Latest reports and interviews gathered in North Korea suggest the country is facing the worst food crisis since the 1990s due to a shortage of supplies amid border closures during the pandemic and Kim Jong-un choosing to invest in developing nuclear weapons.

  • Pyongyang had always relied on importing grains, fertilizers and machinery from China to feed its 26 million citizens and recently fortified borders have made it impossible for people to smuggle in food to sell at black markets.

  • “At first, I was afraid of dying from COVID-19, but then I began to worry about starving to death,” described a construction worker, who claimed that food supplies were so low that five people from his village had already starved to death.

  • A resident from Pyongyang told the BBC that she heard of people who killed themselves at home or disappeared into the mountains to die in their sleep because they could no longer make a living.

  • North Korea economist, Peter Ward, expressed concerns that “middle-class people are seeing starvation in their neighborhoods.”

  • The government used the past three years to pass new laws to further control people’s lives, particularly in relation to defection. A resident commented that “If you even approach the river now you will be given a harsh punishment, so almost nobody is crossing,” while another said, “We are stuck here waiting to die.”

Source:

The BBC

The Independent 

KIM JONG-UN BANS SUICIDE AS NORTH KOREANS CHOOSE TO END THEIR LIVES

  • North Korean leader, Kim Jong-un, defined suicide as an “act of treason against socialism” and secretly issued a suicide prevention order during an emergency meeting with party leaders after media outlets revealed that families committed suicide due to hunger and poverty.

  • An official mentioned that there were 35 known suicide cases in Chongjin and nearby Kyongsong county this year alone, most of which involved whole families ending their lives together.

  • According to the South Korean National Intelligence Service, suicides in North Korea had risen by about 40 percent compared to last year.

  • Violent crimes in North Korea are also on the rise as people struggle under extreme hardships.

Source:

Radio Free Asia

Hindustan Times

UCA News 

NORTH KOREA VOWS TO FULLY SUPPORT RUSSIA AGAINST UKRAINE

  • Kim Jong-un pledged to “hold hands” with Russia’s Vladimir Putin in a message to Moscow marking Russia’s National Day.

  • Kim defended Putin’s stance in the Russia-Ukraine war, stating that “Justice is sure to win and the Russian people will continue to add glory to the history of victory.”

  • The North Korean leader sought to deepen ties between the two countries after calling for “closer strategic cooperation” in their common aim to build “a powerful country.”

  • Pyongyang has been accused of providing weapons to Russia in exchange for food in violation of security council sanctions. Reports also suggested that North Korean workers were sent to Russian-occupied Ukraine to help in construction.

Source:

The Guardian

Reuters 

USS Michigan, a nuclear-powered submarine, approaches a naval base in Busan, South Korea, Friday, June 16, 2023. (Source: Gang Duck-chul/Yonhap via AP)

NORTH KOREA TALKS DEFENSE STRATEGIES AS U.S. SENDS SUBMARINE TO SOUTH KOREA

  • According to state media reports, Kim Jong-un attended a Workers’ Party’s Central Committee meeting to discuss improving the country’s struggling economy and reviewing defense strategies to “cope with the changed international situation.”

  • The Committee convened the plenary meeting after the U.S. sent a nuclear-powered submarine to South Korea.

  • Pyongyang denounced the U.S. and South Korea for their joint military exercises, which were labeled by the North as invasion rehearsals.

  • Meanwhile, North Korea used the U.S.-South Korean drills as a pretext to develop its own weaponry, including test-firing around 100 missiles since the start of 2022. 

Source:

Al Jazeera

Taiwan News 

Seoul Awakened by Wartime Alerts

It was 6:32 am on Wednesday morning when South Korea’s capital was awakened by high-pitched air raid sirens followed by a wartime alert that urged residents to prepare for an emergency evacuation. South Koreans, who have over many years become desensitized to frequent provocations from the North, were startled as news that Pyongyang had fired a rocket spread like wildfire across the city of 10 million. Accompanied by North Korea’s prior warning that it would launch its first military reconnaissance satellite between May 31 and June 11 and at a time of heightened tension in the region, the rare government alert left citizens worried about an imminent attack and so terrified that a Seoul resident even “thought of the situation in Ukraine” and told NK News that “I panicked with fear of possibly losing my husband in a war. I held onto him and cried.”

FALSE ALARM

The Korean-language notification was short and abrupt. The message warned residents to give priority to children and the elderly during evacuation, but made no mention of what triggered the alert, how people should prepare, or where the evacuation areas were. Lee Ju-yeon, a resident from Seoul, described that “I was so panicked. 911 lines were busy and the internet was slow … So without knowing what was really happening, I was about to head down to a basement wearing a wrap carrier with my baby.” Foreigners visiting Seoul also complained that they were confused as the evacuation order was in Korean, “I didn’t get it of course, but I was nervous,” said Blake Fuentes Glibert, a Mexican tennis player visiting South Korea for a tournament.

It took the South Korean government 22 minutes before recalling the warning as an “error” and reassuring Seoul residents that the city was safe. Upon learning that the alert was triggered by North Korea’s failed attempt to launch its spy satellite into space to monitor U.S. and South Korean military activities, which Kim Jong-un’s sister, Kim Yo-jong, later announced plans to relaunch the satellite in the “near future,” the public’s confusion and anxiety soon turned into anger and exasperation. Seoul resident, Chung Sung-hee, described the chaotic experience of realizing that the loudspeaker broadcast denoted a “real situation,” rather than a drill. “They should’ve said what was happening, and where to go … Who would evacuate with a message like that,” she added that she could not help but curse the authorities when the second alert explained that it was a false alarm.

UNPREPARED FOR WAR

While Yoon’s administration was criticized for championing a tough stance against Pyongyang on the one hand, yet failing to handle major crises and assure its people of its safety on the other hand, this false alarm also highlighted the fact that modern day Seoul is unprepared to respond to a real emergency. As Ahn Byong-jin, a political scientist at Kyung Hee University in Seoul commented, “there has been little training for the general public on how to live with it. The commotion we had this morning encapsulates how the government is failing to understand and respond to this new normal with North Korea.”

Moreover, repeated alerts falsely triggered by its nuclear-armed northern neighbor over the years have conditioned many disinterested South Koreans to ignore both real and apparent threats of war. “One of my colleagues told me that she heard the alert while washing her hair, but just dismissed it thinking it’s just another one of many news alerts about North Korea missiles,” explained an apparel company worker from Seoul. Meanwhile, keywords relating to “alerts” and “evacuation” became the most searched topics on Twitter in South Korea, with a user tweeting “Hey guys, given Twitter is still working, I guess it is not war.” Even though air raid sirens and wartime alerts are rare, false alarms akin to Wednesday’s alert could potentially further desensitize people to disregard future evacuation orders, which are widely expected to normalize going forward, as the country remains technically at war seven decades after the Korean War ended.

Top NK Headlines - May 2023

CRYPTO HACKERS STOLE BILLIONS - FUNDING HALF OF NORTH KOREA’S MISSILE PROGRAM

  • North Korea allegedly targeted crypto assets in other countries to obtain foreign currency to fund its missile program.

  • According to U.K.-based blockchain analysis provider, Elliptic, hacker groups affiliated with North Korea have stolen a total of $2.3 billion USD between 2017 and 2022. Of that, $721 million USD was stolen from Japan alone, which equals to 30% of the total of such losses globally, followed by Vietnam ($540 million USD), the U.S. ($497 million USD) and Hong Kong ($281 million USD).

  • Although Pyongyang employed two main types of cyberattacks: hacking and ransomware, Elliptic’s analysis mostly uncovered hacking (stealing directly from cryptocurrency exchanges).

  • A White House official suggests that about half of North Korea’s missile program has been funded by cyberattacks and cryptocurrency theft.

  • U.S. intelligence agencies are still trying to identify the culprits behind the cybercrimes and the Biden administration is said to be “putting a lot of time and thought” into the problem.

Source:
https://edition.cnn.com/2023/05/10/politics/north-korean-missile-program-cyberattacks/index.html
https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/Cryptocurrencies/North-Korean-crypto-thefts-target-Japan-Vietnam-Hong-Kong 

SOUTH KOREA BEGINS TO TEST NORTH KOREAN DEFECTORS FOR RADIATION EXPOSURE

  • According to Seoul’s unification ministry, voluntary radiation exposure tests have commenced for North Korean defectors who came from areas near North Korea’s Punggye-ri nuclear testing site.

  • South Korea had previously carried out similar tests on 40 North Korean defectors in 2017 and 2018.

  • 796 former residents from Punggye-ri and nearby areas defected to South Korea since the first nuclear test in October 2006.

  • This round of tests come three months after the Transitional Justice Working Group released a report claiming that tens of thousands of North Koreans may have been exposed to radioactive materials and concerns grew over defectors’ health risks.

  • 89 individuals who used to live near the nuclear facility, in which all of the North’s six nuclear weapons tests in the past were carried out, have begun undergoing the testing.

  • The medical tests include whole-body counting (the measurement of radioactivity) and chromosome analysis. Participants would also be asked about the source of their drinking water while living in North Korea.

  • The radiation testing is expected to be completed by November and its outcome likely to be publicized by late December.

Source:
https://en.yna.co.kr/view/AEN20230516003700325
https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/nation/2023/05/103_351012.html 

North Korean soldiers use former South Korean defence minister Kim Kwan-jin’s image as the target for gunnery exercises. Image: KCNA

YOON NAMES ‘SOLDIER MOST FEARED BY NORTH KOREA’ CHIEF OF NEW DEFENSE INNOVATION COMMITTEE

  • South Korean President, Yoon Suk-yeol, named Kim Kwan-jin the de facto chief of a newly established committee tasked with reforming the South Korean military to counter the North’s missile and nuclear threats.

  • Kim is one of the eight experts appointed to deter North Korea’s “provocative mentality in advance."

  • A former defense minister, the retired four-star general has earned a reputation for his uncompromising and aggressive posture toward North Korea. For instance, he ordered the military to take the approach of “shoot first, report later” in face of provocations from the North.

  • Yoon also called on the committee to enhance the South’s reconnaissance and surveillance capabilities and establish a more effective defense system against drones.

  • While one of the most qualified, his appointment was met with controversy due to multiple criminal charges on political meddling and abuse of authority he faced during his time in office.

Source:
https://www.scmp.com/news/asia/east-asia/article/3220288/soldier-most-feared-north-korea-returns-seoul-military-yoon-talks-tough-nuclear-threat
https://www.nknews.org/2023/05/yoon-hires-hawkish-ex-defense-minister-whom-north-korea-wanted-killed/ 

A new solid-fuel intercontinental ballistic missile is shown at a North Korean military parade held in Pyongyang on Feb. 8. Image: KCNA

NORTH KOREA PREPARES FOR NEXT MILITARY PARADE

  • Satellite images appear to show North Korean soldiers gathering at the Mirim parade training ground in Pyongyang to prepare for a military parade.

  • The training base shares the same ground pattern as Kim Il Sung Square, and hundreds of possibly troop-carrying trucks arrived after May 12.

  • The apparent rehearsals are speculated to prepare for a potential parade to be held on July 27, which marks the 70th anniversary of the end of the Korean War. Another possible date is September 9, known as “Republic Day,” which celebrates the establishment of the regime.

  • Researchers described military parades as Pyongyang’s low-cost method of garnering attention that also serves to “bolster internal solidarity by putting a spotlight on the armed forces, which is the only sector where the Kim Jong-un regime can claim to have achieved progress.”

  • Satellite images also show a new hotel under construction at Mirim which is intended to house soldiers during extended military parade training in the future.

Source:
https://koreajoongangdaily.joins.com/2023/05/16/national/northKorea/Korea-North-Korea-Mirim-parade-training-ground/20230516152046726.html
https://www.nknews.org/pro/north-korea-appears-to-start-major-training-for-next-military-parade-imagery/