Defector tells of harrowing experience. ( Archived) (6)

Apr 12, 2013 9:01 AM CST Defector tells of harrowing experience.
tomcatwarne
tomcatwarnetomcatwarneOcean City, Plumouth, Devon, England UK289 Threads 7 Polls 17,106 Posts
View Photo
North Korea: Defector Reveals Harrowing Escape
Defectors fleeing North Korea are routinely sentenced to death as the government attempts to shut its people away from the world. Here one woman tells her story.
The North Korea that the government hides from the outside world is characterised by food shortages, indoctrination, military paranoia and labour camps where thousands toil to stay alive; locked up for showing even the slightest dissent.
Attempting to escape the country is a capital offence. The regime is determined to keep its iron grip on the population.
Defectors send messages home revealing that the outside world is not determined to crush North Korea and that people do not need to live in a twilight of perpetual shortages.
Some do make it, accepting they will never see their families again.
They spend their lives living as anonymously as possible; a picture of them in the south on any type of media would condemn their families at home to instant imprisonment.
In North Korea punishment lasts three generations. A husband and wife, their children and their grandchildren will all be punished, will all be locked up in the camps.
Lee Hyeonseo escaped with her entire family so is happy to speak out.
Speaking in a drop in centre for North Koreans at a Seoul university she said: "A family would completely be sent to a prison camp if they found out their family are in South Korea; it is a little problem if they are in China but it is a different thing if they are in South Korea.
"People in the north don't know the truth about what is going on as they can't hear or see anything about the wider world.
"They don't know about human rights or the suffering. They live in a virtual prison."
The journey to South Korea is difficult, long and dangerous. They cross to China. If they are arrested there they are sent back to certain death.
They then make their way through Laos, Cambodia or Vietnam heading for Thailand where they present themselves to a South Korean embassy and apply for asylum.
Miss Lee said: "It is very hard and long and very difficult."
She will not give any details of how she bribed her way out, but she did it for herself and her family and she certainly had no money.
The current crisis is about the regime holding on to power according to Miss Lee.
She said: "He (Kim Jong Un) needs to do something to show the people that he is protecting our country. The people are told it was started by the US or other countries.
"This is good propaganda for him that is why he is doing this it is all absurd."

Yahoo.
------ This thread is Archived ------
Apr 12, 2013 10:11 AM CST Defector tells of harrowing experience.
drgroovetone
drgroovetonedrgroovetoneNew Orleans, Louisiana USA1 Threads 1 Polls 89 Posts
there are plenty of "harrowing experiences" to be had here in USA as well
------ This thread is Archived ------
Apr 12, 2013 11:01 AM CST Defector tells of harrowing experience.
tomcatwarne
tomcatwarnetomcatwarneOcean City, Plumouth, Devon, England UK289 Threads 7 Polls 17,106 Posts
drgroovetone: there are plenty of "harrowing experiences" to be had here in USA as well


Of that, I have no doubt.
------ This thread is Archived ------
Apr 12, 2013 11:56 AM CST Defector tells of harrowing experience.
Several years ago in a National Geographic special Lisa Ling traveled with a Nepalese eye doctor and secretly films what she can of life inside North Korea during her trip. It was amazing to watch the eye doctor restore eye sight to people who had been blind for years and they immediately walk up to pictures of (the dear leader) Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il to thank them for giving back their eye sight without a word of thanks to the Nepalese doctor. The most chilling scene was when one old woman pledged to work harder in the salt mines for the glory of Kim Jong-il for returning her eye sight.

Lisa Ling rightfully points out how a system of fear governs the country. If these people didn’t give thanks to the Kim regime, they and their whole families would have been sent to one of the massive concentration camps that Lisa Ling spent plenty of time covering. The funniest portion was when Lisa Ling visited a North Korean family and asked them if there was anything wrong with Kim Jong-il. The North Korean interpreter kept pretending he didn’t understand the question. Overall, definitely a must see documentary about life in North Korea.
------ This thread is Archived ------
Apr 12, 2013 3:12 PM CST Defector tells of harrowing experience.
GUZMAN1
GUZMAN1GUZMAN1Barcelona, Catalonia Spain65 Threads 44 Polls 5,101 Posts


If you want to know more, travel there
------ This thread is Archived ------
Apr 26, 2013 1:26 PM CST Defector tells of harrowing experience.
Janze
JanzeJanzeIndianapolis, Indiana USA1 Threads 37 Posts
Would you tell the world of the hidden America where families live under bridges?

Would you tell the world of the America where hundreds of thousands of people live on the streets?

Would you tell the world of the America where every conversation between citizens and between especially citizens and foreigners are monitored?

Finally, would you tell the world of the America where 1 out of every 5 children live in abject poverty, in the wealthiest country of the world?

As soon as those realities become public knowledge, North Korean should reveal themselves to the world, at the same time.
------ This thread is Archived ------
Post Comment - Post a comment on this Forum Thread

This Thread is Archived

This Thread is archived, so you will no longer be able to post to it. Threads get archived automatically when they are older than 3 months.

« Go back to All Threads
Message #318

Stats for this Thread

707 Views
5 Comments
by tomcatwarne (289 Threads)
Created: Apr 2013
Last Viewed: 21 hrs ago
Last Commented: Apr 2013

Share this Thread

We use cookies to ensure that you have the best experience possible on our website. Read Our Privacy Policy Here