• Please... Save N. Korean defectors from being deported back to N.Korea
    18 replies, posted
A photo of North Korean defectors being deported back to North Korea has been released to the public for the first time. Taken in August last year at the North Korea-China borderlands of Tumen in China and Onsong County of North Hamkyong Province, the picture shows Chinese police sending back a North Korean family of a man, two women and a teenage boy back to the North. Having departed a concentration camp in Tumen, a pickup truck enters the North Korean and Chinese border bridge. WJ refers to the license plate of the Chinese armed police force. "The family members in the back seat were wearing manacles on their wrists. Women were lying unconscious and the man seemed to have given up, with his eyes closed. The children looked terrified. Tourists were abustle at the sight." Defectors arrested at the Tumen camp are sent back to North Korea in trucks once a week on average, but this family was transported differently in an apparent political move. Across the bridge lies the North Korean worker district of Onsong. [IMG]http://english.donga.com/data/20120221/photo/2012022186748.jpg[/IMG] [B]The story of a North Korean defector.....[/B] "My younger cousin loved meat. We grew up in the same neighborhood together. I was going to take her to (South) Korean barbecue places when she came back to (South) Korea. But that may never happen." A former North Korean defector who came to South Korea five years ago had both heartening and heartbreaking moments last year. He heard that his cousin had left her hometown of North Hamkyong Province to arrive in Changchun, the capital of China`s Jilin County. As soon as the former defector heard the news, he asked his friends in China to help arrange a meeting with his cousin. He remembered her as a young and charming girl who would tag along with him to school. He never got a hold of her, however. He hired a broker to find her but in vain. Fearing that something might have happened to her, he tried to calm himself down. Five months later while passing a newsstand on the street, he found a newspaper that said North Korean defectors were caught by Chinese police and were on the brink of being deported. He then realized that his cousin was one of those arrested. For the former defector, he felt as if his world was caving in. Since new North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has come to the fore, the communist state has repetitively warned of the "extermination of three generations" of defectors. The former defector could not go to work for fear that his cousin would become another victim. The former defector has written many letters to his cousin in the hope that she will read them eventually. With swollen eyes, he said, "I never had a chance to say I love her. She wanted to be a teacher. If I meet her again, I will say I love her and that everything`s okay now. I desperately hope that people take interest in this issue." Kim Jung-un, the son of Kim Jung-il and NK's current leader, declared that refugees who flee North Korea during the 100-day mourning period of his father's death would be annihilated along with their families. China already know this fects.. but they are ready to send back a North Korean defectors... It really can't be happen....
How the fuck is this funny or dumb.
i'm confused this seems like a spambot but i'm not sure
fects
God fucking damnit why does defector remind me of black ops THE FUCKING NUMBERS
I spy with my little eye no source where is it
Found it [URL]http://english.donga.com/srv/service.php3?biid=2012022183448[/URL] Actually, despite the similarity between this site and a blog, it is one of the three major south Korean newspapers' English website. How did I screw up spelling English that badly?
So if anyone tries to defect, they'll be killed along with their families? Fucking sickening.
[QUOTE=st_nick5;34801249]So if anyone tries to defect, they'll be killed along with their families? Fucking sickening.[/QUOTE] well, according to the article, they are all killed if they defect during the mourning period of 100 days prolly happens outside of that mourning period or put into camps for the rest of there lives, too
[QUOTE=st_nick5;34801249]So if anyone tries to defect, they'll be killed along with their families? Fucking sickening.[/QUOTE] You're talking about North Korea, where execution is probably a better alternative to a life of starving and worrying that you might be sent to a forced labor camp, and China who execute so many people that they have to roll out mobile execution buses. Like either of this countries give a shit about human rights.
[quote]Kim Jung-un, the son of Kim Jung-il and NK's current leader, declared that refugees who flee North Korea during the 100-day mourning period of his father's death would be annihilated along with their families.[/quote] Fuck this guy. Seriously.
[QUOTE=Snuffy;34802131]Fuck this guy. Seriously.[/QUOTE] It's a shame that fucking cocksucker didn't really get assassinated
Sometimes I just feel like nuking North Korea just because it fucking exists. One of the cancers on the planet, really.
They are going to be murdered. But China would do the same thing in a heartbeat if it benefitted them, so there's no stopping it.
I remember when people hoped Un would be better than his father. Really, I hope the fat motherfucker gets assassinated soon.
If only North Korea didn't exist...
[QUOTE=Dark RaveN;34802331]Sometimes I just feel like nuking North Korea just because it fucking exists. One of the cancers on the planet, really.[/QUOTE] good thing you're not the president then
[QUOTE=Dark RaveN;34802331]Sometimes I just feel like nuking North Korea just because it fucking exists. One of the cancers on the planet, really.[/QUOTE] You want to nuke lots of people just because they live in a country you don't like, and you call them the cancer? Alright.
Doing this is pretty much an illegal action, I'm fairly sure it is illegal for a country to deport people to a country that has a death penalty.
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