Published : Oct. 4, 2016 - 11:37
North Koreans staying temporarily in third countries such as overseas workers are subject to South Korea's new law aimed at improving the North's human rights situation, a government official said Tuesday.
The law which took effect last month will be applicable to such North Koreans, making it possible for Seoul to conduct investigations into such people, said the official at Seoul's unification ministry.
(Yonhap)
Article 3 of the law only stipulated that North Koreans are defined as those who live in areas above the military demarcation line.
The Center for North Korean Human Rights Records that started operations on Sept. 28 will investigate and collect data on North Korea's human rights abuses in accordance with the law.
Suh Doo-hyun, president of the center, told Yonhap News Agency last week that his agency plans to consider probing human rights abuses facing North Korean overseas workers over the long haul.
More than 50,000 North Koreans are believed to be forced to work overseas, mainly in China and Russia, sending substantial amounts of their salaries to the North's regime. Pyongyang reportedly earns more than $200 million per year through labor exports.
But the Ministry of Unification still remains cautious about whether it could support civic groups' moves to help North Korean defectors staying in third countries, citing the scope of the law.
Opposition lawmakers and critics are opposed to the idea of applying the law to such defectors on concerns that the move can spark a diplomatic row and it could effectively spur defections orchestrated by the government.
"We are taking a prudent stance over the issue by taking into account diplomatic relations with relevant countries," a government official said.
President Park Geun-hye on Saturday called for ordinary North Koreans to defect to the South, saying that Seoul will keep the door open for them to find new hopes and lives here.
A ministry official said that Park's message pointed to dismal human rights violations facing North Korean people and the need to hold the North's regime accountable for the rights abuses.
"Her message indicated Seoul's commitment to making efforts to enable North Koreans to live a decent life as human beings and to enjoy the universal values of freedom and human rights," said the official, asking not to be named.
He added that Park's speech does not signal changes in the government's policy with North Korea or its careful position on supporting civic groups helping people get away from the repressive regime. (Yonhap)