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Human trafficking of North Korean women in China

Many North Korean women fall victim to human trafficking upon migrating to the neighboring country of China. North Korea's discrimination of women in the workforce, the traditional familial view of women as a burden,[1] and the region's ever-increasing poverty serve as factors that motivate them to migrate to their neighboring country to find a better life.[2] China's one-child policy decreased the amount of women in the country, growing the demand for trafficked sex workers and brides.[3] As of 2020, an estimated 80% of North Korean defectors were women, 60% of whom were sold in China's extensive human trafficking network.[4][3] Women and girls who are trafficked are bought by cybersex brokers, sold into marriage, and forced into prostitution. As of 2023, there are up to 500,000 such women and girls in China's northern provinces of Jilin, Liaoning, and Heilongjiang, where human trafficking industry exploded, reaching $105 million per year.[5] North Korea's punishments for defectors and China's lack of legal protection for North Korean refugees force women to withstand abuse to avoid facing deportation.

History edit

After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in the year 1991[3] and wavering ties with Russia and China,[2] the North Korean regime lost financial support and fell into an increasingly severe economic depression.[6][7] Many factories shut down due to a lack of natural resources and an inability to pay laborers, forcing the government to drastically cut food rations.[2] In 1994, Kim Jung Il announced that citizens had to be self-sufficient because he was shutting down the railway system, leaving many people without access to food.[3][8] The ensuing famine[9] exacerbated by "agricultural disasters" killed 2 million North Koreans[2][3] from 1996 to 1999.[10] In 2002, new economic policies increased the cost of food by 50% and decreased the purchasing power of money, this matter forcing people to spend 75 to 85% of money on groceries.[2] The ever-worsening starvation conditions in North Korea motivated families to migrate to the neighboring nation of China.[11] In the decade leading to 2006, 100,000 North Korean immigrants entered China searching for food and job security through the Yalu and Tumen rivers.[3]

The $105 million trafficking market of North Korean women[12] is mainly powered by the demand of the Shandong, Fujian, and Guangdong villages and the supply of the Yunnan province.[13] China's one-child policy enacted in 1980[14] fueled the desire for trafficked women. When it was implemented, the law motivated an increase in female infanticides and sex-selective abortions,[15] creating the alarming ratio of 14 men to 1 woman that rural areas have today.[2] According to the United Nations Human Rights Council, men outnumbered women in China by 34 million in 2014.[16] The cultural practice of the commodifying of women also plays a role in China's rampant human trafficking situation, as, historically, Confucian beliefs encouraged families to sell women into concubinage and servitude.[13]

North Korean experiences with human trafficking edit

Some North Korean women are initially willing to be smuggled across the border in hopes of finding a better life. Although this is true, many women consent to this without knowing they are going to be trafficked, they can only hope for the best. Many times, smugglers promise to help them in good faith, but eventually sell them to trafficking brokers.[17][2] Traffickers lure Korean women into migrating by promising them normal jobs in China like working as a maid or factory worker and then force them into the commercial sex industry.[2] In other cases, North Korean women are sold by their own family in the hopes that, in China, they will work to provide them with financial support.[2][3] Some families also sell their North Korean daughters as brides to Chinese men under the false premise that they will receive compensation.[10]

There are many factors that facilitate the trafficking of North Korean women and girls, such as the fact that most traffickers are of ethnic Korean-Chinese men who are fluent in Korean,[2] this circumstance increasing the trust these women have in their smugglers. Other factors include the corruption among border guards that allow the smuggling of women[10] and the tendency of trafficked individuals to help traffic other Korean women. In 2019, 15% of the women and girls who were trafficked were bought by cybersex brokers, 30% were sold as brides, and 50% were forced into prostitution.[4] While under the control of their captors, more than 60% of women experienced physical and psychological abuse.[17][2][18] Trafficked North Korean women are forced to participate in sex, gang-rape, depraved cybersex performances, and hard labor (when sold to men in rural areas).[2] Traffickers also try to break trafficked women's spirits to flee by chaining them for long periods of time and submitting them through prolonged rape periods.[2] Women who forcefully refuse to be trafficked are beaten, starved, and even killed.[2]

Legislation edit

North Korea edit

The North Korean government claimed not having a human trafficking case for more than 50 years, an assertion that has maintained people ignorant of the trafficking of their female citizens.[2] Despite this claim, trafficked defectors are frequently caught in China and are sent to the North Korean-Chinese border to be interrogated, beaten, searched, and tortured[19] at police stations or detention centers.[16] If found guilty, trafficking brokers fare even worse, as those that are caught are sentenced to death and executed publicly. On the other hand, trafficking victims are tried as political criminals[2] and sent to labor camps for at least 5 years to perform hard labor under poor working conditions.[3][16] In these labor camps, repatriated pregnant women are subject to induced abortions and infanticide as a way to keep North Korean lineages pure and rid the government of responsibility from financially supporting "foreign-blooded children".[2]

According to a 2021 report by the US Department of State, the North Korean government compels its citizens to work in China as forced labor (likely known and possibly sanctioned by China) to generate revenue for the North Korean government.[20] The forced labor involves working in hotels and restaurants as well as in cyber operations.[20]

China edit

China refuses to acknowledge North Koreans as refugees[21] due to its prioritization of its 1986 Repatriation Agreement with the communist country.[2][10] To justify their deportation and rid itself of the financial responsibility of providing asylum to North Koreans, China labels them as economic migrants.[22][3] In doing so, it excuses itself from violating the United Nation's Refugee Convention of 1951,[23] repatriating about 6,000 North Koreans annually.[4] The Human Rights Watch reported that China recently repatriated 500 North Korean refugees on October 9, 2023.[24] Consistent with its treatment of refugees, China has refused to sign the UN's Protocol to Prevent, Suppress, and Punish Trafficking in Persons, especially Women and Children formulated in the year 2000.[2]

Although China does not consider North Koreans as refugees, it has taken multiple measures to discourage their migration and has implemented laws to diminish the prevalence of human trafficking. As of 2002, China officially increased police surveillance to watch for undocumented migrants and intensified the deportation of Korean defectors.[2] China also began to pay Chinese citizens to turn in Korean refugees and punished those who illegally helped them.[2] It fined employers up to US$600 for employing North Koreans, a matter that increased women's vulnerability to being trafficked. It is estimated that, in 2013, 1978 brokers were convicted for trafficking women and children in China[13] upon the implementation of stricter surveillance measures.

International Law edit

International bodies like the United Nations have taken action to remedy the trafficking of North Koreans.[25] In 1951, prior to the boom of human trafficking in China, the United Nations ratified the Refugee Convention, a document that protects refugees universally. Due to China's agreement to comply with the document, the UN has repeatedly urged the country to protect defectors who are afraid of repatriation.[2] Not only has China refused to abide by the convention, but it has repeatedly turned down the UN High Commission on Refugees’ requests to turn over North Korean refugees to them.[2]

International attitudes to helping trafficked North Korean refugees vary. A source indicates that the global community has formerly threatened China with sanctions, but that the threats were inconsistent and weak,[2] allowing China to neglect the issue.

As of 2013, the United States Department of State placed China on its Tier 3 Watch List due to its human trafficking problem.[13] Other countries are not as sensitive to this humanitarian crisis, as South Korea holds a discriminatory attitude towards North Korean refugees.[10] The Seoul government is “remarkably unwilling to accept” the 1000 migrants that try to enter its city every year due to the belief that the refugees’ lack of education will make them a burden to society.[10] Despite this fact, North Koreans are considered citizens of South Korea immediately upon crossing the border.[3][26]

Types of human trafficking edit

Bride trafficking edit

North Korean women who are trafficked are promised a better life by bride traffickers if they agree to marry Chinese or Korean-Chinese men. A lot of women willingly accept because they fear that they will die of starvation if they stay in their country.[2] Although some North Korean women agree to arranged marriages in China in order to escape extreme poverty, many brokers deceive these vulnerable women by selling them into the sex industry or to undesirable partners (such as old, disabled, drunkard, or drug-using men).[2][17] Women who cross safely may also be sold into marriage when kidnapped in areas where illegal migrants congregate.[23][10] Prices for women vary in China from US$120 to US$1200.[10] North Korean women are desired by Chinese men because they find them to be ideal wife prospects due to the perception that they are “respectful and obedient”.[23][3] Despite their popularity among purchasers, many men are sometimes reluctant to buy them because marriages with defectors are not legally recognized by the Chinese government.[27] If found, the family could be heavily fined and the Korean bride repatriated.[4][28][3] There are systemic barriers in China that keep women from escaping forced marriages. When wives run away, husbands can contact brokers and use their help to recapture brides.[3] Trafficked brides are sometimes sold again by their Chinese partners or kidnapped by their marriage traffickers.[2][29] Chinese police and border guards are also accomplices. They arrest women under the premises of deportation but end up selling them to other men.[2]

Prostitution edit

Chinese venues of prostitution involve unlikely, average businesses such as hair salons, karaoke bars, hotels, saunas, cafes, and bathhouses, among others. North Korean female defectors between the ages of 15 and 25 are the group most severely abused in such places, where those trafficked experience abuse such as like gang-rape, groping, vaginal rape, and forced masturbation.[30][31] Victims forced to work in such brothels sometimes catch venereal diseases.[32] Despite the health risks and social degradation they are subjected to in such acts, oftentimes these women only receive a small fraction of what customers pay for sex services.[33][32]

Cybersex edit

Captured North Korean women and girls are forced to livestream their sexual abuse by cybersex business owners.[4] When sold into the cybersex industry, a Chinese purchaser usually keeps multiple women locked in an apartment performing sexual acts 7 days a week, for as many as 17 hours at a time.[34] Sometimes, women are physically abused and made dependent on drugs in order to keep them from escaping.[4] Emancipated Korean victims of cybersex traffickers are a few of the reliable sources that currently exist for documenting the daily life of individuals made to work in cybersex dens.

Autobiographies & memoirs about first-hand accounts edit

First-hand accounts from North Korean defectors that experienced human trafficking upon migrating from their native country are essential sources of information for scholars interested in the issue. Autobiographies and memoirs of defectors depict life in North Korea and provide testimonies for the problem of human trafficking in China.

Some notable works of literature that voice the struggles of many trafficked North Korean women are:

  • In Order to Live: A North Korean Girl’s Journey to Freedom by Yeonmi Park
  • The Girl With Seven Names: Escape from North Korea by Hyeonseo Lee
  • A Thousand Miles to Freedom: My Escape from North Korea by Eunsun Kim

There are many more first-hand accounts that shed light to this issue, but these are some of the most widely-known memoirs today.

Organizations against the issue edit

  • Liberty In North Korea is a non-profit resettlement agency that guides North Koreans to freedom along a 3000-mile route and works alongside them after escape to guide them in their new life.[35]
  • Crossing Borders is a Christian-based non-profit organization that provides social and economic support, providing safety and guidance to trafficked North Korean refugee women.[36]
  • Helping Hands Korea is a Christian non-governmental organization that also strives to provide safe escape routes out of China to neighboring countries.[37]

References edit

  1. ^ Song, Jiyoung (2013-03-08). ""Smuggled Refugees": The Social Construction of North Korean Migration". International Migration. 51 (4): 158–173. doi:10.1111/imig.12033. ISSN 0020-7985. S2CID 154687185.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Davis, Kathleen (2006). "Brides, Bruises and the Border: The Trafficking of North Korean Women into China". SAIS Review of International Affairs. 26 (1): 131–141. doi:10.1353/sais.2006.0004. ISSN 1945-4724. S2CID 154490879.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Kook, Kyunghee (2018-02-21). ""I Want to Be Trafficked so I Can Migrate!": Cross-Border Movement of North Koreans into China through Brokerage and Smuggling Networks". The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 676 (1): 114–134. doi:10.1177/0002716217748591. ISSN 0002-7162. S2CID 149274101.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "Gender and Migration from North Korea". Journal of Public and International Affairs. Retrieved 2023-10-24.
  5. ^ "North Korean women fleeing to China forced into marriages, sex slavery". humanevents.com. March 27, 2023. Retrieved December 3, 2023.
  6. ^ Park, Kyung-Ae (2010-07-26). "People's Exit in North Korea: New Threat to Regime Stability?". Pacific Focus. 25 (2): 257–275. doi:10.1111/j.1976-5118.2010.01046.x. ISSN 1225-4657. S2CID 152691927.
  7. ^ Seliger, Bernhard (2006-09-01). "Income, Wealth, and Political Power in North Korea". North Korean Review. 2 (2): 5–22. doi:10.3172/nkr.2.2.5. ISSN 1551-2789.
  8. ^ Sung, Kieun; Cho, Sunwoong (2018-09-30). "Why Are North Korean Women More Likely to Defect than North Korean Men?". Asian Women. 34 (3): 97–118. doi:10.14431/aw.2018.09.34.3.97. ISSN 1225-925X. S2CID 149831003.
  9. ^ Sung, Sangmi (2022-09-06). "Women in transit: Risky journeys and precarious lives among North Korean female escapees in China". International Migration. 61 (3): 287–300. doi:10.1111/imig.13049. ISSN 0020-7985. S2CID 252129911.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Lankov, Andrei (November 2004). "North Korean Refugees in Northeast China". Asian Survey. 44 (6): 856–873. doi:10.1525/as.2004.44.6.856. hdl:1885/82846. ISSN 0004-4687.
  11. ^ Yoon, I Sil (2022-06-17). "Imago Dei and Human Rights: A North Korean Case Study". Theology Today. 79 (2): 166–183. doi:10.1177/00405736221091918. ISSN 0040-5736. S2CID 249832044.
  12. ^ Jeong, Andrew; Kim, Na-Young (2019-11-30). "Global Child-Porn Sting Puts Pressure on South Korea to Toughen Laws". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 2023-10-24.
  13. ^ a b c d Ni, Jane (2015). "Selling Bodies and Souls: Human Sex Trafficking in China". Scholars Archive.
  14. ^ "One-child policy | Definition, Start Date, Effects, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. 7 November 2023. Retrieved 2023-11-07.
  15. ^ Xia, Yiwei; Zhou, Yisu; Du, Li; Cai, Tianji (2019-07-03). "Mapping Trafficking of Women in China: Evidence from Court Sentences". Journal of Contemporary China. 29 (122): 238–252. doi:10.1080/10670564.2019.1637564. ISSN 1067-0564. S2CID 198630451.
  16. ^ a b c United Nations Human Rights Council (2014). "Report of the Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea".
  17. ^ a b c Board of the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea (2009). "Lives - Committee for Human Rights in North Korea" (PDF).
  18. ^ Kim, Jae Yop; Kim, Hee Jin; Choi, Kwonho; Nam, Boyoung (2016-11-09). "Mental Health Conditions Among North Korean Female Refugee Victims of Sexual Violence". International Migration. 55 (2): 68–79. doi:10.1111/imig.12300. ISSN 0020-7985.
  19. ^ "North Korean Refugees Trapped by China's Expanding Dragnet | Human Rights Watch". 2017-09-18. Retrieved 2023-11-06.
  20. ^ a b "2021 Trafficking in Persons Report: China". US Department of State Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons. Retrieved January 22, 2024.
  21. ^ Yoon, I Sil (2019-06-20). "Cosmopolitanism: The Foundational Ground for a More Inclusive Understanding of Belonging to Protect the Human Rights of North Korean Stateless Women". International Migration. 58 (2): 67–79. doi:10.1111/imig.12602. ISSN 0020-7985. S2CID 197830929.
  22. ^ Cohen, Roberta (2014). "China's forced repatriation of North Korean refugees incurs United Nations censure". International Journal of Korean Studies. 18 (1): 59–89.
  23. ^ a b c Choi, Eunyoung (2014-01-16). "North Korean Women's Narratives of Migration: Challenging Hegemonic Discourses of Trafficking and Geopolitics". Annals of the Association of American Geographers. 104 (2): 271–279. doi:10.1080/00045608.2013.862129. ISSN 0004-5608. S2CID 143748332.
  24. ^ "China Forcibly Returns More than 500 to North Korea | Human Rights Watch". 2023-10-12. Retrieved 2023-11-07.
  25. ^ Hyun-Chin, Lim. "The political and human rights issues surrounding North Korean defectors". The Review of Korean Studies. 9 (1): 87–115.
  26. ^ Pacheco, Veronica (2020-10-26). "Discourse Analysis of International Reporting on Human Trafficking of North Koreans at the Border with China". Journal of Human Trafficking. 8 (3): 309–333. doi:10.1080/23322705.2020.1823770. ISSN 2332-2705. S2CID 226335426.
  27. ^ Cussen, John (2016). "On the Call to Dismiss North Korean Defectors' Memoirs and on Their Dark American Alternative". Korean Studies. 40 (1): 140–157. doi:10.1353/ks.2016.0005. ISSN 1529-1529. S2CID 163985007.
  28. ^ Ko, Sung Ho; Chung, Kiseon; Oh, Yoo-seok (2004). "North Korean Defectors: Their Life and Well-Being After Defection". Asian Perspective. 28 (2): 65–99. doi:10.1353/apr.2004.0022. ISSN 2288-2871.
  29. ^ Kim, Sung Kyung (2014-10-02). ""I am well-cooked food": survival strategies of North Korean female border-crossers and possibilities for empowerment". Inter-Asia Cultural Studies. 15 (4): 553–571. doi:10.1080/14649373.2014.972663. ISSN 1464-9373. S2CID 145345612.
  30. ^ Ling, Bonny (2018-06-01). "Prostitution and Female Trafficking in China". China Perspectives. 2018 (1–2): 65–74. doi:10.4000/chinaperspectives.7742. ISSN 2070-3449. S2CID 159152404.
  31. ^ Ochab, Dr Ewelina U. "Trafficking Of North Korean Women In China". Forbes. Retrieved 2023-10-24.
  32. ^ a b Muico, Norma Kang (2005). "An Absence of Choice - Antislavery.Org".[permanent dead link]
  33. ^ García, Ana Belén Martínez (2019-01-01). "Denouncing Human Trafficking in China: North Korean Women's Memoirs as Evidence". State Crime Journal. 8 (1). doi:10.13169/statecrime.8.1.0059. ISSN 2046-6064. S2CID 181454648.
  34. ^ Sang-Hun, Choe (2019-09-13). "After Fleeing North Korea, Women Get Trapped as Cybersex Slaves in China". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-10-24.
  35. ^ "Refugee Resettlement - Liberty in North Korea". libertyinnorthkorea.org. Retrieved 2023-10-24.
  36. ^ "Serving Trafficked North Korean Women - Crossing Borders". Crossing Borders - Helping North Korean Refugees and Orphans. Retrieved 2023-10-24.
  37. ^ "About Us". Helping Hands Korea. Retrieved 2023-10-24.

External links edit

  • 2021 Trafficking in Persons Report: China by the U.S. Department of State

human, trafficking, north, korean, women, china, also, human, trafficking, north, korea, trafficking, china, many, north, korean, women, fall, victim, human, trafficking, upon, migrating, neighboring, country, china, north, korea, discrimination, women, workfo. See also Human trafficking in North Korea and Sex trafficking in China Many North Korean women fall victim to human trafficking upon migrating to the neighboring country of China North Korea s discrimination of women in the workforce the traditional familial view of women as a burden 1 and the region s ever increasing poverty serve as factors that motivate them to migrate to their neighboring country to find a better life 2 China s one child policy decreased the amount of women in the country growing the demand for trafficked sex workers and brides 3 As of 2020 an estimated 80 of North Korean defectors were women 60 of whom were sold in China s extensive human trafficking network 4 3 Women and girls who are trafficked are bought by cybersex brokers sold into marriage and forced into prostitution As of 2023 there are up to 500 000 such women and girls in China s northern provinces of Jilin Liaoning and Heilongjiang where human trafficking industry exploded reaching 105 million per year 5 North Korea s punishments for defectors and China s lack of legal protection for North Korean refugees force women to withstand abuse to avoid facing deportation Contents 1 History 2 North Korean experiences with human trafficking 3 Legislation 3 1 North Korea 3 2 China 3 3 International Law 4 Types of human trafficking 4 1 Bride trafficking 4 2 Prostitution 4 3 Cybersex 5 Autobiographies amp memoirs about first hand accounts 6 Organizations against the issue 7 References 8 External linksHistory editAfter the dissolution of the Soviet Union in the year 1991 3 and wavering ties with Russia and China 2 the North Korean regime lost financial support and fell into an increasingly severe economic depression 6 7 Many factories shut down due to a lack of natural resources and an inability to pay laborers forcing the government to drastically cut food rations 2 In 1994 Kim Jung Il announced that citizens had to be self sufficient because he was shutting down the railway system leaving many people without access to food 3 8 The ensuing famine 9 exacerbated by agricultural disasters killed 2 million North Koreans 2 3 from 1996 to 1999 10 In 2002 new economic policies increased the cost of food by 50 and decreased the purchasing power of money this matter forcing people to spend 75 to 85 of money on groceries 2 The ever worsening starvation conditions in North Korea motivated families to migrate to the neighboring nation of China 11 In the decade leading to 2006 100 000 North Korean immigrants entered China searching for food and job security through the Yalu and Tumen rivers 3 The 105 million trafficking market of North Korean women 12 is mainly powered by the demand of the Shandong Fujian and Guangdong villages and the supply of the Yunnan province 13 China s one child policy enacted in 1980 14 fueled the desire for trafficked women When it was implemented the law motivated an increase in female infanticides and sex selective abortions 15 creating the alarming ratio of 14 men to 1 woman that rural areas have today 2 According to the United Nations Human Rights Council men outnumbered women in China by 34 million in 2014 16 The cultural practice of the commodifying of women also plays a role in China s rampant human trafficking situation as historically Confucian beliefs encouraged families to sell women into concubinage and servitude 13 North Korean experiences with human trafficking editSome North Korean women are initially willing to be smuggled across the border in hopes of finding a better life Although this is true many women consent to this without knowing they are going to be trafficked they can only hope for the best Many times smugglers promise to help them in good faith but eventually sell them to trafficking brokers 17 2 Traffickers lure Korean women into migrating by promising them normal jobs in China like working as a maid or factory worker and then force them into the commercial sex industry 2 In other cases North Korean women are sold by their own family in the hopes that in China they will work to provide them with financial support 2 3 Some families also sell their North Korean daughters as brides to Chinese men under the false premise that they will receive compensation 10 There are many factors that facilitate the trafficking of North Korean women and girls such as the fact that most traffickers are of ethnic Korean Chinese men who are fluent in Korean 2 this circumstance increasing the trust these women have in their smugglers Other factors include the corruption among border guards that allow the smuggling of women 10 and the tendency of trafficked individuals to help traffic other Korean women In 2019 15 of the women and girls who were trafficked were bought by cybersex brokers 30 were sold as brides and 50 were forced into prostitution 4 While under the control of their captors more than 60 of women experienced physical and psychological abuse 17 2 18 Trafficked North Korean women are forced to participate in sex gang rape depraved cybersex performances and hard labor when sold to men in rural areas 2 Traffickers also try to break trafficked women s spirits to flee by chaining them for long periods of time and submitting them through prolonged rape periods 2 Women who forcefully refuse to be trafficked are beaten starved and even killed 2 Legislation editNorth Korea edit The North Korean government claimed not having a human trafficking case for more than 50 years an assertion that has maintained people ignorant of the trafficking of their female citizens 2 Despite this claim trafficked defectors are frequently caught in China and are sent to the North Korean Chinese border to be interrogated beaten searched and tortured 19 at police stations or detention centers 16 If found guilty trafficking brokers fare even worse as those that are caught are sentenced to death and executed publicly On the other hand trafficking victims are tried as political criminals 2 and sent to labor camps for at least 5 years to perform hard labor under poor working conditions 3 16 In these labor camps repatriated pregnant women are subject to induced abortions and infanticide as a way to keep North Korean lineages pure and rid the government of responsibility from financially supporting foreign blooded children 2 According to a 2021 report by the US Department of State the North Korean government compels its citizens to work in China as forced labor likely known and possibly sanctioned by China to generate revenue for the North Korean government 20 The forced labor involves working in hotels and restaurants as well as in cyber operations 20 China edit China refuses to acknowledge North Koreans as refugees 21 due to its prioritization of its 1986 Repatriation Agreement with the communist country 2 10 To justify their deportation and rid itself of the financial responsibility of providing asylum to North Koreans China labels them as economic migrants 22 3 In doing so it excuses itself from violating the United Nation s Refugee Convention of 1951 23 repatriating about 6 000 North Koreans annually 4 The Human Rights Watch reported that China recently repatriated 500 North Korean refugees on October 9 2023 24 Consistent with its treatment of refugees China has refused to sign the UN s Protocol to Prevent Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons especially Women and Children formulated in the year 2000 2 Although China does not consider North Koreans as refugees it has taken multiple measures to discourage their migration and has implemented laws to diminish the prevalence of human trafficking As of 2002 China officially increased police surveillance to watch for undocumented migrants and intensified the deportation of Korean defectors 2 China also began to pay Chinese citizens to turn in Korean refugees and punished those who illegally helped them 2 It fined employers up to US 600 for employing North Koreans a matter that increased women s vulnerability to being trafficked It is estimated that in 2013 1978 brokers were convicted for trafficking women and children in China 13 upon the implementation of stricter surveillance measures International Law edit International bodies like the United Nations have taken action to remedy the trafficking of North Koreans 25 In 1951 prior to the boom of human trafficking in China the United Nations ratified the Refugee Convention a document that protects refugees universally Due to China s agreement to comply with the document the UN has repeatedly urged the country to protect defectors who are afraid of repatriation 2 Not only has China refused to abide by the convention but it has repeatedly turned down the UN High Commission on Refugees requests to turn over North Korean refugees to them 2 International attitudes to helping trafficked North Korean refugees vary A source indicates that the global community has formerly threatened China with sanctions but that the threats were inconsistent and weak 2 allowing China to neglect the issue As of 2013 the United States Department of State placed China on its Tier 3 Watch List due to its human trafficking problem 13 Other countries are not as sensitive to this humanitarian crisis as South Korea holds a discriminatory attitude towards North Korean refugees 10 The Seoul government is remarkably unwilling to accept the 1000 migrants that try to enter its city every year due to the belief that the refugees lack of education will make them a burden to society 10 Despite this fact North Koreans are considered citizens of South Korea immediately upon crossing the border 3 26 Types of human trafficking editBride trafficking edit North Korean women who are trafficked are promised a better life by bride traffickers if they agree to marry Chinese or Korean Chinese men A lot of women willingly accept because they fear that they will die of starvation if they stay in their country 2 Although some North Korean women agree to arranged marriages in China in order to escape extreme poverty many brokers deceive these vulnerable women by selling them into the sex industry or to undesirable partners such as old disabled drunkard or drug using men 2 17 Women who cross safely may also be sold into marriage when kidnapped in areas where illegal migrants congregate 23 10 Prices for women vary in China from US 120 to US 1200 10 North Korean women are desired by Chinese men because they find them to be ideal wife prospects due to the perception that they are respectful and obedient 23 3 Despite their popularity among purchasers many men are sometimes reluctant to buy them because marriages with defectors are not legally recognized by the Chinese government 27 If found the family could be heavily fined and the Korean bride repatriated 4 28 3 There are systemic barriers in China that keep women from escaping forced marriages When wives run away husbands can contact brokers and use their help to recapture brides 3 Trafficked brides are sometimes sold again by their Chinese partners or kidnapped by their marriage traffickers 2 29 Chinese police and border guards are also accomplices They arrest women under the premises of deportation but end up selling them to other men 2 Prostitution edit Chinese venues of prostitution involve unlikely average businesses such as hair salons karaoke bars hotels saunas cafes and bathhouses among others North Korean female defectors between the ages of 15 and 25 are the group most severely abused in such places where those trafficked experience abuse such as like gang rape groping vaginal rape and forced masturbation 30 31 Victims forced to work in such brothels sometimes catch venereal diseases 32 Despite the health risks and social degradation they are subjected to in such acts oftentimes these women only receive a small fraction of what customers pay for sex services 33 32 Cybersex edit Captured North Korean women and girls are forced to livestream their sexual abuse by cybersex business owners 4 When sold into the cybersex industry a Chinese purchaser usually keeps multiple women locked in an apartment performing sexual acts 7 days a week for as many as 17 hours at a time 34 Sometimes women are physically abused and made dependent on drugs in order to keep them from escaping 4 Emancipated Korean victims of cybersex traffickers are a few of the reliable sources that currently exist for documenting the daily life of individuals made to work in cybersex dens Autobiographies amp memoirs about first hand accounts editFirst hand accounts from North Korean defectors that experienced human trafficking upon migrating from their native country are essential sources of information for scholars interested in the issue Autobiographies and memoirs of defectors depict life in North Korea and provide testimonies for the problem of human trafficking in China Some notable works of literature that voice the struggles of many trafficked North Korean women are In Order to Live A North Korean Girl s Journey to Freedom by Yeonmi Park The Girl With Seven Names Escape from North Korea by Hyeonseo Lee A Thousand Miles to Freedom My Escape from North Korea by Eunsun Kim There are many more first hand accounts that shed light to this issue but these are some of the most widely known memoirs today Organizations against the issue editLiberty In North Korea is a non profit resettlement agency that guides North Koreans to freedom along a 3000 mile route and works alongside them after escape to guide them in their new life 35 Crossing Borders is a Christian based non profit organization that provides social and economic support providing safety and guidance to trafficked North Korean refugee women 36 Helping Hands Korea is a Christian non governmental organization that also strives to provide safe escape routes out of China to neighboring countries 37 References edit Song Jiyoung 2013 03 08 Smuggled Refugees The Social Construction of North Korean Migration International Migration 51 4 158 173 doi 10 1111 imig 12033 ISSN 0020 7985 S2CID 154687185 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Davis Kathleen 2006 Brides Bruises and the Border The Trafficking of North Korean Women into China SAIS Review of International Affairs 26 1 131 141 doi 10 1353 sais 2006 0004 ISSN 1945 4724 S2CID 154490879 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Kook Kyunghee 2018 02 21 I Want to Be Trafficked so I Can Migrate Cross Border Movement of North Koreans into China through Brokerage and Smuggling Networks The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 676 1 114 134 doi 10 1177 0002716217748591 ISSN 0002 7162 S2CID 149274101 a b c d e f Gender and Migration from North Korea Journal of Public and International Affairs Retrieved 2023 10 24 North Korean women fleeing to China forced into marriages sex slavery humanevents com March 27 2023 Retrieved December 3 2023 Park Kyung Ae 2010 07 26 People s Exit in North Korea New Threat to Regime Stability Pacific Focus 25 2 257 275 doi 10 1111 j 1976 5118 2010 01046 x ISSN 1225 4657 S2CID 152691927 Seliger Bernhard 2006 09 01 Income Wealth and Political Power in North Korea North Korean Review 2 2 5 22 doi 10 3172 nkr 2 2 5 ISSN 1551 2789 Sung Kieun Cho Sunwoong 2018 09 30 Why Are North Korean Women More Likely to Defect than North Korean Men Asian Women 34 3 97 118 doi 10 14431 aw 2018 09 34 3 97 ISSN 1225 925X S2CID 149831003 Sung Sangmi 2022 09 06 Women in transit Risky journeys and precarious lives among North Korean female escapees in China International Migration 61 3 287 300 doi 10 1111 imig 13049 ISSN 0020 7985 S2CID 252129911 a b c d e f g h Lankov Andrei November 2004 North Korean Refugees in Northeast China Asian Survey 44 6 856 873 doi 10 1525 as 2004 44 6 856 hdl 1885 82846 ISSN 0004 4687 Yoon I Sil 2022 06 17 Imago Dei and Human Rights A North Korean Case Study Theology Today 79 2 166 183 doi 10 1177 00405736221091918 ISSN 0040 5736 S2CID 249832044 Jeong Andrew Kim Na Young 2019 11 30 Global Child Porn Sting Puts Pressure on South Korea to Toughen Laws Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved 2023 10 24 a b c d Ni Jane 2015 Selling Bodies and Souls Human Sex Trafficking in China Scholars Archive One child policy Definition Start Date Effects amp Facts Britannica www britannica com 7 November 2023 Retrieved 2023 11 07 Xia Yiwei Zhou Yisu Du Li Cai Tianji 2019 07 03 Mapping Trafficking of Women in China Evidence from Court Sentences Journal of Contemporary China 29 122 238 252 doi 10 1080 10670564 2019 1637564 ISSN 1067 0564 S2CID 198630451 a b c United Nations Human Rights Council 2014 Report of the Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in the Democratic People s Republic of Korea a b c Board of the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea 2009 Lives Committee for Human Rights in North Korea PDF Kim Jae Yop Kim Hee Jin Choi Kwonho Nam Boyoung 2016 11 09 Mental Health Conditions Among North Korean Female Refugee Victims of Sexual Violence International Migration 55 2 68 79 doi 10 1111 imig 12300 ISSN 0020 7985 North Korean Refugees Trapped by China s Expanding Dragnet Human Rights Watch 2017 09 18 Retrieved 2023 11 06 a b 2021 Trafficking in Persons Report China US Department of State Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons Retrieved January 22 2024 Yoon I Sil 2019 06 20 Cosmopolitanism The Foundational Ground for a More Inclusive Understanding of Belonging to Protect the Human Rights of North Korean Stateless Women International Migration 58 2 67 79 doi 10 1111 imig 12602 ISSN 0020 7985 S2CID 197830929 Cohen Roberta 2014 China s forced repatriation of North Korean refugees incurs United Nations censure International Journal of Korean Studies 18 1 59 89 a b c Choi Eunyoung 2014 01 16 North Korean Women s Narratives of Migration Challenging Hegemonic Discourses of Trafficking and Geopolitics Annals of the Association of American Geographers 104 2 271 279 doi 10 1080 00045608 2013 862129 ISSN 0004 5608 S2CID 143748332 China Forcibly Returns More than 500 to North Korea Human Rights Watch 2023 10 12 Retrieved 2023 11 07 Hyun Chin Lim The political and human rights issues surrounding North Korean defectors The Review of Korean Studies 9 1 87 115 Pacheco Veronica 2020 10 26 Discourse Analysis of International Reporting on Human Trafficking of North Koreans at the Border with China Journal of Human Trafficking 8 3 309 333 doi 10 1080 23322705 2020 1823770 ISSN 2332 2705 S2CID 226335426 Cussen John 2016 On the Call to Dismiss North Korean Defectors Memoirs and on Their Dark American Alternative Korean Studies 40 1 140 157 doi 10 1353 ks 2016 0005 ISSN 1529 1529 S2CID 163985007 Ko Sung Ho Chung Kiseon Oh Yoo seok 2004 North Korean Defectors Their Life and Well Being After Defection Asian Perspective 28 2 65 99 doi 10 1353 apr 2004 0022 ISSN 2288 2871 Kim Sung Kyung 2014 10 02 I am well cooked food survival strategies of North Korean female border crossers and possibilities for empowerment Inter Asia Cultural Studies 15 4 553 571 doi 10 1080 14649373 2014 972663 ISSN 1464 9373 S2CID 145345612 Ling Bonny 2018 06 01 Prostitution and Female Trafficking in China China Perspectives 2018 1 2 65 74 doi 10 4000 chinaperspectives 7742 ISSN 2070 3449 S2CID 159152404 Ochab Dr Ewelina U Trafficking Of North Korean Women In China Forbes Retrieved 2023 10 24 a b Muico Norma Kang 2005 An Absence of Choice Antislavery Org permanent dead link Garcia Ana Belen Martinez 2019 01 01 Denouncing Human Trafficking in China North Korean Women s Memoirs as Evidence State Crime Journal 8 1 doi 10 13169 statecrime 8 1 0059 ISSN 2046 6064 S2CID 181454648 Sang Hun Choe 2019 09 13 After Fleeing North Korea Women Get Trapped as Cybersex Slaves in China The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 10 24 Refugee Resettlement Liberty in North Korea libertyinnorthkorea org Retrieved 2023 10 24 Serving Trafficked North Korean Women Crossing Borders Crossing Borders Helping North Korean Refugees and Orphans Retrieved 2023 10 24 About Us Helping Hands Korea Retrieved 2023 10 24 External links edit2021 Trafficking in Persons Report China by the U S Department of State Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Human trafficking of North Korean women in China amp oldid 1225488440, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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