Wednesday, February 9, 2005
Unlike the spoiled "refugees" of Arab Palestine, there is no Organization of the Islamic Conference or UNRWA looking out for those who escape from the national gulag known as North Korea. What can we do?
Except the number of North Koreans welcomed by the rest of the world has been tragically small--amounting to about 6,300 all told, most of them arriving in South Korea over the past three years. That's about zip compared to the number who would flee given even a whisper of a decent chance. At risk of their lives, an estimated 300,000 have in any case fled across the border into China.
You might think that once they reached Chinese turf, an outfit such as the United Nations, keeper of the 1951 convention on refugees, would offer help. Hardly. Since famine in North Korea and growing mobility inside China brought the first serious refugee influx in the early 1990s, the U.N. has engaged in what it calls "quiet diplomacy," meant to persuade China's regime to honor its international obligations and at least allow safe passage to these asylum-seekers, who have a fear of persecution deeply grounded in the likelihood that they may be executed, or sent to murderous labor camps, if returned. But so quiet is this diplomacy, so as not to offend China--which sits on the governing body of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, and holds a veto-wielding seat on the UN Security Council--that nothing much has emerged from all the hush. There are no refugee centers for North Koreans in China; instead, there is a bilateral treaty with North Korea under which asylum-seekers are labeled illegal economic migrants. If caught, they are sent back.
The result, as South Korea-based private American relief worker Tim Peters reports in a recent bulletin, is that even with help for North Korean refugees signed into law in the U.S. last year, the outlook for them "is indeed grim for 2005." China has beefed up efforts to keep them out or catch them, posting more soldiers along the border, and adding roadblocks to detect private aid workers trying at risk of prison themselves to reach the border areas. From inside North Korea, reports Mr. Peters, he has been receiving accounts that "authorities have stepped up the monitoring and interrogation of families in which family members are unaccounted for." That is awful news, because in North Korea, the regime imposes collective punishment on entire families...
China could end the regime on a moment's notice, but what incentive do they have? As it is, North Korea is camped out soldily in their zone of influence - why change that by removing the regime, freeing the people and driving the country into the arms of Dar al-Hura (the House of Freedom) and Capitalism? Why bring that straight to China's border? You and I watch with horror at a nation-as-prison-camp, but from the Chinese perspective, all those people are just usefull defense-in-depth. Arms sales to unstable regimes a problem? Not a problem for China. Most of those regimes (in the Middle East) are just potential business partners for the Chines, and server as lovely thorns in the side and checks on the power of Uncle Sam. A living North Korea is way too valuable to the Chinese.