The
Lives of the Two North Korean Defectors Who Have Been Forcefully Repatriated
from South Korea Must Be Protected
Dr.
Yeosang Yoon (NKDB)
An act that should never have happened in South Korea has
unfolded.
According to media reports, the South Korean government
handed over two North Koreans to DPRK officials at the border village of
Panmunjom in the DMZ at 15:10 on November 7th, 2019. It is the
South’s very first deportation of North Korean defectors who have expressed their
intent to remain in the Republic of Korea.
The South Korean government revealed that the two North
Korean fishermen in their 20s crossed the maritime border (NLL) and were seized
by the South Korean navy on November 2nd, 2019. While being
interrogated by the ROK’s authorities, the two young men expressed their
intention to defect to South Korea. According to the South’s investigators, the
two fishermen killed 16 fellow crew members aboard a squid fishing vessel on North
Korea’s East Coast before fleeing to South Korean waters.
The South Korean government mentioned the following grounds
for sending them back to the DPRK: they are serious criminals and thus denied
the rights to be protected under the law, they pose a threat to the safety of South
Koreans if they were to be granted entry, and that criminals are not recognized
as refugees under international refugee law.
However, the announcement and the reasons for the
deportation provided by the South Korean government fail to comply with every
law that pertains to the essence of this issue including the South Korean Constitution,
North Korean Refugees Protection and Settlement Support Act (hereinafter “North
Korean Refugees Support Act”), and all past Supreme Court decisions; and can be
defined as a crime against humanity.
Article 3 of South Korea’s Constitution stipulates that
“the territory of the Republic of Korea (South Korea) shall consist of the
Korean peninsula and its adjacent islands,” recognizing the North Korean region
as its territory. Past Supreme Court decisions recognize all North Korean
citizens and North Korean defectors who have entered South Korea as South
Korean citizens.
Despite such legal basis, and the fact that the two North
Koreans entered the South, sought protection from the South Korean government,
and refused to return to the North by expressing their intent to defect to ROK,
the authorities nevertheless deported the two North Koreans. The South
Korean government stated the reasons below to explain their justification
of the deportation.
l First, offenders of serious crimes
are exempted from protection pursuant to the North Korean Refugees Support Act,
thus it was justifiable that they were deported.
l Second, serious criminals are also
not recognized as refugees under international refugee law. It is justifiable
that they are deported to keep the lives and safety of South Koreans.
l Third, the unprecedented nature of
this case and the absence of relevant regulations have led South Korean government
bodies to make a joint decision.
l Fourth, this case was not
disclosed to the public and was mistakenly uncovered by the media. If the case
remained undisclosed, it would have likely remained low-profile.
The claims by the South Korean government can be deemed
to have breached the Constitution, relevant laws, Supreme Court decisions, and even
humanity for the following reasons:
First, it is stated in Article 1 of
North Korean Refugees Support Act that “the
purpose of this Act is to provide for matters relating to protection and
support as necessary to help North Korean residents escaping from the area
north of the Military Demarcation Line who desire to be protected by the
Republic of Korea, as swiftly as possible to adapt themselves to, and
settle down in, all spheres of their lives, including political, economic,
social and cultural spheres.” Just as the Article clearly states that North
Korean residents who seek protection from South Korea are subject to the Act,
the two young North Koreans who sought protection from South Korea are duly
subject to the Act.
Article
2 of the same Act also stipulates that North Korean refugees refer to “persons
who have their residence, lineal ascendants and descendants, spouses,
workplaces, etc. in the area north of the Military Demarcation Line
("North Korea"), and who have not acquired any foreign nationality
after escaping from North Korea.” Pursuant to the Act, they are North Korean
refugees.
When the
South Korean government locates and holds custody of a person claiming to be a
North Korean refugee, it is the South Korean National Intelligent Service (NIS)
that determines the person’s status as a resident of North Korea, hence a North
Korean refugee (once verified as a resident of North Korea, the person is
automatically recognized as a North Korean refugee regardless of the purpose of
or reason for defection, escape route, identity, and past acts or records.) The
NIS’s North Korean Defector Protection Center conducts an investigation and
once determined as a resident of North Korea, the person is deemed a citizen of
South Korea.
There is
currently no single legal basis including the Constitution, laws, and Supreme
Court decisions that provides basis for the South Korean government to deport a
South Korean citizen to North Korea. North Korean residents or refugees are
deemed South Korean citizens, and hence cannot be sent back to North Korea. If
done so, this is a grave breach of the Constitution and relevant laws.
The
information compiled through the investigation at the NIS’s North Korean
Defector Protection Center are sent to the Ministry of Unification to use it to
review and determine whether the North Korean refugee is now eligible for special
protection and support from the government.
The
South Korean government announced that it has confirmed that the two fishermen
were residents of North Korea. In other words, the government deported North
Korean refugees against their will.
Article
2 Section 2 states that “the person eligible for protection” refers to a resident
escaping from North Korea who is provided with protection and support pursuant
to this Act. According to Article 8 (Decision on Protection) and Article 9
(Criteria for Protection), the person intending to receive government support
(financial support for settlement, social integration education, shelter,
medical service, education, employment, living support, etc.) must first be
recognized as “the person eligible for protection.” Hence, this Act is only to
decide whether the North Korean refugee is eligible to receive the government
benefits. It does not decide on whether the person shall be deported or not.
The
decision on whether the person is eligible for protection is under the
authority of the Minister of Unification after review by the Consultative
Council. However, if the North Korean refugee is deemed as a significant threat
to national security, the Director of the National Intelligence Service shall
decide on his or her protective status and immediately report to the Minister of
Unification and the North Korean applicant respectively.
According
to Article 9, the government may not decide to provide protection to the
following persons:
1.
International criminal
offenders involved in aircraft hijacking, drug trafficking, terrorism or
genocide, etc.;
2.
Offenders of nonpolitical and
serious crimes, such as murder;
3.
Suspects of disguised escape;
4.
Persons who have earned their
living for at least ten years in their respective countries of sojourn;
5.
Persons who have applied for
protection when three years elapsed since their entry into the Republic of
Korea;
6.
Other persons prescribed by
Presidential Decree as unfit for the designation as persons eligible for
protection.
The
government announced that the two North Koreans apply to the second item and
hence they are ineligible for protection. In addition, it added that as the two
men were significant threats to the security of people in South Korea, it is
only right that they shall be deported.
If it
is true that the two North Koreans were offenders of serious crimes as
announced by the government, they may not be provided protection pursuant to
the Act. As such, the documents that led to this decision by the Minister of
Unification and the Consultative Council should be verified. Nonetheless, even
if they were deemed to be ineligible for protection, it simply means that their
potential government benefits have been stripped away, and in no way does it
serve as the basis to make a decision for deportation.
According
to the 2019 report on the parliamentary inspection of the administration, three
North Korean refugees have been denied legal protection over the past five
years as a result of them having committed serious nonpolitical or transnational
crimes. The report on the protection decision submitted to the legislature by
the Ministry of Unification on October 20, 2019, showed that a total of 137
North Korean refugees have been deemed ineligible for protection over the past
five years, and among them was a bounty hunter aiming to arrest North Korean
defectors, and two murderers.
People
ineligible for protection are thus given other forms of protection and support
from the government and society specific to their needs, but they are not
subject to deportation. Which is why until now, there has never been a public
announcement of the government forcefully repatriating North Koreans back to
North Korea. In fact, while there have been quite a large number of North
Korean refugees who have been denied protection pursuant to the Act, not a
single person has been deported.
Pursuant
to the Enforcement Decree of the Act, any person who is likely to affect
national security to the considerable extent prescribed in the provision to
Article 8 (1) of the Act shall be any of the following persons.
1.
A person who
has committed a crime concerning insurrection or crime concerning foreign
aggression defined in the Criminal Act; a crime of insurrection, crime of benefitting the enemy, or
crime of unlawful use of secret codes defined in the Military Criminal Act; or any other crime falling under the National Security Act (excluding Article 10) or the Military Secret
Protection Act; or a person
who initially intended to commit any of the aforesaid crimes but has expressed
his/her will to renounce such intention;
2.
A person
deemed essential for national security by the Director of the National
Intelligence Service among persons actively engaged in protecting the North
Korean regime in the Workers' Party; the Cabinet; the armed forces; the
Ministry of People’s Security; or the Ministry of State Security of North
Korea;
3.
A spouse or
relative of the person of supreme power in North Korea;
4.
A person with
important intelligence in advanced science or other special and professional
fields closely related to national security.
The government has yet to disclose when and by whom the
decision that led to the status of ineligibility for protection of the two
North Korean nationals was made. According to the government statements, other
than the fact that they are fishermen, no particular information pertaining to
their personal identity has been announced which makes it unlikely that the
Director of National Intelligence Service would be the one to make the decision
for protection. There is no additional information that would show that these
North Koreans would affect national security. Assuming that what the South
Korean government announced about the two men is all true, they are simply
offenders of criminal law, not threats to national security. In this case then,
the decision maker for such matters on protection should have been made by the
Minister of Unification. The Consultative Council under the Ministry of
Unification normally holds the review meeting once a month, and hence it is
highly likely that the normal process was not applied to the two North Koreans.
If this was the case, the two men were deported without due procedures as
required by law.
When North Koreans are found by the South Korean government at
sea (usually on fishing vessels that have drifted away or crossed the border
for fishing) and they express their intent to go back to North Korea, the
government respects their will and sends them back without the procedures
required for decision on protection. Although the two fishermen in this case
refused to go back, the same process as those wishing to go back was undertaken.
Because the two fishermen escaped from North Korea, their repatriation will
only place their lives in greater danger.
In conclusion, first, the South Korean government has no
authority to deport North Koreans against their will even if they are deemed
offenders of serious crimes or threats to the national security. While North
Koreans eligible for protection can receive various social government benefits,
those who have been decided as ineligible for protection only receive a
resident registration card. The only difference is that once they start living
in South Korea, their living conditions may be more difficult than other North
Korean defectors who receive protection. Since the two Koreas have been
divided, several hundreds of North Korean defectors have integrated into Korean
society without these protection benefits.
The Lives of the Two North Korean Defectors Who Have Been Forcefully Repatriated from South Korea Must Be Protected
Dr. Yeosang Yoon (NKDB)
An act that should never have happened in South Korea has unfolded.
According to media reports, the South Korean government handed over two North Koreans to DPRK officials at the border village of Panmunjom in the DMZ at 15:10 on November 7th, 2019. It is the South’s very first deportation of North Korean defectors who have expressed their intent to remain in the Republic of Korea.
The South Korean government revealed that the two North Korean fishermen in their 20s crossed the maritime border (NLL) and were seized by the South Korean navy on November 2nd, 2019. While being interrogated by the ROK’s authorities, the two young men expressed their intention to defect to South Korea. According to the South’s investigators, the two fishermen killed 16 fellow crew members aboard a squid fishing vessel on North Korea’s East Coast before fleeing to South Korean waters.
The South Korean government mentioned the following grounds for sending them back to the DPRK: they are serious criminals and thus denied the rights to be protected under the law, they pose a threat to the safety of South Koreans if they were to be granted entry, and that criminals are not recognized as refugees under international refugee law.
However, the announcement and the reasons for the deportation provided by the South Korean government fail to comply with every law that pertains to the essence of this issue including the South Korean Constitution, North Korean Refugees Protection and Settlement Support Act (hereinafter “North Korean Refugees Support Act”), and all past Supreme Court decisions; and can be defined as a crime against humanity.
Article 3 of South Korea’s Constitution stipulates that “the territory of the Republic of Korea (South Korea) shall consist of the Korean peninsula and its adjacent islands,” recognizing the North Korean region as its territory. Past Supreme Court decisions recognize all North Korean citizens and North Korean defectors who have entered South Korea as South Korean citizens.
Despite such legal basis, and the fact that the two North Koreans entered the South, sought protection from the South Korean government, and refused to return to the North by expressing their intent to defect to ROK, the authorities nevertheless deported the two North Koreans. The South Korean government stated the reasons below to explain their justification of the deportation.
l First, offenders of serious crimes are exempted from protection pursuant to the North Korean Refugees Support Act, thus it was justifiable that they were deported.
l Second, serious criminals are also not recognized as refugees under international refugee law. It is justifiable that they are deported to keep the lives and safety of South Koreans.
l Third, the unprecedented nature of this case and the absence of relevant regulations have led South Korean government bodies to make a joint decision.
l Fourth, this case was not disclosed to the public and was mistakenly uncovered by the media. If the case remained undisclosed, it would have likely remained low-profile.
The claims by the South Korean government can be deemed to have breached the Constitution, relevant laws, Supreme Court decisions, and even humanity for the following reasons:
First, it is stated in Article 1 of North Korean Refugees Support Act that “the purpose of this Act is to provide for matters relating to protection and support as necessary to help North Korean residents escaping from the area north of the Military Demarcation Line who desire to be protected by the Republic of Korea, as swiftly as possible to adapt themselves to, and settle down in, all spheres of their lives, including political, economic, social and cultural spheres.” Just as the Article clearly states that North Korean residents who seek protection from South Korea are subject to the Act, the two young North Koreans who sought protection from South Korea are duly subject to the Act.
Article 2 of the same Act also stipulates that North Korean refugees refer to “persons who have their residence, lineal ascendants and descendants, spouses, workplaces, etc. in the area north of the Military Demarcation Line ("North Korea"), and who have not acquired any foreign nationality after escaping from North Korea.” Pursuant to the Act, they are North Korean refugees.
When the South Korean government locates and holds custody of a person claiming to be a North Korean refugee, it is the South Korean National Intelligent Service (NIS) that determines the person’s status as a resident of North Korea, hence a North Korean refugee (once verified as a resident of North Korea, the person is automatically recognized as a North Korean refugee regardless of the purpose of or reason for defection, escape route, identity, and past acts or records.) The NIS’s North Korean Defector Protection Center conducts an investigation and once determined as a resident of North Korea, the person is deemed a citizen of South Korea.
There is currently no single legal basis including the Constitution, laws, and Supreme Court decisions that provides basis for the South Korean government to deport a South Korean citizen to North Korea. North Korean residents or refugees are deemed South Korean citizens, and hence cannot be sent back to North Korea. If done so, this is a grave breach of the Constitution and relevant laws.
The information compiled through the investigation at the NIS’s North Korean Defector Protection Center are sent to the Ministry of Unification to use it to review and determine whether the North Korean refugee is now eligible for special protection and support from the government.
The South Korean government announced that it has confirmed that the two fishermen were residents of North Korea. In other words, the government deported North Korean refugees against their will.
Article 2 Section 2 states that “the person eligible for protection” refers to a resident escaping from North Korea who is provided with protection and support pursuant to this Act. According to Article 8 (Decision on Protection) and Article 9 (Criteria for Protection), the person intending to receive government support (financial support for settlement, social integration education, shelter, medical service, education, employment, living support, etc.) must first be recognized as “the person eligible for protection.” Hence, this Act is only to decide whether the North Korean refugee is eligible to receive the government benefits. It does not decide on whether the person shall be deported or not.
The decision on whether the person is eligible for protection is under the authority of the Minister of Unification after review by the Consultative Council. However, if the North Korean refugee is deemed as a significant threat to national security, the Director of the National Intelligence Service shall decide on his or her protective status and immediately report to the Minister of Unification and the North Korean applicant respectively.
According to Article 9, the government may not decide to provide protection to the following persons:
1. International criminal offenders involved in aircraft hijacking, drug trafficking, terrorism or genocide, etc.;
2. Offenders of nonpolitical and serious crimes, such as murder;
3. Suspects of disguised escape;
4. Persons who have earned their living for at least ten years in their respective countries of sojourn;
5. Persons who have applied for protection when three years elapsed since their entry into the Republic of Korea;
6. Other persons prescribed by Presidential Decree as unfit for the designation as persons eligible for protection.
The government announced that the two North Koreans apply to the second item and hence they are ineligible for protection. In addition, it added that as the two men were significant threats to the security of people in South Korea, it is only right that they shall be deported.
If it is true that the two North Koreans were offenders of serious crimes as announced by the government, they may not be provided protection pursuant to the Act. As such, the documents that led to this decision by the Minister of Unification and the Consultative Council should be verified. Nonetheless, even if they were deemed to be ineligible for protection, it simply means that their potential government benefits have been stripped away, and in no way does it serve as the basis to make a decision for deportation.
According to the 2019 report on the parliamentary inspection of the administration, three North Korean refugees have been denied legal protection over the past five years as a result of them having committed serious nonpolitical or transnational crimes. The report on the protection decision submitted to the legislature by the Ministry of Unification on October 20, 2019, showed that a total of 137 North Korean refugees have been deemed ineligible for protection over the past five years, and among them was a bounty hunter aiming to arrest North Korean defectors, and two murderers.
People ineligible for protection are thus given other forms of protection and support from the government and society specific to their needs, but they are not subject to deportation. Which is why until now, there has never been a public announcement of the government forcefully repatriating North Koreans back to North Korea. In fact, while there have been quite a large number of North Korean refugees who have been denied protection pursuant to the Act, not a single person has been deported.
Pursuant to the Enforcement Decree of the Act, any person who is likely to affect national security to the considerable extent prescribed in the provision to Article 8 (1) of the Act shall be any of the following persons.
1. A person who has committed a crime concerning insurrection or crime concerning foreign aggression defined in the Criminal Act; a crime of insurrection, crime of benefitting the enemy, or crime of unlawful use of secret codes defined in the Military Criminal Act; or any other crime falling under the National Security Act (excluding Article 10) or the Military Secret Protection Act; or a person who initially intended to commit any of the aforesaid crimes but has expressed his/her will to renounce such intention;
2. A person deemed essential for national security by the Director of the National Intelligence Service among persons actively engaged in protecting the North Korean regime in the Workers' Party; the Cabinet; the armed forces; the Ministry of People’s Security; or the Ministry of State Security of North Korea;
3. A spouse or relative of the person of supreme power in North Korea;
4. A person with important intelligence in advanced science or other special and professional fields closely related to national security.
The government has yet to disclose when and by whom the decision that led to the status of ineligibility for protection of the two North Korean nationals was made. According to the government statements, other than the fact that they are fishermen, no particular information pertaining to their personal identity has been announced which makes it unlikely that the Director of National Intelligence Service would be the one to make the decision for protection. There is no additional information that would show that these North Koreans would affect national security. Assuming that what the South Korean government announced about the two men is all true, they are simply offenders of criminal law, not threats to national security. In this case then, the decision maker for such matters on protection should have been made by the Minister of Unification. The Consultative Council under the Ministry of Unification normally holds the review meeting once a month, and hence it is highly likely that the normal process was not applied to the two North Koreans. If this was the case, the two men were deported without due procedures as required by law.
When North Koreans are found by the South Korean government at sea (usually on fishing vessels that have drifted away or crossed the border for fishing) and they express their intent to go back to North Korea, the government respects their will and sends them back without the procedures required for decision on protection. Although the two fishermen in this case refused to go back, the same process as those wishing to go back was undertaken. Because the two fishermen escaped from North Korea, their repatriation will only place their lives in greater danger.
In conclusion, first, the South Korean government has no authority to deport North Koreans against their will even if they are deemed offenders of serious crimes or threats to the national security. While North Koreans eligible for protection can receive various social government benefits, those who have been decided as ineligible for protection only receive a resident registration card. The only difference is that once they start living in South Korea, their living conditions may be more difficult than other North Korean defectors who receive protection. Since the two Koreas have been divided, several hundreds of North Korean defectors have integrated into Korean society without these protection benefits.