ASIA: BORDERLAND ( N Korean refugees) work in progress
"When you stand in front of me and look at me, what do you know of the griefs that are in me and what do I know of yours?" Franz Kafka....
Wenn Du vor mir stehst und mich ansiehst, was weißt Du von den Schmerzen,
die in mir sind und was weiß ich von den Deinen.
[Franz Kafka: Aus einem Brief an Oskar Pollak vom 8. November 1903)
The lack of food is a major reason North Koreans cross the border to China. According to an activist, many North Koreans initially have no plan to leave for good. In the hermetically closed country though ( unlike in former Eastern Germany,North Koreans have no access to TV or any info about foreign countries) people are educated to believe their country is better off than the world that surrounds North Korea.
They merely hope to earn some money which is used to buy food for their families.
However, once North Koreans arrive in China, they gradually realize by watching Korean satellite TV and observing the comparatively prosperous lifes of the Chinese that they are better off by not returning. They become refugees.
As it's illegal to stay in China, the journey continues to South Korea which can take a few weeks for people with connections up to several years by traveling through China to South -East Asia or Mongolia. There's constant fear of being discovered by police and unforeseen abuse: People are not paid by their employers and women are particularly vulnarable as they occasionally fall into the hands of traffickers and are sold to men as second wifes or as prostitutes to brothels.
It's a dangerous trip as people who are caught, usually are forcibly repatriated and put into jail or labour camps.
Tens of thousands North Koreans are believed have left their home country in recent years by crossing the border into China. According to a WSJ report (Jan. 2012) there's 23.000 refugees in total who reached South Korea by the end of 2011.