Laos Admits Handing Over North Korean Defectors to Pyongyang
MAY 31, 2013— Laos broke its silence Friday over its much-criticized deportation of nine
North Korean defectors, saying it had handed them directly to North Korea and not to China
as widely reported.
News reports, some quoting South Korean officials, had said that Laos had deported the
defectors, some as young as 14 years old, to China which then repatriated them to North
Korea this week without having their asylum claims assessed.
North Korean defectors face harsh punishment, including the death penalty, on their return
home.
The Lao Foreign Ministry said in a two-paragraph statement sent to RFA's Lao Service
that the Lao government had handed the nine North Koreans to the North Korean Embassy in
Vientiane.
It said that the nine North Koreans, aged between 14 to 18 years, and two South Koreans
were detained by police in Oudomxay province in Laos bordering China. It accused the South
Koreans of committing human trafficking.
Lao statement
"On 10th May 2013, the police of Oudomxay Province of the Lao PDR detained 11 Koreans
and had subsequently transferred them to Vientiane for investigation," the statement
said.
"As a result of the investigation, it has been identified that nine of them are the
citizens of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) aged between 14 to 18 years
who have illegally entered into the Lao PDR, while the other two are the citizens of the
Republic of Korea (ROK) who have committed human trafficking."
"In accordance with the Law of the Lao PDR, particularly the Prime Minister’s Decree
No. 136 on Immigration and Foreigners Control, and after coordination between the Lao
authorities concerned and the concerned Embassies in Vientiane, the Lao side has handed
over the nine citizens of the DPRK and the two citizens of the ROK to their respective
Embassies on 27th May 2013 and 28th May 2013, respectively," the statement said.
There was no reference to China in the statement or whether the defectors had been sent to
North Korea or China.
Reports had said the nine were returned to China on Monday and flown back to North Korea
the following day.
Beijing has not commented on the issue so far.
International obligations
International law requires that a person be allowed to apply for asylum and not be
expelled to a country where his life or freedom may be under threat.
The U.N. refugee agency UNHCR had expressed concern that the deported individuals did not
have a chance to have their asylum claims assessed.
“We have received credible information that the nine young North Korean defectors were
subsequently returned to DPRK via China,” a spokesperson for the U.N. human rights office
(OHCHR), Rupert Colville, said, according to a statement issued by the Geneva-based
office.
Colville added that OHCHR was “extremely concerned” about the protection of the group
members “who are at risk of severe punishment and ill-treatment upon their return.”
"We are dismayed that the Governments of Laos and China appear to have abrogated
their non-refoulement obligations, especially given the vulnerability of this group, all
of whom are reported to be orphans."
"We urge the Chinese and Laotian authorities to publicly clarify the fate of the nine
young North Koreans, as well as the conditions under which they were returned, and request
the Government of DPRK to provide immediate access to the group by independent actors to
verify their status and treatment," the statement said.
The U.N. General Assembly, in successive resolution, has expressed serious concern about
the situation of refugees and asylum-seekers expelled or returned to North Korea and the
sanctions imposed on those repatriated from abroad.
On Friday, South Korean activists criticized Laos during a rally outside its embassy in
Seoul.
"We are here to call on Laos not to deport North Korean defectors because there is
concern they may be tortured when sent back," the Associated Press quoted Lee
Ho-taek, head of a group that provides refugees with support, as saying.
Defectors' plight
Close to 25,000 North Koreans have come to South Korea since the end of the Korean War.
The vast majority of them hid in China and Southeast Asian countries including Laos,
Thailand, and Vietnam before flying to Seoul.
China, North Korea's key ally, does not recognize defectors as asylum seekers and has
been known to return them to Pyongyang.
"North Korea has to come clean on where these nine refugees are and publicly
guarantee that they will not be harmed or retaliated against for having fled the
country," said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director of Human Rights Watch. "As a
result of their return, they are at dire risk."
Reported by RFA's Lao Service. Written in English by Parameswaran Ponnudurai.
View this story online at:
http://www.rfa.org/english/news/laos/defectors-05312013155247.html
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