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SEOUL,
South Korea (AP) — Thirteen North Koreans working at the same
restaurant in a foreign country have defected to South Korea, Seoul
officials said Friday.
People
working in North Korean-operated restaurants overseas have previously
defected, but this is the first time multiple workers have escaped from
the same restaurant, South Korean Unification Ministry spokesman Jeong
Joon Hee told reporters in Seoul.
North
Korean defections are a bitter point of contention between the rival
Koreas. Pyongyang usually accuses Seoul of enticing North Korean
citizens to defect, something Seoul denies.
Overseas North Korean workers are usually thought to be chosen largely because of their loyalty.
Jeong
said one male and 12 female North Korean workers arrived in the South
on Thursday. He didn't reveal the country where they were working or the
route they took to avoid diplomatic problems and possibly endanger
North Koreans still working in the country.
The
Associated Press called a number of North Korean restaurants in Asia,
and all were open except one located in the Crowne Plaza Hotel in
Danang, Vietnam. A person who answered the telephone at the hotel said
the Pyongyang Restaurant had closed two weeks ago and all the Korean
staff had left the country. She declined to provide more details or
identify herself. It was unclear whether the restaurant was connected to
the defections.
The
North Korean defectors told South Korean officials that they learned
about the South and began to distrust North Korean propaganda by
watching South Korean TV dramas and movies and from searching the
Internet while living overseas, Jeong said.
South
Korean officials believe overseas North Korean restaurants have been
suffering economically since stronger international sanctions were
applied against North Korea over its recent nuclear test and long-range
rocket launch. Jeong said the defectors told South Korean officials that
their restaurant was struggling to meet demands from North Korean
authorities at home for foreign currency.
South
Korea recently advised its citizens not to patronize North Korean
restaurants, although such visits are not illegal. South Korea's spy
agency estimates that North Korea runs about 130 restaurants in other
countries — about 100 in China and the others in Russia, Southeast Asia
and South Asia.
In
a report to the U.N. General Assembly in October last year, Marzuki
Darusman, a U.N. special rapporteur on human rights in North Korea, said
more than 50,000 North Koreans are working in foreign countries, mostly
in China and Russia, providing a source of money for Pyongyang. He
cited various studies, including a 2012 report by the International
Network for the Human Rights of North Korean Overseas Labor that
estimated North Korea was earning as much as $2.3 billion annually from
the workers it sent abroad.
The
Unification Ministry's website says more than 29,000 North Koreans have
defected to South Korea as of March. But there have been only a few
incidents in which large groups of North Korean defectors entered South
Korea at once.
North
Korea in 2004 accused South Korea of kidnapping its citizens after the
South airlifted 468 North Koreans from Vietnam. Seoul said the North
Koreans fled their country into China and then traveled overland to
Vietnam. In 2011, nine North Koreans used a small boat to defect to
South Korea by sea.
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