SEOUL — Hardly anybody has escaped from North Korea these previous 4 years, since chief Kim Jong Un shuttered his nation’s border with China within the earliest days of the pandemic.
However Kang Gyu-rin and her mom, aunt and a household buddy are among the many few. To take action, they used a dangerous route that has turn out to be virtually the one choice for escape: by sea.
One evening final October, the 4 boarded Kang’s rickety picket boat — with a rudimentary pumping system for bailing out the water — and set out for South Korea. Or demise.
“I used to be able to die, so I wasn’t afraid,” mentioned Kang, now 23. “We needed to give it our greatest shot.”
Kang and her mom, Kim Myung-sook, informed The Washington Submit about their life throughout the covid period and their choice to flee by sea, providing uncommon perception into how North Korea has modified up to now 4 years. The ladies modified their names after arriving within the South as a result of they’re escapees and needed to guard relations again dwelling. They spoke to The Submit on the situation that their new names be used.
North Korea, run by the totalitarian Kim regime for nearly eight many years, has lengthy been one of many world’s most reclusive and repressive international locations, a dire place during which to dwell however an especially troublesome place from which to flee.
It was within the late Nineteen Nineties, on the peak of a devastating famine within the North, that waves of escapees began arriving within the South, virtually all of them taking an overland route throughout the comparatively porous border into China, then to Mongolia or down via Southeast Asia, the place they might fly to South Korea.
Some 33,000 North Koreans had arrived within the South that manner. However that stopped in January 2020, when Kim Jong Un slammed shut the borders after which erected new barbed-wire fencing and watchtowers — making it inconceivable for anybody to cross into China with out permission.
Kim has now basically ushered in a “zero escapees period,” human rights advocates say.
How we reported this story
Whereas some North Koreans who have been already outdoors the nation when the pandemic struck, resembling laborers despatched to Russia, have arrived in South Korea since 2021, solely 15 or so folks have been in a position to flee North Korea and make it south, in line with estimates from defector-support organizations. That quantity consists of Kang and her household.
That makes their account extraordinarily precious. But North Korean escapees’ tales are notoriously troublesome to corroborate as a result of journalists can’t attain residents or officers who can verify their accounts. Kang’s aunt and the male household buddy who steered their boat declined to be interviewed.
The Submit cross-checked Kang’s account with two advocacy organizations in Seoul which have interviewed her — the Database Heart for North Korean Human Rights and Liberty in North Korea — and confirmed that key particulars have been relayed constantly. The Submit met Kang and her mom independently of the advocacy teams.
Julie Turner, U.S. particular envoy for North Korean human rights points, has additionally met with Kang and was struck by the lengths to which she went to flee.
“The desperation piece has caught with me,” Turner mentioned, noting that North Koreans are having to resort to boats. “Persons are nonetheless so hungry for alternatives that they’re taking a look at these rather more treacherous routes.”
Map of most important routes for these fleeing North Korea
The land route via China carried immense dangers, together with repatriation to North Korea — and excessive punishment — if caught. However in China, a community of brokers and activists helped North Koreans to security. It was costly and harmful, but it surely was attainable.
Escaping by sea is even riskier: These fleeing should cope with border patrols on the coast and at sea, in addition to woefully insufficient boats and unpredictable climate. Even seasoned North Koreans battle to fish given the difficult situations: Battered picket “ghost ships” commonly wash up on Japan’s western shores, carrying the corpses of fishermen who’ve starved at sea.
Kang and her mom had heard of different households who fled on boats. It wasn’t till they arrived in South Korea that they realized none of these households made it alive.
If escapees make it to the South’s waters, they danger South Korean patrols mistaking them as hostile intruders — and doubtlessly firing upon them.
The water route might not even final for much longer, with North Korea erecting new fencing round its coastlines to attempt to cease folks from accessing the ocean.
However for Kang and her household, the ocean was the one manner out. They usually have been solely in a position to make the journey as a result of they lived close to the coast and Kang had a ship as a result of she labored within the fishing business.
This is only one household’s story, however it’s one which displays simply how troublesome it has turn out to be for strange folks to dwell in North Korea — and to flee it.
New, ‘suffocating’ pressures
Kang and Kim lived a middle-class life in South Hamgyong province on the east coast, though they have been removed from the border with China, the place virtually all commerce occurred. That didn’t matter a lot earlier than the pandemic as a result of the market financial system had nicely and really taken maintain throughout North Korea.
However then got here the border closures. Then crackdowns on meals distributors and the markets that maintain the North Korean financial system, they mentioned. Their high quality of life deteriorated sharply.
“We discuss how life felt laborious in 2019 [before the pandemic], however now that we glance again, these have been the great years. It will likely be troublesome to return to the way in which we lived then,” Kang mentioned.
Objects that used to trickle into the nation from China grew to become exponentially dearer or disappeared, they mentioned. The scarcity of stock confirmed Kang simply how a lot her nation trusted its northern neighbor, she mentioned.
“Even stitching needles grew to become 10 occasions dearer. I questioned why, and naturally, they turned out to be a Chinese language product. I spotted how little my nation truly produces,” Kang mentioned.
The Submit can’t independently confirm her claims, however South Korean officers and reporting from North Korea-monitoring web sites have equally reported on value hikes and money shortages created by crackdowns.
“There must be a movement of merchandise into the markets, both via manufacturing from North Korean corporations or by way of China, however neither of these issues have been taking place,” mentioned Lee Sang-yong, director of analysis and evaluation at Every day NK, a media outlet with informants within the North, together with in Kang’s dwelling province.
These pressures are “suffocating” residents who can now not navigate the markets like they used to, mentioned Kim, who’s 54. She recalled the famine of the Nineteen Nineties and the capitalist smarts it took for folks to outlive it — making, promoting or shopping for gadgets they might commerce for meals.
“Now, it feels unsustainable even for the savviest,” Kim mentioned. “The federal government is taking up [the markets], however they’re not giving us the rest in return.”
Kang recalled the summer season of 2022, when the North Korean regime first publicly admitted to a coronavirus outbreak. North Korea then claimed it eradicated the “fever” virus in simply three months, and that simply 74 “fever” sufferers — about 0.0003 p.c of its inhabitants — died, which might make North Korea’s covid fatality fee the bottom on the planet.
Consultants consider it’s an undercount of the true toll of the unfold of the virus, particularly given North Korea’s lack of coronavirus testing kits and vaccines. Kang believes she and practically everybody she knew caught the virus then. The mismatch between the regime’s model of occasions and the fact on the bottom sowed one other seed of mistrust.
Kang’s recollections, along with accounts from another latest escapees, are early indicators of probably profound shifts that occurred inside North Korea throughout the pandemic, mentioned Sokeel Park of Liberty in North Korea.
The intense restrictions on motion, coupled with acute meals shortages, have torn up the implicit social contract that enabled folks to fend for themselves if the federal government can’t present, Park mentioned. This raises greater questions on how North Korean folks view their authorities, he mentioned.
“Totally different escapees are telling us independently that North Korean folks’s sentiment and mentality advanced considerably throughout the pandemic in a extra disaffected and skeptical course,” Park mentioned.
A chase, then a welcome
After Kang dropped out of school throughout the pandemic to earn cash, she purchased the boat together with her mother’s assist — her mom had $4,000 in financial savings, a fortune in North Korea — to start out a small fishing operation.
Enterprise was brutal, she mentioned. Diesel was costly, the boat stored needing repairs, she needed to pay employees even when there was no seafood to catch.
She stored monitor of stock and income in bookkeeping notebooks, which she introduced south and confirmed a Submit reporter. They confronted her with a grim actuality: The enterprise was not sustainable.
She’d at all times recognized the boat may assist her escape someday. However she began critically planning her escape final spring, mapping out her steps and routes, and put her plan into movement the night of Oct. 22, 2023.
Getting ready for his or her journey, they packed water, dried noodles, bread, rice and sleeping capsules — which they agreed to take if it grew to become clear they’d be caught by the North Korean coast guard. They most well-liked a peaceable demise to execution or jail camps.
The waves that evening have been unexpectedly excessive, lifting their boat off the water at every crest and crashing it down at every trough, Kang and Kim mentioned.
Nonetheless, they have been making progress. They have been about two hours from crossing the maritime border. Then they noticed a North Korean patrol ship heading towards them.
“They simply stored flashing, flashing, flashing their lights. They wouldn’t let up,” Kang mentioned. “I questioned, is it time for the capsules? My coronary heart was beating a lot.”
Kim, who was comforting her seasick sister, mentioned all she may do was pump out water and pray for survival: “I hoped that the heavens didn’t ship us on this journey simply to die.”
It’s unclear why the patrol vessel didn’t intercept them. The second they reached the maritime border, the lights disappeared, the patrol boat heading again north, they mentioned.
It was about 7 a.m. on Oct. 24 when blowfish catcher Lim Jae-gil noticed Kang’s boat. He had heard warnings on the radio transmitter that North Korean legislation enforcement vessels have been heading south, and instantly knew this was the boat that they had been chasing.
He had by no means seen something like Kang’s boat in additional than a decade of fishing off South Korea’s east coast, about 35 miles away from the border. It seemed prefer it ought to have been despatched to the scrapyard way back, Lim, 62, mentioned in an interview.
Lim referred to as the authorities whereas he steered towards it. When he received shut, one of many North Koreans requested: “The place are we?”
“Sokcho, in Gangwon province,” Lim replied. “Are you from North Korea?”
The North Koreans nodded. “Effectively carried out,” Lim mentioned.
The 4 boarded Lim’s boat and waited for the South Korean coast guard. Lim supplied the arrivals cigarettes and water. The North Koreans had packed loads of each, however Kang mentioned they accepted as a result of they needed to expertise the style of South Korean cigarettes and water.
The person took one puff of the cigarette and flicked it into the ocean. “It was a lot weaker than the cigarettes we have been used to,” Kang recalled.
As for the water: “It was the identical. It’s water,” she mentioned, laughing. “However the whole lot felt so fascinating on the time.”
A brand new life within the South
Like many North Koreans, Kang realized about life within the South via its tv applications, which she began watching as a teen. It was unlawful, however everybody did it.
Kang is among the many cohort of North Koreans who grew up after the famine, studying to navigate capitalism and entry merchandise from China and South Korea — together with TV exhibits and films that opened their eyes to life in a wealthy and free society. They’ve turn out to be extra uncovered to the skin world and disillusioned with their very own authorities, consultants say.
“We don’t consider [the propaganda],” Kang mentioned. “Possibly our dad and mom did manner again when however I don’t know any of that myself. … I’ve seen a lot of dramas, and I knew life in North Korea was actually terrible.”
It’s due to this technology’s consciousness of life outdoors North Korea — and the risk this data poses to the long-term survival of the regime — that Kim Jong Un has cracked down on international affect, from style to slang. In December 2020, North Korea adopted a legislation “rejecting reactionary ideology and tradition,” in line with state media.
Tightening controls, right down to her earring selections, made Kang really feel like a “kindergartner,” she mentioned.
Kang now not has to fret about such calls for. She wears gold-colored jewellery and coloured contact lenses, and has dyed her hair reddish-brown. Her smartphone is continually buzzing, and her drink of alternative — like most each different South Korean Gen Zer — is iced espresso.
Now, Kang is making ready for faculty and hopes to someday research overseas. Her mom, who’s in search of a job, worries in regards to the lengthy hours her daughter spends finding out.
They introduced virtually nothing with them from North Korea. However Kang has her bookkeeping notebooks, their pages broken from the waves, and appears at them to inspire herself via hardships. She additionally has a photograph she took at a studio within the North. Its caption reads: “To a life that’s at all times stuffed with thrilling and pleased occasions.”
About this story
Story by Michelle Ye Hee Lee. Illustrations by Mikyung Lee. Story enhancing by Anna Fifield. Design by Andrew Braford. Design enhancing by Joe Moore. Map by Samuel Granados. Copy enhancing by Kim Chapman.