Sunday, March 26, 2023
manilastandard.net
ADVERTISEMENT
  • About
  • News
    • Top Stories
    • National
    • World News
    • Pinoy Abroad
    • Features
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Columns
    • Soundbytes
  • LGUs
    • NCR
    • Luzon
    • Visayas
    • Mindanao
  • Business
    • Corporate
    • Economy & Trade
    • Stocks
    • Money
    • Agri & Mining
    • Power & Tech
    • IT & Telecom
  • Sports
    • Basketball
    • Volleyball
    • Fightsports
    • Active
    • Sports Plus
    • One Championship
    • Columns
  • Entertainment
    • TV & Movies
    • Celebrity Profiles
    • Music & Concerts
    • Digital Media
    • Columns
  • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Culture & Media
    • Fashion
    • Health and Home
    • Leisure
    • Shopping
    • Columns
  • Others
    • Pets
    • Pop.Life
      • Newsmakers
      • Hangouts
      • A-Pop
      • Post Its
      • Performances
      • Malls & Bazaars
      • Hobbies & Collections
    • Technology
      • Gadgets
      • Computers
      • Business
      • Tech Plus
    • MS ON THE ROAD
      • Sedan
      • SUV
      • Truck
      • Bike
      • Accessories
      • Motoring Plus
      • Commuter’s Corner
    • Home & Design
      • Residential
      • Commercial
      • Construction
      • Interior
    • Spotlight
    • Gallery
      • Photos
      • Videos
    • Events
      • Seminars
      • Exhibits
      • Community
    • Biyahero
      • Travel Features
      • Travel Reels
      • Travel Logs
  • Advertise with Us
No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • News
    • Top Stories
    • National
    • World News
    • Pinoy Abroad
    • Features
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Columns
    • Soundbytes
  • LGUs
    • NCR
    • Luzon
    • Visayas
    • Mindanao
  • Business
    • Corporate
    • Economy & Trade
    • Stocks
    • Money
    • Agri & Mining
    • Power & Tech
    • IT & Telecom
  • Sports
    • Basketball
    • Volleyball
    • Fightsports
    • Active
    • Sports Plus
    • One Championship
    • Columns
  • Entertainment
    • TV & Movies
    • Celebrity Profiles
    • Music & Concerts
    • Digital Media
    • Columns
  • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Culture & Media
    • Fashion
    • Health and Home
    • Leisure
    • Shopping
    • Columns
  • Others
    • Pets
    • Pop.Life
      • Newsmakers
      • Hangouts
      • A-Pop
      • Post Its
      • Performances
      • Malls & Bazaars
      • Hobbies & Collections
    • Technology
      • Gadgets
      • Computers
      • Business
      • Tech Plus
    • MS ON THE ROAD
      • Sedan
      • SUV
      • Truck
      • Bike
      • Accessories
      • Motoring Plus
      • Commuter’s Corner
    • Home & Design
      • Residential
      • Commercial
      • Construction
      • Interior
    • Spotlight
    • Gallery
      • Photos
      • Videos
    • Events
      • Seminars
      • Exhibits
      • Community
    • Biyahero
      • Travel Features
      • Travel Reels
      • Travel Logs
  • Advertise with Us
No Result
View All Result
manilastandard.net
No Result
View All Result
Home News World News

In N. Korea, bleak choices for women

AFPbyAFP
November 3, 2016, 9:10 pm
in World News
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Email

HONG KONG”•Stay and endure a life of privation and oppression, or escape and risk being sold into sexual slavery: this is the stark choice facing many women in North Korea, bestselling author and activist Hyeonseo Lee warns.

The daughter of a military official, she is not your typical defector”•it was curiosity not desperation that pushed her to venture beyond its borders. Almost 20 years on she has become a powerful voice of dissent, laying bare the reality of life under the totalitarian regime in her memoir The Girl with Seven Names.

Now she is campaigning for greater protection for North Koreans who manage to flee”•particularly women”•warning that many are captured in China and sold into prostitution or end up in forced marriages.

“All but the lucky few will live the rest of their lives in utter misery,” she tells AFP.

“They will be repeatedly raped day in and day out by an endless supply of customers who enrich their captors at their expense.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Horrified by ‘survivor testimony’ she is launching a new NGO, North Star NK, which has agents in the field across Southeast Asia and China helping those trafficked in the sex trade to escape.

Lee says: “They are so humiliated and broken, they don’t want to speak out, so I decided I should try to help.”

The Tumen and Yalu rivers act as a border with China. In some parts the water is navigable, while in winter they are frozen over completely. For many the physical act of crossing is the easiest bit.

There is no asylum once they reach the other side. They are regarded as illegal migrants and face deportation if caught and then severe punishment in North Korea.

The women are in an incredibly vulnerable position, Lee says. They have little choice but to trust the brokers smuggling them out. But there is no one to turn to if things go wrong.

“North Korean women and girls run a gauntlet of forced marriage, and sexual abuse, in China as a de facto requirement to escape to a third country,” says Phil Robertson, deputy director of Human Rights Watch in Asia.

Lee herself narrowly avoided being forced into the sex trade when she crossed into China. She was told she was being trained to work in a hair salon but on arrival she discovered it was a brothel, and managed to run away.

North Korean women are also trafficked as ‘forced brides’, she says, usually sold to men in the countryside. The combination of China’s one-child policy and a historic preference for boys has now led to a shortage of women of marriageable age. Families are willing to pay hundreds of dollars for brides for otherwise ineligible bachelors.

This too can end in abject misery. 

“One trafficked woman I know was severely beaten by her husband and his family. To prevent her from escaping, they chained her inside a shed when they weren’t monitoring her,” Lee recalls.

“Some of these trafficked North Korean women commit suicide, while others hold onto a sliver of hope that they will eventually escape. Almost none of them succeed.” 

Her own story is one of remarkable survival against the odds. 

From public executions and corpses lying on the streets to family gatherings and playing with friends, Lee’s memories of her childhood are a patchwork of the ordinary and the horrifying”•and yet, she says, it was all normal in North Korea. 

“The sad truth for most North Koreans is that they are brainwashed to think that their complete lack of freedom and human rights is normal,” she says.

For her the coil of indoctrination unraveled gradually. She grew up on the border”•the neon lights of China visible just across the Yalu River.

“My country was completely dark, even though we were supposedly superior,” she explains. “Living so close to China also allowed me to secretly watch Chinese TV channels, which opened my eyes to a whole new world.”

A nationwide famine, known as the “Arduous March”, also forced her to reconsider the rhetoric of the regime.

“In my hometown of Hyesan I could see dead bodies on the streets. The smell of decomposing flesh made me feel sick and gave me goosebumps,” she recalls.

It is estimated hundreds of thousands died.

Lee was just 17 when she illegally crossed the river into China, planning on just a short visit. Instead, she ended up on a decade-long odyssey, during which she assumed multiple identities, evaded state crackdowns on North Koreans, and endured betrayals and beatings.

She says: “I’ve had many low points throughout my life, but I remember crying so much when I was living by myself in China, because I never thought I would see my family again. I hated myself.”

In 2008 she arrived in Seoul and was granted asylum, before going on to guide her family from North Korea to freedom too. She is happily married to an American whom she met in the city.

Now she is determined to use her experiences to bring about change.

She says: “It’s essential that the people who have been oppressed speak out. It’s the most effective way to compel the international community to help.”

Tags: Hyeonseo LeeNorth Koreawomen
ADVERTISEMENT
AFP

AFP

Related Posts

UN hits Russia, Ukraine forces for POW ‘summary executions’

byAFP
March 25, 2023, 10:00 pm
0
8
Southwoods nails Seniors’ Fil golf crown

KYIV—The United Nations said Friday it was “deeply concerned” by what it said were summary executions of prisoners of war...

Read more

Unrest in France prompts Charles to postpone visit

byAFP
March 25, 2023, 9:50 pm
0
8
Unrest in France prompts Charles to postpone visit

PARIS -- Violent pension reform protests in France led to the postponement Friday of King Charles III’s trip to the...

Read more

N. Zealand raises concerns with China over rights

byAFP
March 25, 2023, 9:40 pm
0
8
Southwoods nails Seniors’ Fil golf crown

BEIJING—New Zealand has raised concerns with China over human rights abuses and growing tensions with Taiwan, Wellington’s foreign minister told...

Read more

19 killed as US strikes Iran-linked Syria groups

byAFP
March 25, 2023, 9:30 pm
0
8
Southwoods nails Seniors’ Fil golf crown

BEIRUT—The death toll from retaliatory US strikes on Iran-linked groups in Syria following a deadly drone attack has risen to...

Read more

Trump to rally at site of deadly anti-government siege in Waco

byAFP
March 25, 2023, 9:20 pm
0
8
In final days, a weakened Trump faces first veto override

WACO -- Donald Trump stages his first presidential campaign rally Saturday at the site of a deadly 1993 standoff between...

Read more

Indian MP Gandhi ‘to keep fighting’

byAFP
March 25, 2023, 9:10 pm
0
8
Southwoods nails Seniors’ Fil golf crown

NEW DELHI -- Top Indian opposition figure Rahul Gandhi said Saturday he would keep fighting for democracy after blaming his...

Read more

Print Edition

View More

Recent Posts

  • Guns, ammo at Teves biz
  • PSA: Fishers, farmers, rural folk still poorest
  • Cost-cutting Accenture to cut 19,000 jobs worldwide
  • New international shrine
  • Back to her roots
  • Du30 tops Pahayag poll of possible Senate candidates in 2025 elections
  • EDCA does not give US troops unlimited access in PH—DND
  • PCG to boost oil spill containment with Korean help

Advertisement

Latest News

Du30 tops Pahayag poll of possible Senate candidates in 2025 elections

byMaricel Cruz
March 26, 2023, 1:20 am
0
8
Rody wants more time with family after term

n By Maricel V. Cruz If senatorial elections were held today, former President Rodrigo Duterte would top the race if...

Read more

EDCA does not give US troops unlimited access in PH—DND

byManila Standard
March 26, 2023, 1:10 am
0
8
US to demonstrate rockets in Balikatan

The Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA) between the Philippines and the United States have built-in protocols and does not allow...

Read more

PCG to boost oil spill containment with Korean help

byCharles Dantes
March 26, 2023, 1:00 am
0
8
PCG ships set for ‘water war’ in WPS

The Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) vowed to heighten its oil spill containment activity in Oriental Mindoro province in collaboration with...

Read more

House, Senate seek agreement on Cha-cha

byJoel E. Zurbanoand1 others
March 26, 2023, 12:50 am
0
8
House leader graces school fair

Senator Robinhood Padilla on Saturday thanked Speaker Martin Romualdez and members of the House of Representatives for considering discussing a...

Read more

Men and birds go fishing

byRevoli Cortez
March 26, 2023, 12:48 am
0
8
Universal phenomenon

A group of fishermen and a flock of egrets enjoy a good catch of fish during low tide at Barangay...

Read more

Advertisement

ADVERTISEMENT
Facebook Twitter Instagram Youtube

ABOUT US

Manila Standard

Manila Standard website (manilastandard.net), launched in August 2002, extends the newspaper’s reach beyond its traditional readers and makes its brand of Philippine news and opinion available to a much wider and geographically diverse readership here and overseas.

Digital Edition

In tone and content, the online edition mirrors the editorial thrust of the newspaper. While hewing to the traditional precepts of fairness and objectivity, MS believes the news of the day need not be staid, overly long or dry. Stories are succinct, readable and written in a lively style that has become a hallmark of the newspaper.

Download – Today’s Paper

Search

No Result
View All Result

6th Floor Universal Re Bldg., 106 Paseo De Roxas cor. Perea Street, Legaspi Village, 1226 Makati City Philippines

Trunklines: 832-5554, 832-5556, 832-5558

© 2021 Manila Standard - Designed and Developed by Neitiviti Studios.

No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • News
    • Top Stories
    • National
    • World News
    • Pinoy Abroad
    • Features
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Columns
    • Soundbytes
  • LGUs
    • NCR
    • Luzon
    • Visayas
    • Mindanao
  • Business
    • Corporate
    • Economy & Trade
    • Stocks
    • Money
    • Agri & Mining
    • Power & Tech
    • IT & Telecom
  • Sports
    • Basketball
    • Volleyball
    • Fightsports
    • Active
    • Sports Plus
    • One Championship
    • Columns
  • Entertainment
    • TV & Movies
    • Celebrity Profiles
    • Music & Concerts
    • Digital Media
    • Columns
  • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Culture & Media
    • Fashion
    • Health and Home
    • Leisure
    • Shopping
    • Columns
  • Pop.Life
    • Newsmakers
    • Hangouts
    • A-Pop
    • Post Its
    • Performances
    • Malls & Bazaars
    • Hobbies & Collections
  • Technology
    • Gadgets
    • Computers
    • Business
    • Tech Plus
  • MS ON THE ROAD
    • Sedan
    • SUV
    • Truck
    • Bike
    • Accessories
    • Motoring Plus
    • Commuter’s Corner
  • Home & Design
    • Residential
    • Commercial
    • Construction
    • Interior
  • Spotlight
  • Gallery
    • Photos
    • Videos
  • Events
    • Seminars
    • Exhibits
    • Community
  • Biyahero
    • Travel Features
    • Travel Reels
    • Travel Logs
  • Pets
  • Advertise with Us

© 2021 Manila Standard - Designed and Developed by Neitiviti Studios.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Install Manila Standard Web App

Install App