Skip to content

Defectors in Seoul Continue to Send Facts and Rice to North Korea

May 1, 2018 | Asia
May 1, 2018
AsiaNorth Korea

ICC Note: Despite seemingly warming relations between the two Koreas, the North Korean defectors in the South continue their work of sending rice and facts-loaded USB sticks to the North, hoping to penetrate their hometown with reality eight gigabytes at a time.

05/01/2018 North Korea (Channel News Asia) – North Korean defectors sent water bottles filled with rice and K-pop-loaded USB sticks floating towards their homeland Tuesday (May 1), even as the Seoul government removed border loudspeakers following a rare summit with Pyongyang.

The North’s leader Kim Jong Un and the South’s president Moon Jae-in agreed last week to “completely cease all hostile acts” along the Demilitarized Zone from May 1, including loudspeaker broadcasts and leaflet balloon launches.

But former North Korean political prisoner Jung Gwang-il and other activists tossed bottles into the sea from an island, hoping the tide will carry them northwards.

Seoul is playing into Pyongyang’s hands by depriving ordinary North Koreans of much-needed information, Jung said.

“What is one thing that Kim Jong Un hates the most?” he asked. “It’s North Koreans becoming aware of the reality.”

The defectors have been throwing hundreds of bottles filled with food, cash, medicine and memory sticks into the sea twice a month for more than two years.

There is no definitive way of verifying whether the items have been received, but Jung said the South’s coastguards have told him the bottles are often retrieved by North Korean fishing boats.

The USB sticks contain movies, current affairs programmes, and K-pop music videos – carefully selected by Jung to include female musicians in revealing outfits.

“It shows what freedom is,” he said. “It’s no problem in South Korea but banned in the North. That’s what we want to show.”

A survey conducted in 2015 said 81 percent of North Korean defectors had watched foreign films on USB sticks before they fled the country.

As the activists tossed the bottles into the sea, the South’s defence authorities began removing loudspeakers along the Demilitarized Zone to implement the Panmunjom Declaration agreed at last week’s summit.

The high-decibel loudspeakers have been blaring K-pop music and South Korean news towards the North’s border troops.

US activist Susan Scholte called Seoul’s move a “huge mistake”.

[Full Story]

For interviews with Gina Goh, ICC’s Regional Manager, please contact Olivia Miller, Communications Coordinator: [email protected]

To read more news stories, visit the ICC Newsroom
For interviews, please email [email protected]

Help ICC bring hope and ease the suffering of persecuted Christians.

Give Today
Back To Top
Search