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Increasing Numbers of Nork Refugees Head to Thailand
Published last week but worth looking at now.

Remember how East Germany cracked and the Wall came down? It happened because Czechoslovakia and especially Hungary turned a blind eye to the escape of East German refugees through their countries to the west. Once they made clear that they were no longer willing to stand in socialist solidarity with the blockheads running the East German paradise (and Gorby realized that he couldn't send the tanks in) it was all over. Substitute Thailand and Vietnam as the countries willing to look the other way, and China for Gorbachev, and the similarities are clear.

I don't say we're there yet; unfortunately things in Nork-land will have to get a lot worse before that sad country implodes. But the outline is discernible.
An increasing number of North Korean refugees are arriving in northern Thailand, fleeing poverty and political oppression at home. They were spotted on the side of the road along Thailand's border with Laos. Several more ran as journalists approached.

Speaking in Chinese, one woman says they just arrived and asks where exactly they are, but she does not want to say where they came from or how they got here. "Don't ask this. So many things are not good to ask. We don't dare say," she said.

The refugees reach Thailand by crossing the Mekong River from Laos after a dangerous journey across China.

Thai immigration authorities say they took more than 1,000 North Koreans into custody this year, compared with less than 400 in 2008 when Beijing tightened security for the Olympics. Police superintendent Sutham Chatarsa says they come to Thailand because, unlike in China and Laos, they will not be sent home, where they could face execution.

"We don't have the policy to send them back to North Korea," he said. "We want to take care of them until they are accepted into a third country. It's not the same as people coming from Cambodia or Laos. North Koreans come here because of political problems. So, we want them to get to a third country."

Even so, the North Koreans are treated as illegal immigrants before being allowed to go to South Korea or another country.

Lawmakers from 12 countries met in Thailand in November to raise attention to the plight of North Koreans fleeing their impoverished and repressive nation.

South Korean lawmaker Kim Yong-tae says they often face abuse because of their illegal status. "We need to cooperate with each other to pressure Chinese or the other country governments to give them legal status. And second, we need to offer some conditions for them to sustain their livelihoods," he said.

Thai authorities say they expect the number of North Korean refugees to continue to grow next year as more choose take the dangerous journey to freedom.
Posted by: Steve White 2010-01-04
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=287083