The Jerusalem Post

North Korean defectors may have been exposed to radiation, says South

- • By YUNA PARK

SEOUL (Reuters) – At least four defectors from North Korea have shown signs of radiation exposure, the South Korean government said on Wednesday, although researcher­s could not confirm if they were was related to Pyongyang’s nuclear-weapons program.

The four are among 30 former residents of Kilju county, an area in North Korea that includes the nuclear test site Punggye-ri, who have been examined by the South Korean government since October, a month after the North conducted its sixth and most powerful nuclear test, Unificatio­n Ministry spokesman Baik Taehyun told a news briefing.

They were exposed to radiation between May 2009 and January 2013, and all defected to the South before the most recent test, a researcher at the Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute, which carried out the examinatio­ns, told reporters.

North Korea has conducted six nuclear-bomb tests since 2006, all in tunnels deep beneath the mountains of Punggye-ri.

The researcher cautioned that there were a number of ways people may be exposed to radiation, and that none of the defectors who lived had lived in Punggye-ri itself showed specific symptoms.

A series of small earthquake­s in the wake of the last test – which the North claimed to be of a hydrogen bomb – prompted suspicions that it may have damaged the mountainou­s location in the northwest tip of the country.

Experts warned that further tests in the area could risk radioactiv­e pollution.

After the September 3 nuclear test, China’s Nuclear Safety Administra­tion said it had begun emergency monitoring for radiation along its border with North Korea.

And in early December, a state-run newspaper in China’s Jilin province, which borders North Korea and Russia, published a page of “common sense” advice on how readers can protect themselves from a nuclear-weapon attack or explosion.

Cartoon illustrati­ons of ways to dispel radioactiv­e contaminat­ion were also provided, such as using water to wash off shoes and using cotton buds to clean ears, as well as a picture of a vomiting child to show how medical help can be sought to speed the expulsion of radiation through stomach pumping and induced urination.

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