The Korea Times

N. Korea exploited S. Korean POWs ‘for decades’

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North Korea used South Korean prisoners of war and their descendant­s through several generation­s as slave labor in a vast network of coal mines, a rights group said Thursday.

Tens of thousands of South Korean prisoners of war were never returned by Pyongyang after the 1950-53 Korean War.

Instead, they were assigned to toil at coal mines in slave-like conditions, with their children and grandchild­ren inheriting the brutal fate, according to the Seoul-based Citizens’ Alliance for North Korean Human Rights (NKHR).

North Korea’s so-called “songbun” system classifies citizens according to their socio-political background, from the loyal “core” to the “neutral” and the “hostile”.”

This songbun has been passed down to their children and grandchild­ren who are bonded to labour in coal, lead, zinc, magnesite and other mines,” the report said.”

They are completely restricted from changing residence, job, or attaining higher education.”

Pyongyang invaded the South in 1950 and by the time the armistice was signed, hundreds of thousands of captured soldiers were held on both sides of the DMZ.

While the Geneva Convention requires all POWs to be repatriate­d once hostilitie­s end, Pyongyang returned only 8,343 South Koreans.

A U.N. human rights report in 2014 concluded that at least 50,000 POWs from the South remained in the North after the war, and that around 500 were still alive.

‘Bosom of republic’

Pyongyang insists it protects “genuine human rights” and dismisses accusation­s of abuses by the internatio­nal community.

It maintains that all POWs were returned according to the armistice terms, with a government official previously saying that any who remained did so out of a wish “to remain in the bosom of the republic”.

Coal was a top export item — largely to China — and foreign currency earner for Pyongyang, until its export was banned in 2017 under U.N. Security Council sanctions imposed over the North’s nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs.

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