Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Seafood sold in U.S. stores props up North Korea

Workers’ pay goes to government

- By Tim Sullivan, Hyung-Jin Kim and Martha Mendoza Associated Press

HUNCHUN, China — Americans buying seafood for dinner may inadverten­tly have subsidized the North Korean government as it builds its nuclear weapons program, an Associated Press investigat­ion has found. Their purchases may also have supported forced labor.

At a time when North Korea is banned from selling almost anything, the country is sending tens of thousands of workers worldwide to bring in an estimated $200 million to $500 million a year. That could account for a sizable portion of North Korea’s nuclear weapons and missile programs, which South Korea says have cost more than $1 billion.

While North Korean workers have been documented overseas, the AP investigat­ion reveals that some products they make go to the U.S. AP also tracked products made by North Korean workers to Canada, Germany and elsewhere in theEuropea­n Union.

At Chinese factories, North Korean workers aren’t allowed to leave their compounds without permission, and must step from housing to factories in pairs or groups, with North Korean minders. They receive a fraction of their salaries, while the rest — as much as 70 percent — is taken by the North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s government.

John Connelly, president of the National Fisheries Institute, urged its 300 members, including the largest seafood importers in the U.S., to “ensure that wages go to the workers, and are not siphoned off to support a dangerous dictator.”

Besides seafood, AP found North Korean laborers making wood flooring and sewing garments in Chinese factories. Those industries also export to the U.S., but AP did not track specific shipments except for seafood.

American companies aren’t allowed to import products made by North Korean workers anywhere in the world, and companies doing business with them could face criminal charges for using North Korean workers or materially benefiting from their work. (The AP employs a small number of support staff in its Pyongyang bureau under a waiver granted by the U.S. government to allow the flow of news and informatio­n.)

U.S. Customs and Border Protection, responsibl­e for enforcing the law, did not respond to requests for comment.

Western companies involved that responded to AP said forced labor and potential support for North Korea was unacceptab­le in their supply chains. They said they’d investigat­e, and some said they’d already cut off ties with suppliers.

Meanwhile, as many as 100,000 North Koreans continue to work in constructi­on in the Gulf states, shipbuildi­ng in Poland, logging in Russia and on fishing boats in Uruguay. New U.N. sanctions bar countries from expanding their North Korean workforce. Despite the pay and restrictio­ns, the jobs abroad are highly coveted among North Koreans.

Roughly 3,000 North Koreans are believed to work in Hunchun, a Chinese industrial hub near the North Korean and Russian borders.

At some factories, laborers work hunched over tables as North Korean political slogans blasted from loudspeake­rs. When a reporter approached a group of North Koreans — women in tight, bright polyester clothes preparing a meal at a garment factory — one confirmed that she and some others were from Pyongyang, the North Korean capital. Then a minder arrived, ordering: “Don’t talk to him!”

AP reporters saw North Korean laborers living and working in several facilities, including joint venture Hunchun Dongyang Seafood Industry & Trade Co. Ltd. & Hunchun Pagoda Industry Co. Ltd., distribute­d globally by Ocean One Enterprise; Yantai Dachen Hunchun Seafood Products, and Yanbian Shenghai Industry & Trade Co. Ltd.

 ?? Ng Han Guan/Associated Press ?? North Korean workers wash up at a seafood processing plant in Hunchun, in northeaste­rn China. The workers are distinguis­hed from their Chinese counterpar­ts by having to wear blue overalls.
Ng Han Guan/Associated Press North Korean workers wash up at a seafood processing plant in Hunchun, in northeaste­rn China. The workers are distinguis­hed from their Chinese counterpar­ts by having to wear blue overalls.

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