Dissertation - Master - 9.15 - 7.55 pm
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Dissertation - Master - 9.15 - 7.55 pm
Fear and Defection: Information Dissemination and the Threat of North Korean Defectors Jordan Groh (590069) MSc Migration, Mobility and Development Submitted: 15 September 2014 This dissertation is submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of MSc in the Migration, Mobility and Development of the School of Oriental and African Studies (University of London) Declaration by candidate: “I undertake that all material presented for examination is my own work and has not been written for me, in whole or in part, by any other persons(s). I also undertake that any quotation or paraphrase from the published or unpublished work of another person has been duly acknowledged in the work which I present for examination.” Signed: Jordan Groh Date: 15 September 2014 Word Count: 9,964 1 Table of Contents: • Abstract 5 • Acknowledgements 6 • Note on Terminology 7 • Dissertation 8 1. Introduction 8 2. Methodology 10 Caveats 10 3. Historical Overview 12 o o Effects of Famine 12 o Marketization and Migration as a Response to Famine 12 o A Rising Number of Defections 13 4. Literature Review o Effects of Foreign Information in Poland 16 o Effects of Foreign Information in the Soviet Union 16 o Effects of Foreign Information in East Germany and Ukraine 17 o Effects of Foreign Information in North Korea 18 5. Measuring Foreign Media in North Korea 2 16 19 o Smuggling Operations Along the Sino-Korea Border 19 o Balloon Launches 21 o Contact with Foreign Tourists 22 o Word-of-Mouth Sources 23 o Foreign DVDs 24 o Foreign Radio 25 o Computer Usage 26 o Alternative Technologies 27 o Conflicting Evidence 27 6. The Influence of Defections on Reform o High-profile Defections 29 o Songbun: Class Stratification 30 o Provincial and City Origins 31 o Gender 34 o Occupation 34 o Education 36 o Age 36 o Review of Defection Findings 37 7. A Critique of Current Policy and Practice 39 8. Conclusion 41 o The North Korean Response to Defections 41 o Policy Recommendations 42 9. Bibliography o 3 29 Personal Correspondence, Personal Interviews, and Web Sources 43 46 Figures: Figure 1.0 14 Figure 2.0 32 Tables: Table 1.0 32 Table 2.0 33 Table 3.0 34 Table 4.0 35 Table 5.0 36 Table 6.0 37 Table 6.1 37 4 Abstract: Does access to foreign-produced information influence a North Korean citizen’s desire to defect? And, if so, are defections influencing reform in governmental policy or the creation of political dissent? Access to information may have a long history of influencing defections and influencing reform in various countries, but in the context of North Korea, it is critical to examine whether the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea’s leadership has a fear of defectors. Looking at the DPRK through the lens of a hereditary single-party regime which has systematically exploited its citizenry, migration is often a last resort for victims of persecution. Through this dissertation, I will attempt to assess the role information and foreign media plays in a North Korean citizen’s decision to defect and whether this should concern the North Korean government. As an isolated pariah state, the understanding of North Korea’s actions as a highly effective Machiavellian actor make the drafting of responsible policy more relevant. 5 Acknowledgements: This paper has been a long work in progress and my gratitude extends to many people. First, and foremost, I would like to thank my wife, Danielle, for all of her suggestions, edits, and thorough recommendations. Second, I would like to acknowledge friends and former colleagues in South Korea. Their expertise and inspiration have helped guide the paper to what it has finally become. A big thank you to Ji Hyeon, Matt, Dan, Ryan, Yerin, Hee Hwa, and Katty. Further, a thank you to every friend who looked over this paper in its final proofreading stages. Your comments truly helped shape the final draft. Finally, I would like to extend a specific thank you to the brilliant Christopher Green for his invaluable advice and expertise on the issue of North Korean defectors. My dissertation has been funded by the Rotary Foundation of Rotary International. Through its Global Grant program and the generous funding received, I have had the opportunity to focus scholarly attention to this critical issue without worry. It has been invaluable. 6 Note on terminology: For the purposes of this paper, a ‘defector’ is a North Korean migrant who has renounced the North Korean nation-state and has arrived in South Korea. North Korean migrants hiding in or migrating through China are classified as ‘refugees.’ North Korean migrants temporarily in China with plans to return to North Korea voluntarily are classified as ‘travelers.’ North Korean ‘refugees’ living in countries beside China will not be examined. 7 Fear and Defection: Information Dissemination and the Threat of North Korean Defectors by: Jordan Groh Introduction There has been a remarkable increase in the rate of North Koreans defecting from their home country and resettling in South Korea since the year 2000 (Ministry of Unification 2014). While the South Korean Ministry of Unification (MOU) records which types of North Koreans are defecting through data on provincial and city origins, gender, education, job, and age, it has been unclear whether the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea’s (DPRK) leadership is fearful of defections destabilizing the nation. I will attempt to assess the role information plays in a North Korean citizen’s decision to defect. Gauging which types of information produce the most internal change can influence a more thoughtful foreign policy. By investigating whether information influences defection, I will examine whether defections are influencing reform in governmental policy or the creation of political dissent. As an isolated pariah state, the DPRK has made a name for itself as a highly effective Machiavellian actor that prioritizes the survival of the internal elite. The issue of emigration from North Korea through defection is important because there is not a clear understanding as to whether defections are indicative of internal dissent and potential reform. Large financial resources continue to fund democracy and human rights programs in North Korea each year with limited information regarding their real effectiveness at influencing reform (State Dept. 2011). I admit to a bias of desiring significant reform in North Korea and eventual reunification with South Korea, but ineffective programs wasting limited financial resources should receive a more critical examination. After years of living in South Korea, listening to the stories of defectors, and campaigning for a stronger consciousness of North Korean human rights, I grew tired of the low quality of data prevalent throughout the media regarding North Korea. U.S. Congressman Jay Kim previously spoke of the DPRK’s former leader, Kim Jong-Il, saying, “I understand he is not a rational individual” (Lerner 2007: 833). Despite the regularity of this sentiment, responsible study of the nation, its leadership, and policies 8 reveal carefully crafted decisions produced to the most optimal effect. 9 Methodology My research is structured on three principal methods: a secondary data analysis of various types of foreign media accessed by North Koreans, primary interviews with several prominent academics and specialists in the field of North Korea, and an analysis of statistical information provided by the MOU and correlated with the most recent DPRK census. Important insights can be revealed into the strategic thinking of the DPRK leadership through these methods. To properly explore these issues, this paper will first briefly consider the historical situation affecting the North Korean economy, the collapse of its Public Distribution System (PDS), the increase in self-dependency and marketization of the country, the rise in defections from North Korea, and the return of control to the North Korean government and its battle over the role of government, the private marketplace, and state-supported socialism. Second, this paper intends to briefly examine the present literature available on the role that information dissemination has played in the historical context of reform in the formerly authoritarian countries of Poland, the Soviet Union, East Germany, Ukraine, and North Korea. Third, this paper will discuss an analysis of the ways that foreign media enters North Korea and the effectiveness of those modes of transmission. In the fourth section, I will introduce my crosssectional analysis of who defectors are by examining Songbun (송분) status, provincial and city origin, gender, occupation, education, and age data. In the fifth section, I will scrutinize the efforts of charities whose primary focus is influencing reform in North Korea through the funding of defections. Finally, I will conclude with a discussion of the North Korean government’s likely response to the issue of defection and how policymakers can effectively influence reform in North Korea. Caveats Because North Korea continues to consider national statistics a State secret, most academic research relies on qualitative and quantitative data from defector surveys in South Korea and refugee and traveler surveys in China. Despite a highly discouraging lack of rigorous academic study on the issue of the effects of foreign media consumption and information dissemination within North Korea, my research 10 principally builds upon a small handful of noteworthy publications. Additionally, a very important caveat to any academic study of this topic is the issue of correlation and causation. As very little can be definitively proven about the attitudes and opinions of the North Korean leadership, the limitations of a reliance on defector surveys and traveler surveys can create accidental biases and a statistical overrepresentation of North Koreans who have a negative sentiment large enough to defect and do not necessarily correlate to the views of the majority of the population. With these restraints in mind, I hope to show whether information is influencing defections and whether these defections are indicative of internal dissent and potential reform. 11 Historical Overview To understand the importance of defection from North Korea, it is first important to consider the historical situation affecting the nation. For the sake of brevity, and at fear of oversimplifying the issue, it is important to note the complex role of Kim Il-Sung’s Juche (주체) ideology and the ethnic nationalism affecting the two Koreas. A visiting Japanese Parliamentarian described Kim Il-Sung in diplomatic cables with caution, stressing, “it is a mistake to think of Kim Il-Sung as a communist. He may be more of a nationalist” (Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs 1975). With the DPRK having fallen behind economically from its southern counterpart in the late 1970s, the decline of Soviet aid through the late 1980s, and the collapse of the PDS for rations-par-everything in the early 1990s, disaster was long overdue by the time floods and famine struck the country in 1994 (Oberdorfer 2001). Effects of Famine With famine-conditions striking most severely in the outermost provinces, governmental relief failing to arrive, and economic recession striking at the core of the PDS, North Korean citizens ushered in a new era of self-dependency, personal entrepreneurship, and the early stages of the marketization of the country (Noland et al. 2001: 747). North Korea’s Arduous March would eventually claim between 1 and 3 million victims from a population of approximately 22 million creating lasting effects of citizens fending for themselves would remain (Noland et al. 2001: 741). Evidence now documents an overwhelming reliance on the market throughout the country, minimal reliance on the reviving PDS, and an effective privatization of industrial output, showcasing “a fraying of state control” and a “collapse of the socialist social contract” (Haggard and Noland 2011: 102; Kim 2011). Marketization and Migration as a Response to Famine The issue of marketization remains extremely pertinent with regards to the information-defection nexus as the marketplace is a primary origin of information dissemination in North Korea (Kang and Park 2011). Despite the illegality of the contents being sold, the black markets, known in North Korea as 12 Jangmadang (장마당), have flourished since the years of the Arduous March and now number approximately three hundred throughout the country (Kang and Park 2011). As Lee Soo-Jung writes, “marketization is the most important [change in North Korea] as it has become the core of life in the DPRK” (Kretchun and Kim 2012: 9). As North Korea consistently ranks amongst the bottom of the list of the most repressive freedom-of-information countries in the world according to Reporters Without Borders annual World Press Freedom Index, markets have become a critical source for information dissemination in North Korea (Reporters Sans Frontières 2014: 31). After the famine period of the Arduous March, the growth of the black market brought a wide variety of media devices now in common circulation within North Korea (Kretchun and Kim 2012: 12). Another way North Koreans attempted to mitigate the most severe elements of the famine and economic crisis was through cross-border migration to China (Schwekendiek 2010: 253). As nearly all movement within the country requires official government approval and travel permits, cross-border migration has consistently been viewed by the government of the DPRK as treasonous and betraying the goals and ideals of Juche ideology (Lankov 2013a: 34-35). During the famine years of the mid-1990s as many as 300,000 North Koreans were living in China as illegal refugees (Hawk 2003: 56). The illegality of these North Koreans’ refugee statuses comes not from any lacking of a fear of persecution under the United Nations’ 1951 Refugee Convention, but from agreements made between China and North Korea (Schwekendiek 2010: 250). Under agreements, all North Korean refugees caught in China are regarded as illegal economic migrants and undergo forceful repatriation to North Korea and denial of nonrefoulement principles (ibid). A Rising Number of Defections While the famine years did not witness waves of refugees and defections to South Korea, they remain incredibly relevant as they mark the first cracks in North Korea’s repressive system of state control. While only 641 North Koreans arrived in South Korea as defectors in the 40 years between 1953 and 1993, the year 1994 marks a turning point in the information landscape as the first evidences of North 13 Koreans not fully believing the story reported by the North Korea’s official media outlets (MOU 2011; MOU 2014). As of June 2014, a total of 26,854 North Koreans have defected to South Korea (MOU 2014). Figure 1.0 chronicles the trend in defection by year. Figure 1.0: (MOU 2014: Personal Translation, Personal Compilation). DPRK Defections to South Korea by year 3,500 3,000 2,500 2,000 1,500 1,000 500 0 Though defections have increased dramatically, they only represent a tenth of a single percentage of the 2014 census estimates of 24,851,627 citizens of the national population (CIA 2014). Regardless, cross-border migration has presented challenges to the regime by spreading news of the outside world with consequences too severe to ignore (Kang and Park 2011). The domestic situation during the years of 2005 to 2009 can be summarized as governmental initiatives aimed at cracking down on markets, illegal cross-border smuggling operations supplying the markets, and defections which had been embarrassing to the regime (Lankov 2009a: 49). The major setback for governmental initiatives at reviving the PDS came during the botched 2009 currency reform, with the failure so severe “the local authorities were explicitly ordered in May 2010 not to intervene with the daily working of markets - as long as politically dangerous items, like South Korean DVDs, were not on sale” (Lankov 2013a: 130). With the information blockade crumbling, the government of North Korea has shifted strategy and no longer attempts to propagate that 14 the nation is more economically well-off than its South Korean brethren (Kretchun and Kim 2012: 17). 15 Literature Review With the previously noted caveats in mind, access to information does have a long history of influencing change and reform in various countries. Historical comparisons of Poland, the Soviet Union, East Germany, and Ukraine are relevant due to significant political reform happening in each country during an era without widespread mobile and computer technologies.1 In these countries, foreign media played vital roles by getting information into each country and by encouraging reform movements. Effect of Foreign Information in Poland For Poland, Lech Walesa commented on the influence which radio broadcasts played by remarking, “it is difficult to imagine what would have happened if it were not for the Voice of America and other sources with the help of which the true information squeezed through, which showed a different point of view, which said that we are not alone and that something is happening in the country — because our mass media did not do that.” (BBG Watch 2013). Although the opinions of one man, albeit the trade-union activist and future President of Poland, are noteworthy, further proof within the Soviet bloc can aid an understanding of the importance of foreign broadcasting and heterodox information-sources. Effect of Foreign Information in the Soviet Union Interviews with more than 50,000 Soviet citizens while traveling abroad paint a compelling picture of the impact of foreign broadcasting in the Soviet Union. Foreign radio broadcasts, with upwards of 25% of the adult population during the period from 1978 to 1990, “helped to keep the flame of hope alive” through alternative viewpoints sharing censured news (Parta 2007: 66-67). Listenership to foreign broadcasting was so widespread that “at the height of the cold War, the USSR had constructed such an Popular mass citizens’ movements such as the Arab Spring and its reliance on social media do not appear relevant to information dissemination research into North Korea (Lever 2013; Y. Kim 2014: 2930). 1 16 extensive jamming transmitter network that it cost considerably more to jam Western broadcasts than to broadcast them (ibid: 11). Effect of Foreign Information in East Germany and Ukraine To summarize Rudiger Frank’s lessons on information dissemination and European socialism, he writes, “we will never know in advance how stable the other side really is.” (2010: 7). For East Germany, “a massive number of visits, phone calls, letters, parcels, TV and radio transmissions, transiting cars, etc. led to embarrassment and frustration which accumulated silently and in the end broke out visibly” (ibid: 14). The merit of information promoting reform in the Soviet bloc is further illustrated by a recollection of a Radio Liberty listener recounting, “I speak for a circle of Ukrainian intellectuals in Kiev, we feel that all the changes taking place in the USSR today are in great part due to Western radio broadcasting the truth... If the radio stopped broadcasting, we would feel betrayed... it would be a disaster” (Parta 2007: 68). In the historical contexts of the above-mentioned countries, access to information influenced reform and encouraged internal dialogue and debate about the future path each country would take. While it can be argued the cases of information dissemination in Poland, East Germany, and Ukraine are reflective of correlation and not causation, the depth of quantitative research in the traveler surveys of Soviet citizens strongly points toward radio broadcasting as encouraging reform. Observing the large quantity of politically moderate listeners, Parta notes “Western radio provided alternative and supplementary information without which a critical thought process might have been inconceivable. It was when the ‘moderates’ and the ‘liberals’ found common ground in the perestroika period that change became possible” (2007: 66). Foreign radio broadcasting became so influential that the Soviet Union created a system of jamming stations which “cost considerably more to jam [the] Western broadcasts than to broadcast them (2007: 11). 17 Effect of Foreign Information in North Korea Just as foreign radio broadcasting influenced heterodox thought in former Soviet bloc countries, subtle shifts in public opinion due to exposure with the outside world is well documented in North Korea. North Korean public opinion has shifted in very unexpected ways similar to American color televisions and domestic appliances swaying East Germans and Soviet citizens (Castillo 2010: vii-xvii). In the case of Im Su-Gyong, the famous South Korean student activist whose illegal trip to North Korea in 1989 gripped the nation, the effects of her trip were completely unanticipated (Lankov 2013a: 222-225). Barred from traveling by the South Korean government, her eventual trip was a major media event in North Korea (ibid). With her trip came some of the first revelations that North Korean government propaganda was not as accurate as claimed. Lankov writes, “according to the official media, South Korean workers were starving whilst their kids made a miserable living by working in sweatshops, begging, or polishing the shoes of sadistic American soldiers” (2013a: 223). Her unexpected influence would continue both as “a trendsetter in the world of North Korean fashion” and through the broadcasted interviews of her parents, who though “the family members of a political criminal,” North Koreans saw they “were allowed to stay in their home in the capital city, keep their jobs, and talk freely to journalists” (ibid: 224). 18 Measuring Foreign Media in North Korea Having established that foreign sources of information and media can play a direct role in encouraging diverse public opinion in historical situations, this research will now transition towards gauging the effects of information access and exposure to foreign media in North Korea. I have compiled a diverse body of research examining types of foreign media measurably flowing into North Korea and whether these media devices are influencing the opinions and actions of North Korean citizens and defectors. Several types of media are flowing into North Korean in measurable quantities and documented ways. In this section, I will document the effectiveness of the routes travelled and the types of media platforms used while gauging their effects at influencing opinions and reform. First, it is important to note that radios, televisions, computers, DVD players, USB memory devices, etc. have never been illegal in North Korea, though government-issued radios traditionally have their dials fixed to government stations and require soldering to remove the restrictions (Lankov 2013a: 103, 225). While devices such as computers and mobile phones are legal to own, registration of the device at local governmental offices is required (Boynton 2011). Finally, while it may be legal to own these devices, playing foreign media content on them is strictly illegal (Bruce 2012: 4). This research will focus on cross-border smuggling operations, balloon launches, foreign tourists in the DPRK, and word-of-mouth sources as it examines the routes which information takes entering North Korea. Of the types of media and information platforms entering North Korea, this research will place its emphasis on DVDs and radio broadcasts with a small section focused briefly on computers and USB memory devices.2 Smuggling Operations Along the Sino-‐Korean Border While there is a statistical black-hole with concern to accurate numbers of cross-border smuggling operations between North Korea and China, evidence points to smuggling operations as being the Though radio broadcasts can be utilized as a route for information entering the country, I will discuss its impact in the latter section on media platforms used to access information due to market-accessibility. 2 19 logistical backbone of North Korea’s recent marketization (Reporters Sans Frontières 2011: 6). Illegal provincial migration has increased in recent years due to corruption in the lower and middle echelons of poorly-paid government officials, with much of this provincial typically being seafood-based or seasonal agricultural-based foods that are cheaper in rural and coastal areas and are smuggled to other provinces (Lankov 2009b). Though the marketization of North Korea has made luxuries such as car batteries, electric shavers, and South Korean rice cookers more accessible for average citizens through cross-border smuggling with China, this research will focus its attention on cross-border smuggling entirely related to media devices (Park 2009). Smuggling takes place in many forms ranging from tunnel networks buried beneath the SinoKorean border, bribing of border guards, and attempting to sneak across the porous border (Lankov 2009b; Tiezzi 2014). Though smuggling remains a very dangerous operation, the demand for DVD players, computers, televisions, DVDs, USB devices, and other media platforms is far greater than the risk of being caught (Halvorssen and Lloyd 2014). Border guards, when not overlooking contraband due to bribery, have even been known to keep illicit entertainment devices for their own personal use (Boynton 2011). Max Fisher describes the commonplace activity that has come to dominate North Korea’s border region with China through a defector’s experiences, reporting, “police who caught him at the border would sometimes beat him or sometimes send him to jail, for sentences that might be a few days or a few months. The money was too good to stop, and other opportunities too scarce, but Seongmin worried the punishments would get much worse once he turned 17 and became a legal adult. So he started bribing border guards, first to look the other way and, later, to help him. The authorities who'd beaten him became his employees. Business boomed” (2013). Despite the volume of contraband flowing across the border, governments should be cautious of funding grants to organizations that profess an ability to get information about the outside world into 20 North Korea. Grant funding such as those through the United State’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor and its respective call for information access programs targeting North Korea are ripe for abuse (State Dept. 2014). As Chad O’Carroll, founder of the prominent ‘NK News’ website comments, “there is nothing to stop a crafty businessman taking a whole load of [USBs and DVDs] and dumping them in a river once they cross the border. In fact, that would be a more logical thing to do [with grant funding from the U.S. Government]” (2014b). Balloon Launches While grants for smuggling operations should be awarded with caution, there are far fewer hurdles to overcome than with balloon launches. As a whole, statistical data on balloon launches does not exist. Many prominent organizations, such as Park Sang-Hak’s ‘Fighters for a Free North Korea,’ rely on balloon launches and typically count evidence of effectiveness on lone defectors who have picked up information dropped by the balloons (Sulek 2014). With writing on the balloons containing highlypolitical messages such as “the regime must fall,” the balloons are typically thirty feet tall, cylindrical, and full of “DVDs, USBs, transistor radios, and tens of thousands of leaflets” (Halvorssen and Lloyd 2014). There is widespread skepticism about the effectiveness of these balloons actually getting information into North Korea. Lankov notes, “the occasional encounter with a short piece of information provided by a printed text is unlikely to seriously change the worldview of a North Korean (2013a: 227). Christine Hong argues, “these are Cold War psychological warfare strategies that today are very erroneously labeled ‘human rights’ efforts,” (Hotham 2014). One anonymous contributor for NK News described balloon launches as “a total waste of time” and simply “a publicity stunt (Anonymous 2014). While religious groups such as Seoul USA are taking advantage of patience with the winds, their profession of using GPS technology is riddled with technical holes. While I consider patience and the utilization of GPS technology as a ‘best practices’ method for balloon launches, even their public statement only notes usage of a single GPS transmitter on one solitary balloon (SeoulUSA.org 2014). As launching ten balloons costs approximately five thousand dollars, relying on speculation and gauging how angrily the North Korean 21 government responds remains a wasteful use of resources (Farivar 2014; SeoulUSA.org 2014). With “only about sixty percent” landing on target, even Park Sang-Hak admits “of those… maybe a quarter make it into anyone’s hands” (Sulek 2014). Further, attempts to send USB devices with pre-loaded content into North Korea via balloons should be approached with caution. Efforts have been made by various groups to send items such as articles about the world written on the Korean version of Wikipedia on USB devices (Williams 2014b). Others include a cross-border smuggling attempt by North Korea Intellectual Solidarity to send softwareloaded USB devices with programs such as ‘Window to the Global Village’ which appears as an empty USB device but opens automatically to the unwary user (Boynton 2011). All of these “surreptitious distribution techniques” are troubling for the risks they present to unknowing citizens (ibid). Additionally, I am skeptical of significant numbers of North Koreans actually deciding to share USB-sourced e-books with politically dangerous contents, like the United Nations’ Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in the DPRK when understood through the context of North Korean citizens’ hesitance to share even South Korean dramas via DVD, a much less politically dangerous item (Kirby 2014; Kretchun and Kim 2012: 16). Contact with Foreign Tourists Understanding source-points of entry for media devices is important, though information also enters North Korea in low-tech ways. As academic research regarding this issue is limited, this paper’s discussion of information spread by foreign tourists will remain decidedly brief. Nonetheless, the topic does warrant further research and could be easily accomplished by interviewing tourists post-trip to North Korea. O’Carroll provides further evidence that foreign tourists share both domestic and international news with their tour guides, remarking, “news broke of Gaddafi’s death and we told our guides of it” (2014b).3 As international hotels, embassies, and foreign businesses increasingly carry satellite television 3 All foreign tourists in North Korea must travel with officially sanctioned tour guides. 22 and Internet access, there is great potential for information to spread quickly from foreigners to local citizens through word-of-mouth. Sometimes it is impossible to gauge how important these small bits of information are towards fostering dissent. Defector Joo Sung-Ha comments, “while the people that tourists often meet in North Korea are elites, don’t also forget that these are the people who are leading the country” (O’Carroll 2014a). Just as contact with foreigners in the Soviet Union influenced heterodox thought, contact with foreigners and the information they share can greatly influence the minds of North Korean citizens (Lankov 2009b). Word-‐of-‐Mouth Sources Gauging the influence of foreign contact affecting alternative viewpoints in North Korea is relevant due to the overwhelming reliance by North Korean citizens on word-of-mouth sources. No single media platform in the countries rates as high as word-of-mouth as an important source of information (Kretchun and Kim 2012: 10). As news filters in, whether it features domestic or international content, North Koreans spread this information. In one survey, 69% of refugees and travelers in China identified wordof-mouth sources as an important source of information (ibid). In another survey, 81% identified word-ofmouth as their primary source of information (Haggard and Noland 2011: 32). Given the historically repressive nature of the North Korean government, ideological controls through community surveillance, and weekly self-criticism sessions, these survey responses are an indication that information is flowing and that North Koreans are now far less scared of sharing politically dangerous information than before. By comparison, the following types of media have been as identified as important sources of information: DVDs (39%), domestic television (38%), South Korean radio (21%), and foreign radio broadcasts (16%) (ibid). There is strategic value for foreign information getting in and spreading via word-of-mouth sources as 98% of survey respondents indicated “[having] received information that was not available in the domestic media in North Korea” (ibid). Regardless of how news and information arrives in North Korea, it spreads. 23 Foreign DVDs In an era of significant upheaval in North Korea, it is important to gauge various media devices effects on attitudes and opinions.4 Comparing qualitative defectors surveys from recent arrivals in South Korea during 2013 and 2014 with quantitative surveys conducted during periods as late as 2010, survey data points to further marketization, massive increases in information dissemination, and a quickly eroding information blockade by the North Korean government (Lankov 2013a). As the information cordon erodes, North Koreans have been highly desirous of watching popular South Korean television dramas and movies (Kang and Park 2011). The rationale is simple: despite having opposing governments, the dramas and movies are entertainment devices that are easy to watch due to sharing the same language (ibid). While State supported television in North Korea are produced for the promulgation of Juche ideology, South Korean dramas and movies are ultimately “commercial products” whose “financial success relies on the production of dramas that a lot of people want to see” (Lankov 2013b). How many DVDs are being sold is statistically difficult to determine as rigorous data on DVDs bought and sold in North Korea’s black markets is impossible to obtain. There does remain useful evidence buried in various survey data that can illuminate the prevalence, quantities, widespread availability, and common acceptability of DVDs in North Korea. Of first note, DVDs sell for a relatively low price of USD $0.50, equivalent to “roughly the same price as a kilo of rice in a public market,” or are more commonly rented for a lesser amount (Kretchun and Kim 2012: 13; Lee 2014). Second, falling just behind televisions (used as a stand-alone media device), DVD players are the most accessible media player with 42% of survey respondents having access (Kretchun and Kim 2012: 11). Finally, by analyzing qualitative interviews with defectors, it becomes readily apparent “that foreign DVD viewing has come to be viewed by many North Koreans as normal behavior rather than exceptional or abhorrent” (ibid: 16). While viewing has become more readily accessible, there remains a mixed fear at sharing foreign DVDs. 4 The first major change is Kim Jong-Un’s hereditary accession following his father’s death in 2011. With news of purges and executions reminiscent of purges carried out by Kim Il-Sung during the period between 1956 and 1960, the early years of Kim Jong-Un’s reign have been turbulent (Lankov 2002: 88114). The second major source of change in North Korea is the increased access of foreign sources of media and media devices. 24 Though North Koreans report readily sharing foreign DVDs with family and trusted friends, many also feel the need to destroy evidence of their illegal viewings by burning the DVDs when they are done watching (Kretchun and Kim 2013: 17; Kang and Park 2011). Defectors frequently describe initial viewings of South Korean dramas and movies with mixed sentiments. While the material luxuries of television families are deemed as implausible and not representative of average South Korean families, defectors tend to view skyscrapers and commercial districts as harder to cinematically fake and thus are more believable (Kang and Park 2011). One defector described this changing state of disbelief by saying, “as I continued to watch it a couple of more times, I could realize what I was watching should be all true. And I thought I wanted to go live in South Korea” (ibid). As evidence suggests, access to foreign sources of information, particularly foreign DVDs providing entertainment content, is influencing the decision-making process of North Koreans in their desire to defect. Commenting on the impact of foreign DVD content on his opinions and attitudes, one North Korean defector remarked, “I fled the North because I came to admire South Korea after watching its TV dramas and movies,” with another defector adding a similar sentiment, “when you know, you change” (Kang 2011). Foreign Radio While DVDs are useful tools for bringing in outside information, they are not particularly useful for timely news distribution. To overcome the limitation on current and accurate news, North Koreans turn to foreign radio broadcasts and listenership is regularly around a quarter of the population (Kretchun and Kim 2012: 20). Though North Korean authorities occasionally jam signals, listeners find ways of listening to broadcasts through several ways. First, due to the jamming of signals, many foreign broadcasters routinely change radio frequencies and listeners have become adept at searching for content. By utilizing the “‘twilight immunity’ effect” during hours when “jamming [is] considerably less effective than at other times,” listeners further avoid jamming practices. (Parta 2007: 97; Kretchun and Kim 2012: 20). Finally, while jamming does occur, its effects appear limited and listeners report typically having 25 multiple options of broadcast content (Kretchun and Kim 2012: 40). With organizations such as Voice of America, Radio Free Asia, North Korea Reform Radio, Radio Free Chosun, and others receiving funding grants and broadcasting into the country, it is necessary to consider the opinions and attitudes of listeners (Williams 2014a). Numerous defectors point to foreign radio as a major influence when deciding to defect. For those who cannot afford to buy foreign built radios, North Korean markets sell crude homemade radios (Ahn 2014). One defector cited his contraband homemade “radio [as playing a] strong role in motivating [him] to escape North Korea” (ibid). From evidence available in defector, refugee, and traveler surveys, foreign radio does appear to have a high correlation with changing attitudes and opinions and decisions to defect. Survey respondents have further indicated a tendency to share information heard on foreign radio with friends and neighbors and also with immediate family members, with sharing rates at 44% and 28% respectively (Kretchun and Kim 2012: 41). Computer Usage Though data remains limited about market penetration rates for computer accessibility, survey responses reflect 16% of refugees and travelers from North Korea having had access to computers (Kretchun and Kim 2012: 57). Reports suggest upwards of one hundred thousand privately-owned and two million government-owned computers are likely to exist in the DPRK. (Lankov 2013a: 103; Reporters Sans Frontières 2011:7). While data does remain limited, available reports do suggest that computers are becoming status symbols, especially for the children of Pyongyang’s elites (Lankov: 2013a: 103). Despite the lack of Internet access throughout the country, computers are valuable information dissemination tools because of the USB and DVD access available. Given the dangers of information dissemination through computer access, North Korea has even banned WiFi from embassies, hotels, and foreign offices in order to curb citizens’ access to an open and uncensored Internet, cited through evidence of a surge in housing prices near these establishments (Byrne 2014). As the North Korean 26 government has perceived the danger which information dissemination can pose to the country, it has specifically set up the ‘109 Groups’ and the ‘927 Groups’ as task forces geared specifically to counter the inflow of information into the country (Daily NK 2014; Gause 2012: 49). While the risk of raids by these security agencies is worrisome for those using DVD players and radio devices, USB devices are quickly concealable and showcase great opportunities for distribution information contents of the outside world through e-books, music, and movie files (Daily NK 2014). Alternative Technologies While news organizations and activist-related charities have a tendency to present all possible information dissemination devices with unrealistic usage expectations, the previously mentioned types of media have been quantifiably documented. The following types of information dissemination methods appear highly valuable in their potential but have impacted the DPRK in very different ways. Though mobile phone usage in North Korea continues to rapidly expand, its information dissemination potential appears presently diminished by widespread governmental eavesdropping (Y. Kim 2014: 31). To aid mobile communications, Commotion’s mesh-networking algorithm could facilitate information dissemination as it bypasses traditional mobile phone towers and relay stations and jumps from one mobile phone to another (Achin 2014.). Another exciting technology with information dissemination potential in North Korea is software-defined radio, which uses computer components to receive and broadcast signals (Skatun 2014). Though mesh-networking and software-defined radio each have significant hurdles to overcome and have likely never entered North Korea, the potential modern equivalents of the Soviet Samizdat is worthy of further research. Conflicting Evidence As this review of available literature has shown, the prospects for information dissemination in North Korea are many and they are rapidly growing. Whether through DVDs, radio, computers, USBs, or other media devices, defectors are making use of foreign media and it is influencing their decisions to defect to South Korea in greater numbers. The implications of these defections are not straightforward 27 and evidence is conflicting. Writing favorably towards foreign media consumption, Haggard and Noland note, “not only is foreign media becoming more widely available but also inhibitions on its consumption are disappearing” (2011: 112). They find evidence of a clear correlation between “consumption of foreign media” and “more negative assessments of the regime and its intentions” (ibid). This is problematic as Kretchun and Kim find evidence of the exact opposite. They document that while access to foreign media statistically impacts favorable beliefs and attitudes about the outside world, they report on the lack of a “measurable direct relationship between exposure to outside media and North Koreans’ beliefs and attitudes about their own regime” (2012: 33-34). They find North Koreans are being convinced of a better life available outside of North Korea, though this is not inspiring political dissent. On the differences between the two studies, Stephen Haggard comments, “[they] are not uncommon; they depend on the samples and the precise questions asked” (Haggard 2014). Nat Kretchun adds a similar sentiment in his comment, “the results aren’t conflicting as much as they are measuring somewhat different things based on the way data was collected and analyzed” (Kretchun 2014). With this in mind, I remain hesitant about supplying firm answers on either side, as further research is necessary. 28 The Influence of Defections on Reform Though research has been conducted into the effects of outside information and the decision to defect, there is a surprising absence of academic literature on the effects of defection with regard to the internal thinking and decision making of the North Korean leadership. If information is motivating defections, are defections influencing reform in governmental policy or the creation of political dissent? Prior research has failed to look into whether defections influence governmental reform. With millions of dollars in funding, organizations such as Liberty in North Korea (LiNK), Citizens’ Alliance for North Korean Human Rights, and People for Successful Corean Reunification (PSCORE) are actively working to end the humanitarian crisis in North Korea and hope to achieve the goal of Korean reunification through the funding of defections (LiNK 2014; Citizens’ Alliance 2013; PSCORE 2013). As the stated goal of these organizations is reform in North Korea, it is important to ask whether their primary method of influencing reform in North Korea is effective in any measurable way. Understanding who defectors are has important implications for determining whether they are influential or not to the DPRK leadership. High-profile North Koreans have left North Korea, but an analysis of which defectors are influential is necessary before an assessment can be made of the North Korean government’s likely response. In this section of the report, I will focus my analysis on a quantitative examination of the 26,854 North Korean defectors living in South Korea. Utilizing data provided by the MOU and cross-correlating it with data from the most recent 2008 North Korean census, I believe important insights can instruct the information-defection nexus. Principally, I will examine class, provincial and city origin, gender, occupation, education, and age data. High-‐profile Defections Before examining how statistics classify North Korean defectors, it is useful to first examine governmental response toward both high and low-profile defectors. When examining high-profile defectors, discussion must first start with the 1997 defection of Hwang Jang-Yop, the driving force behind the formulation of North Korea’s Juche philosophy (Boynton 2011). Though Kim Jong-Il expressed the 29 sentiment, “cowards, leave if you want to. We will defend the red flag of revolution to the end,” it is widely believed that the assassination of defector Lee Han-Young, Kim Jong-Il’s nephew was committed by North Korean agents in retribution for Hwang’s defection (Pollack 1997; Choe 2010b). In 2010, a twoman team posing as North Korean defectors unsuccessfully attempted to assassinate Hwang (Choe 2010b). Another high-profile defector is Park Sang-Hak, known for his balloon-launch activity and the 2011 assassination attempt to kill him with a poison-tipped needle (Choe 2011b). Additionally, Hwang HyeRang, Kang Chol-Hwan, Lee Soon-Ok, Jang Jin-Sung, and Shin Dong-Hyuk are all vocal critics of the North Korean government, but their defections have not publicly been known to have assassination attempts placed on their lives. While high-profile defections generate significant quantities of media attention, the sporadic and limited nature of these high-profile defectors has not caused any significant change in governmental policy (M. Kim 2014).5 And while many of the limited numbers of defections between 1953 and 1993 were high profile, defections since this period have categorically not been high profile (Lankov 2006: 108). Lowprofile defectors such as Kang Chol-Hwan and Shin Dong-Hyuk have gained prominence for their vocal criticism of the government despite not having been politically important prior to their defections. Additionally, with substantial usage of defector testimonies, efforts by the United Nations’ Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in the DPRK have generated widespread international criticism against the North Korean government (UN COI 2014). Nonetheless, despite intense international pressure, no significant reforms have been made in light of these critical findings. Songbun: Class Stratification Understanding the impact of defections can most easily be determined through an analysis of each defector’s Songbun classification. As a system of class stratification, Songbun categorizes each citizen first into three main categories of political loyalty: core (핵심 계층) wavering (동요 계층), and hostile I define a high-profile defector as a North Korean citizen with influence either in government or the military. Further, defectors with advanced knowledge of the inner-workings of governmental programs or personalities of the elite are considered high profile. 5 30 (적대 계층) (Collins 2012: 1). Structured as a way to classify loyalty, class status is marked at birth, followed throughout each citizen’s life, and instructs all educational opportunities, vocational assignments, and housing placements (ibid: 18-19). One significant caveat exists in my quantitative study of defectors. Songbun data is not published by the North Korean government (Demick 2010: 28; Hunter 1999: 3, 6). Though exact statistics of percentile groups comprising each of the three groups is not available, the sizes of the classes in the national population have been quantified and estimated as follows: core (30%), wavering (40%), and hostile (30%) (Hunter 1999: 4-5). Running contrary to numerous international declarations, most notably the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Songbun influences all life prospects through a system of “heredity-based class and socio-political rank” (Collins 2012: 1-2). Though Songbun data would greatly simplify an understanding of the importance of the 26,854 defectors now living in South Korea, important connections can be inferred upon without Songbun data. Provincial and city origin, gender, occupation, education, and age data can all instruct an educated assessment of the impact these defections are causing. Provincial and City Origins First, as the North Korean government uses housing assignments as a way to reward the most politically loyal citizens, understanding where defectors lived in North Korea is a useful starting point (Collins 2012: 75-77). Further, only the most politically loyal are officially allowed to live in Pyongyang, with members of the hostile class generally marked for a life in rural farming collectives or factory work (ibid: 53, 76). Table 1.0 models this trend and showcases where defectors originated in North Korea. Figure 2.0 further visualizes these numbers. Compiling data provided by the MOU, figure 2.0 and tables 1.0 through 6.1 all utilize defector data updated to February 2014 of 26,368 defectors living in South Korea. For table 1.0, highly striking are the numbers of defections taking place from three provinces. North Hamgyeong Province alone, along the Sino-Korean border, has been responsible for 64.31% of all defections. Also along the Sino-Korean border, Ryanggang Province has seen 11.61% of all defections. Finally, South Hamgyeong Province, the only province not along the Sino-Korean border to break above 31 a miniscule four percentage points, has seen 9.05% of defections. Though it is readily acknowledged that provincial and city data cannot instruct perfectly upon how the government of North Korea is reacting to defectors, it is apparent that for 84.97% of defectors to originate from border provinces with limited influence in the government, the likely North Korean governmental reaction is not to fear (Nelan and FlorCruzl 1997). As an inverse to these numbers, only 1.96% of defectors have originated from Pyongyang. Table 1.0: (MOU 2014: Personal Translation, Personal Compilation). Origins Kangwon,Province Nampo,Special,City Ryanggang,Province Jagang,Province South,Pyeongan,Province North,Pyeongan,Province Pyongyang,Directly,Governed,City South,Hamgyeong,Province North,Hamgyeong,Province South,Hwanghae,Province North,Hwanghae,Province Kaeseong,Special,City Other Total Total,Defectors,from, Province,or,Special,City 512 124 3,061 173 922 708 517 2,385 16,958 407 369 69 163 26,368 Percent 1.94% 0.47% 11.61% 0.66% 3.50% 2.69% 1.96% 9.05% 64.31% 1.54% 1.40% 0.26% 0.62% 100.00% Figure 2.0: Heat map visualization of North Korean defections by province or special city (MOU 2014: Personal Translation, Personal Compilation, Personal Illustration). 32 Correlating these numbers with the 2008 North Korean census can show where defections are occurring relative to the size of the provincial or city population.6 To quantity this using Table 2.0, a simple ratio measures that while 9.97% of the North Korean population lives in North Hamgyeong, it’s 64.71% of defectors provide it with a ratio of 6.49.7 8 Ryangang Province has a high ratio of 3.79. Pyongang, by comparison has even fewer defectors than its already low number of 1.97% first suggested. Despite having 13.94% of the nation’s population, Pyongyang’s ratio is only 0.14. This number suggests that the core class of North Koreans living in Pyongyang are not defecting in great enough quantities for the North Korean government to worry about. Pyongyang’s ratio of 0.14 comes only second lowest in the country after Jagang Province’s 0.12 ratio. Table 2.0: (MOU 2014: Personal Translation, Personal Compilation; Central Bureau of Statistics, DPRK 2009).9 Ratio+of+ Percent+of+ Percentage+of+ General+ Proportion+ Defectors+ Defectors+from+ Total+Defectors+ Origins Population+ of+National+ Total+from+ this+province+/+ to+Percentage+of+ (2008) Population Province city National+ Population Kangwon+Province 1,477,582 6.33% 512 1.95% 0.31 Nampo+Special+City 366,815 1.57% 124 0.47% 0.30 Ryanggang+Province 719,269 3.08% 3,061 11.68% 3.79 Jagang+Province 1,299,830 5.57% 173 0.66% 0.12 South+Pyeongan+Province*+excluding+Nampo+ 3,684,881 15.78% 922 3.52% 0.22 North+Pyeongan+Province 2,728,662 11.69% 708 2.70% 0.23 Pyongyang+Directly+Governed+City 3,255,288 13.94% 517 1.97% 0.14 South+Hamgyeong+Province 3,066,013 13.13% 2,385 9.10% 0.69 North+Hamgyeong+Province 2,327,362 9.97% 16,958 64.71% 6.49 South+Hwanghae+Province 2,310,485 9.90% 407 1.55% 0.16 North+Hwanghae+Province*+excluding+ 1,805,232 7.73% 369 1.41% 0.18 Kaeseong+Special+City Kaeseong+Special+City 308,440 1.32% 69 0.26% 0.20 Total 23,349,859 100.00% 26,205 100.00% n/a I have removed the MOU’s “other” category for provincial origin from these statistics. As such, the following percentages and ratios reflect this updated number. 6 7 The ratio is as follows: (!"#$% !"#"$%&'() !"#$ !"#$%&'( !" !"#$ ÷ !"#$% !"#$%&"' !"#"$%&'()) (!"#$%&'%() !" !"#$ !"#$%&'(") ÷!"#$%&"' !"#$%&'(")) . 8 For a perfect ratio of 1.00, a hypothetical province with 10% of the national population would have 10% of total defections. 9 As MOU statistics provide for defectors originating specifically from Nampo Special City and Kaeseong Special City, I have examined North Korean census data for each city and respectively subtracted its population from South Pyeongan Province and North Hwanghae Province statistics. 33 Gender Moving past origins data, the gender of the 26,368 defectors can further instruct an understanding of what the North Korean government’s likely reactions will be. In patriarchal Confucian North Korean society, women are expected to work in official government jobs only until they marry and thereafter expected to work as stay-at-home housewives (Kim 2013). With this in mind, women do not traditionally occupy positions of power within the governmental administrations and decision-making bodies of North Korea’s power structure. As such, table 3.0 shows that 69.68% of all defectors of women. Table 3.0: (MOU 2014: Personal Translation, Personal Compilation). Gender Defectors, Male,from, Province Defectors, Female, from, Province Kangwon,Province Nampo,Special,City Ryanggang,Province Jagang,Province South,Pyeongan,Province North,Pyeongan,Province Pyongyang,Directly,Governed,City South,Hamgyeong,Province North,Hamgyeong,Province South,Hwanghae,Province North,Hwanghae,Province Kaeseong,Special,City Other Total 206 59 917 61 399 334 309 719 4,465 249 154 44 78 7,994 306 65 2,144 112 523 374 208 1,666 12,493 158 215 25 85 18,374 Percent,of, Percent,of, defectors, defectors, from,this, from,this, province, province, alone,who, alone,who, are,male are,female 40.23% 47.58% 29.96% 35.26% 43.28% 47.18% 59.77% 30.15% 26.33% 61.18% 41.73% 63.77% 47.85% 30.32% 59.77% 52.42% 70.04% 64.74% 56.72% 52.82% 40.23% 69.85% 73.67% 38.82% 58.27% 36.23% 52.15% 69.68% Occupation Knowing that most defectors have thus far been described principally as rural women, examining their occupations in North Korea can further instruct upon their likely importance to the DPRK leadership. Through an examination of table 4.0, it is evident that 79.77% of male defectors are laborers 34 or unemployed dependents. For male defectors, only three categories are particularly important to this study of potentially important defectors. With 4.00% of male defectors having been in “administrative” jobs, 7.57% in military positions, and 2.34% in “professional” jobs, this relatively low number is difficult to objectively determine their importance to the regime. MOU statistics are complicated, for while some categories are straightforward, other categories such as “administrative” are not descriptive in terms of whom these defectors are. For example, a minimally important secretary could theoretically be classified in the same way as members of the top leadership. Nonetheless, while it can be said that these low numbers, comprising all male administrative, military, and professional jobs make up a miniscule 4.21% of total defectors regardless of gender, the likely importance to the regime is quite possibly much lower given the nature of military conscription in North Korea (Lankov 2013a: 206). What jobs actually make up the “administrative,” “soldier” and “professional” positions may be documented in further detail by MOU, though it remains unpublished and inaccessible. Despite these questions, it can be summarized with two statistics. First, the total number of defectors classified as either “laborer” or “unemployed dependents” is 86.09%. Second, in the unlikely assumption that every male and female defector in the “administrative,” “soldier,” and “professional” categories are deemed influential to the North Korean leadership, this still only represents 6.25% of all defections. Table 4.0: (MOU 2014: Personal Translation, Personal Compilation). Employment Male Female Total Administrative Soldier Laborer Unemployed1 dependents Service1Sector Arts,1Sports Professional NonKtarget1 (children,1etc.) Other Total 320 605 3421 100 92 6,530 420 697 9,951 Percent1of1 Male1 defectors 4.00% 7.57% 42.79% 2956 9,793 12,749 36.98% 53.30% 48.35% 69 66 187 970 151 345 1,039 217 532 0.86% 0.83% 2.34% 5.28% 0.82% 1.88% 3.94% 0.82% 2.02% 289 254 543 3.62% 1.38% 2.06% 81 7994 139 18,374 220 26,368 1.01% 100.00% 0.76% 100.00% 0.83% 100.00% 35 Percent1of1 Female1 defectors 0.54% 0.50% 35.54% Percent1of1 Total1 Defectors 1.59% 2.64% 37.74% Education Adding to this research’s broad understanding of who is influential to the North Korean government, an analysis of MOU data examining education data through table 5.0 will further provide clarity.10 From these totals, it can be shown that 83.30% of all defectors arrived in South Korea with a middle school education level or less.11 12 As the top universities are reserved for students with a ‘core’ classification, the 6.98% of defectors who attended university show that very few defectors were important enough to the North Korean government to be sent to university (Collins 2012: 71-76). Those attending technical colleges or trade schools may have been deemed important enough to teach a skill or craft, but those attending this type of school are unlikely to have been influential within government (ibid). Table 5.0: (MOU 2014: Personal Translation, Personal Compilation). Education Preschool Kindergarten People's2 School Middle2 School Technical2 College University Uneducated Other Total Male 382 116 Female 360 116 Total 742 269 Percent2of2Total 2.81% 1.02% 705 1,065 1,770 6.71% 4,861 13,535 18,396 69.77% 677 1,762 2,439 9.25% 885 343 25 7,994 955 445 99 18,374 1,840 788 124 26,368 6.98% 2.99% 0.47% 100.00% Age Finally, age statistics in table 6.0 document whom the North Korean government would likely I have found a discrepancy error in Table 5.0 between the total number of male, female, and total defectors. The error appears to be in the Female Kindergarten tally and can be corroborated by a summation of ‘total male’, a summation of ‘total total’, and a summation of ‘total kindergarten.’ Despite determining the nature of this discrepancy, I have chosen to utilize only the combined male and female totals. 11 North Korea’s school system is modeled differently than most Western schools. Students’ primary education is limited to four years. Middle school lasts for just six years. From this age, students are conscripted into the military or enter a university or technical college. 12 I have ignored adding the 0.47% “other” figure. 10 36 determine as the most instrumental agents of reform. As the most influential members of North Korean society, government, and military are likely older men, I am intentionally separating the entirety of MOU’s age statistics into two categories: first, males between the ages of thirty and older and second, females of all ages plus males of the age between zero and twenty-nine. Through this, it can be shown in table 6.1 that 14.28% of all defectors arriving in South Korea have been males and aged thirty or above. 85.72% of defectors have been males under the age of thirty or females of any age. While this representation is by no means perfect, it is a useful step for gauging the importance of defectors in a field with very little statistical data available. I split males at the age of thirty as I find it unlikely for youth and children to represent a significant threat to the North Korean leadership in terms of revolutionary capabilities. Further, males aged twenty to twenty-nine are likely either to still be in military conscription with little power or working in entry-level career positions (Choe 2011a; Collins 2012: 53-59). Table 6.0: (MOU 2014: Personal Translation, Personal Compilation).13 Age Male Female Total 0-9 10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60+ total 577 1,483 2,169 1,905 1,135 418 307 7,994 575 1,746 5,170 5,985 3,114 935 849 18,374 1,152 3,229 7,339 7,890 4,249 1,353 1,156 26,368 Percent of males Percent of females Percent total who are this age who are this age who are this age 7.22% 3.13% 4.37% 18.55% 9.50% 12.25% 27.13% 28.14% 27.83% 23.83% 32.57% 29.92% 14.20% 16.95% 16.11% 5.23% 5.09% 5.13% 3.84% 4.62% 4.38% 100.00% 100.00% 100.00% Table 6.1: (MOU 2014: Personal Translation, Personal Compilation). Males&30+ 3,765 Males&0*29& Males&30+&as& &&females percent&of&total 22,603 14.28% Males&0*29&&&females& as&percent&of&total 85.72% Review of Defection Findings As this research has shown, it is categorically unlikely that defections from North Korea are taking place by influential governmental officials. As most of these defectors are young women from rural As South Korean society and MOU data perceives a child age one as a child having just been born, all MOU age statistics should subtract one year to be correlated with Western ages. 13 37 provinces with minimal education and are either officially unemployed or work as simple laborers, defections are unlikely to create a groundswell of sudden change in North Korea. While the execution of Jang Song-Thaek, the second-highest official in the country and uncle to Kim Jong-Un, could have hypothetically provoked another military general to commit a coup d’état rather than face arrest and execution, defections from North Korea do not hold this same level of influence (Choe 2010a). Highprofile defectors are rare and have been largely minimized through government decisions to have officials travel in pairs accountable to another (Schwekendiek 2010: 251). 38 Critique on Current Policy and Practice As mentioned previously, organizations such as LiNK, Citizens’ Alliance, and PSCORE are actively seeking reform in North Korea through defections. As millions of dollars in grant funding are available internationally for democracy and human rights programs targeting North Korea, effective policy must realize the lack of impact which defectors are having in North Korea (State Dept. 2011).14 For LiNK, their primary and stated goal is “ending the crisis” in North Korea (LiNK 2012: 4). With an operating budget of nearly 1.5 million dollars, LiNK believes it can influence reform in North Korea by operating in two ways. First, they attempt to do this through “awareness” by visiting American universities, high schools, and churches. Second, they attempt to do this through “refugee rescues” (LiNK 2014). Though my research has instructed toward the negligible likelihood that North Korean defectors are high-profile government officials, LiNK attempts to reconcile this through a media campaign focused on utilizing language about “bottom-up changes” being influenced by North Korean defectors (LiNK 2014). Sokeel Park, LiNK’s Director of Research and Strategy, finds merit in examining the role of remittances toward the marketization of North. Speaking in an interview on the approximately 10-15 million dollars being remitted every year by North Korean defectors, Park comments, “certain factors… multiply the effect of that money which is going in… This $15 million going into the grassroots economy is nothing in terms of international finance, but in terms of the grassroots marketization and speeding up the private business activities, it is more significant than we might think. Because this money is going back into certain locations, that is actually better than it just being spread randomly across the country. $15 million across the whole country wouldn’t be that significant, but it’s going into… border towns in the northeast and bigger cities where the changes are already happening the fastest” (Park 2014). Though LiNK’s media campaign is designed well, the remittances argument is unconvincing as $9.5 million was distributed during fiscal years 2008-2011 (State Dept. 2011). Program grants up to $350,000 per organization were available during fiscal year 2014 (State Dept. 2014). 14 39 remittances are not a new phenomenon and have been taking place in large quantities since at least the 1960s from the ethnically Korean Chosen Soren community in Japan (Kang and Rigoulot 2005). While some sources estimate Chosen Soren funds to North Korea may have once been as high as 850 million dollars annually, by the 1990s, these funds were still as high as near 100 million dollars (Eberstadt 1996: 523-524). While Park anecdotally argues that remittances fund the marketization of the country, there is little statistical evidence of what defector remittances are being used for (Park 2014). Though the marketization of North Korea is quickly changing daily life in North Korea, I remain unconvinced that defector remittances are playing an influential role. An additional challenge for organizations seeking to promote “refugee rescues” is both financial and ethical (LiNK 2014; Citizens’ Alliance 2013; PSCORE 2013). Prior to the hereditary accession of Kim Jong-Un, funding a North Korea’s defection cost approximately 2,000 - 2,500 dollars to bribe border guards and insure safe transit through China before arriving in South Korea (Lankov 2013a: 93). With the recent security situation along the Sino-Korean border, funding defections has spiked upwards toward 9,000 dollars (Lankov 2014). Further, there are conflicting moral considerations to examine when falling behind the convenient logic of ‘North Korea is bad. A life in South Korea must be a more desirable alternative.’ Unfortunately, many of these defectors go on to live marginally better lives in South Korea as they become ostracized for their cultural and linguistic differences (Lankov 2006). Defectors frequently risk their lives attempting to escape North Korea and through China only to find themselves in relative poverty with difficulty keeping pace with their hyper-competitive South Korean peers (ibid). While their human security may be higher in South Korea, the high price of funding defections warrants examining whether the funds should be used for alternative programs aimed at influencing change in North Korea. 40 Conclusion The North Korean Response to Defections When examining whether the DPRK leadership should fear defectors, it is useful to first examine its current response. In the era of the Kim Jong-Un administration, the North Korean government has placed its priorities on three issues. Varying in importance at different times, the government has placed priorities toward improving economic performance, clamping down on cross-border movement, and controlling the spread of foreign media (Buckley and Park 2012; Kang 2014). However, I argue that while clamping down on cross-border movement is restricting the flow of defections, these security actions have more to do with the marketization of the country. Another recent phenomenon relates to a small number of re-defections and subsequent press conferences the government of North Korea has held (O’Carroll 2013). Stressing the dangers of life in South Korea, these press conferences are useful for the North Korean government to minimize defections, though I do not believe these press conferences confirm that the North Korean government should fear defectors. Though publications such as the United Nations’ Commission of Inquiry have generated significant foreign condemnation regarding human rights and the treatment of prisoners in labor camps and concentration-style camps, I am highly skeptical the report has spread within the country (Kirby 2014). Defectors are an annoyance to the government of North Korea rather than an outright threat. Despite the large number of defections, they remain a miniscule fraction of the national population. While security clampdowns along the Sino-Korean border and efforts to control the spread of foreign media have become common during the reign of Kim Jong-Un, they are indicative of a threat larger than the defection issue. The biggest challenge facing the DPRK leadership is the inflow of information and the erosion of North Korea’s information barricade. As Lankov frequently stresses, as North Koreans increasingly hear about the economic prosperity of South Korea, who they are ethnically related to, they will increasingly grow tired of state-supported socialism and will eventually seek complete reunification on the Korean peninsula (2013a). 41 Foreign information inspiring negative opinions of the North Korean government is an area that deserves further research and attention, despite conflicting evidence. The collapse of the Soviet Union and the rise of the Arab Spring give cause to remember the speed at which governments collapse. Haggard and Noland conclude their study noting “loyalty to the regime may be in shorter supply than is thought” (2011: 117). The information cordon in North Korea is unraveling and only time will tell how citizens react to news of the outside world. Policy Recommendations As my admitted bias is for the eventual reunification of the Korean peninsula, the results of my findings offer the following advice: First, I advise that policymakers and donors immediately distribute funding away from programs pursuing the defections of low-profile North Koreans. Once defectors arrive in South Korea, I do recommend a continuation of social-welfare assistance from the MOU. Second, as the continued marketization of North Korea and the lessening of social reliance on the PDS should become a top priority, policymakers seeking reform in North Korea should actively fund programs that encourage information dissemination in North Korea. This will be especially useful for market-based information aiding North Korean entrepreneurs to make timely decisions regarding the pricing of commonly sold goods and products. Third, increased funding towards relatively inexpensive shortwave radio broadcasts should take prevalence. 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