Special
 
    
  
+Login    +Register    +Find Id / Pw Home  l  Archives  l  Learning Times  |  Sitemap  |  Subscription  l  Media Kit  l  PDF
    Home > Newszone > Special > Foreign Community >
  National
  Biz/Finance
  BusinessFocus
  Technology
  Arts & Living
  Sports
  Opinion
  Community
  Special
    Photo News  
    Management  
    Embassy Row  
    Foreign Community  
      Blog  
      Links for Expats  
    People  
    Branding Korea  
    Korea Development Model Conference  
    Issue Today  
    Education  
    KoreaToday  
    Country Report  
    Ramsar Changwon 2008  
    Global Korea  
    Korea IR  
    North Korea Today  
    China Today  
    World News  
    Hi Seoul  
    Trend 2008  
    ASEAN+Korea Summit  
    Konglish  
    Focus FTA  
    Presidential Inauguration  
  Science
  The Learning Times
     About English News
     iBT TOEFL
     Essay
     
   04-27-2010 18:20 여성 음성 남성 음성
Activists Come Together in Seoul


Justice for North Korea staged their 100th demonstration against the ill-treatment of North Korean defectors and human rights abuses in the North, in Insa-dong earlier this month. Pictured is American Lauren Walker, hooded with a rope around her neck, as well as Tae-sung, a South Korean man dressed as a North Korean soldier, who preferred to be identified by only his first name. The organization’s demonstrations, which began three years ago, are held every Saturday.
/ Korea Times Photo
by J.R. Breen
By J.R. Breen
Contributing Writer

Protests, seminars, rallies and prayer vigils will be held throughout this week to promote human rights and freedom for the North Korean population.

From last Sunday, North Korean defectors and activists have been meeting for North Korea Freedom Week 2010 in Seoul, which continues until May 1.

"Our hope is that North Korea Freedom Week will empower the 17,000-strong North Korean defectors in South Korea," said Suzanne Scholte, head of North Korea Freedom Coalition (NKFC), in a press release. "And inform all who are suffering north of the DMZ that we will work together until the day their freedom, human rights and dignity are realized."

North Korea Freedom Week was first established by the NKFC in 2004 as a single day to bring together public support in the United States for the North Korea Human Rights Act of 2004. This is the first year it has been held outside of America.

"Many of the North Korean defectors we hosted for North Korea Freedom Week in Washington, D.C., these past six years will now be taking the lead and working with South Korean leaders and organizations to organize these events," Scholte said.

This year, the event is being co-chaired by Scholte and high profile North Korean defector Hwang Jang-yop, a former secretary of the North Korean Workers' Party Central Committee. Two North Korean agents posing as defectors were arrested in the South last week, apparently with orders to kill Hwang.

The week began on Sunday with a prayer vigil by North Korean defector churches and the opening of a photo exhibition at the Seoul Press Center -- "Ah, the warm country in the South!" --by Moon Gook-han about "genocide" in the North.

Other events set to take place over the course of the week include a debate on human rights and freedom in North Korea held at Community Chest Korea, Jung-gu, which will include defector and author of the well-known prison camp expose "The Aquariums of Pyongyang," Kang Chol-hwan. As well as a protest outside the Chinese Embassy in Jongno-gu, Seoul, this Friday at 10 a.m.

In addition to raising awareness of the suffering in North Korea and giving defectors the opportunity to speak out, in past years NKFW has resulted in meetings between the president of the United States and North Korean defectors, the first-ever Congressional hearings to focus on abducted South Korean and Japanese citizens.

"With the increasing ability for North Koreans to learn about the outside world, it is fitting that North Korea Freedom Week will be held in South Korea for the first time," Kim Seung-min of Free North Korea Radio was quoted as saying in the press release.

Simultaneously with events being held in Seoul, Open Doors-USA, will be organizing prayer events for North Korea throughout the U.S.

"This will be -- as always -- a week to promote the freedom, human rights and dignity of the North Korean people through rallies, prayer vigils, conferences, exhibits and other events," Scholte said. "And will conclude with a balloon launch from the DMZ, which will include radios, money and a special message about the Universal Declaration of Human Rights."

North Korea is reported to have nearly 200,000 political prisoners in detention camps. And according to the World Food Program, there are about 9 million people needing urgent food assistance in the communist state.

jrbreen@koreatimes.co.kr




무디스, 스페인·伊·포르투갈 신용등급 강등

美 애완동물 전용항공사 PA, 자금난 '허덕'

나노 입자, 건강에 해로울 수 있어

F-15K 운영유지비 무려 10배 급증해

정부, 인턴제 없애는 내용의 입법예고 무기한 연기

삼성, KT 스마트 TV 갈등 고조

숙명여대, 기부금 관련 갈등 휘말려

[단독] 르노삼성, 본사 모델로 한국 공략

NASA, 달 뒤편에 중간기지 건설 검토

밸런타인데이에 받고 싶은건 초콜릿 아니다


 
 
Samsung chairman Lee Kun-hee sued by e..
Moody's cuts ratings on Italy, Portuga..
Samsung CEO sued over inheritance
US court favors Dongguk over Yale
NK defectors in danger of repatriation
Fine dust in Seoul and metropolitan ar..
BuyING
AhnLab rebuffs claim on stock fraud
Judges collectively protest sanctions ..
Match-fixing allegations also emerge f..
(575) Arriving at a restaurant
Money Is Winner
More belt-tightening for Greece