Release presses China on plight of North Korean refugees

A South Korean Christian prays during a rally against Chinese government's policy of North Korean defectors near the China Embassy in Seoul, South Korea, Saturday, Oct. 20, 2007. AP

|PIC2|Nearly 50,000 signatures have been added to a petition asking China to grant refugee status to North Koreans fleeing famine and persecution in their country.

Release International, a ministry supporting persecuted Christians, gathered the signatures and has presented the petition to the Chinese Embassy in London, the group said on Thursday.

"North Korea is one of the harshest places in the world to be a Christian," said Release International in a statement.

"Our message to China is to treat these men, women and children with compassion – to treat them as refugees, not as fugitives. And to stop sending them back to a land of famine and persecution."

At least 500,000 North Koreans are believed to have crossed the border over to China in the past 10 years. The UN Special Rapporteur on North Korea identifies North Koreans who flee to China as "refugees" deserving of protection, but China defines them as "economic migrants" and not refugees.

China has used the status as an excuse to return North Korean refugees back to their country where they face imprisonment, torture and sometimes execution for leaving the country – a criminal offence.

For the seventh year in a row, Open Doors named North Korea the worst persecutor of Christians in the world in its 2009 World Watch List.

Human rights groups have criticised China for its inhumane policy toward North Korean refugees, emphasising that South Korea and the United States have stated that they are willing to allow North Koreans to resettle in their countries if China only allows safe passage. Moreover, in South Korea, North Koreans are automatically considered citizens.

According to Release International, China repatriates around 4,000 North Koreans a year.

The Release petition strongly urges the government of China:

• to act compassionately towards the men, women and children escaping the regime by granting them refugee status,
• to give them safe passage to third countries, and
• to stop immediately the forcible repatriation of North Koreans

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