N Korea pushes for meet with ‘abducted’ defectors in South
BY Agencies24 April 2016 5:26 AM IST
Agencies24 April 2016 5:26 AM IST
North Korea announced on Friday its decision to send to Seoul the relatives of a dozen defectors it insists were abducted by the South.
Pyongyang argued that a meeting between the family members and recent North Korea defectors would expose the “fiction” that they had escaped to South Korea voluntarily. The 12 women, working as staff in a North Korean restaurant in China, arrived in the South earlier this month, along with their manager.
Seoul said they had planned their group defection together, while the North insisted they were tricked into defecting by South Korean spies who effectively “kidnapped” them with the connivance of the manager.
The North Korean Red Cross had initially offered on Thursday to send the relatives to Seoul, saying refusal by South Korea would be tantamount to “self-admitting the group abduction”. Seoul’s Unification Ministry, which handles cross-border affairs, swiftly rejected the idea and stressed again that the 12 women had defected voluntarily.
In Friday’s statement, the North Korean Red Cross said it would not take no for an answer. “The families of the abductees are eagerly asking for face-to-face contact with their daughters as they were forced to part,” the statement said. “At their earnest requests, our side again seriously notifies your side of our decision to send them to Seoul via Panmunjom,” it added. Panmunjom is the UN truce village situated on the inter-Korean border.
The statement called on the South Korean Red Cross to take “immediate technical measures” to allow the relatives to cross the border and travel to Seoul.
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