Here’s a subject that ex-Pres. Bill Clinton could give some attention to.
A recent Chosun Ilbo article focused on the difficulties that North Koreans face in coming to the US.
Kim said that out of 28 fellow North Korean detainees who wanted to go to America, only eight were able to make it. The problem is a U.S. policy that allows only a minimal number of North Korean refugees to be accepted, he said.
Kim goes on to say that refugees/asylum seekers give up and go to South Korea, because the US resettlement process takes too long. He seems to think that the US resettlement process towards North Koreans is intentionally cumbersome so as to only let in a minimal number of North Korean refugees. This may or may not be true…
I just wish the reporter actually did some more investigatory research instead of basing his piece solely on an interview:
Derek Zoolander: Do you understand that the world does not revolve around you and your do whatever it takes, ruin as many people’s lives, so long as you can make a name for yourself as an investigatory journalist, no matter how many friends you lose or people you leave dead and bloodied along the way, just so long so you can make a name for yourself as an investigatory journalist, no matter how many friends you lose or people you leave dead and bloodied and dying along the way?
If the reporter actually did a decent job, he might have come up with a more balanced and factual piece.
Kim claims that:
“Right now, the U.S. government contacts defectors seeking to enter the U.S. only after they have undergone security screening by South Korean authorities. This process takes too long,” Kim said. Many of the other North Korean defectors imprisoned with him became critical of the U.S. for this reason, he said.
Kim is correct that the process is lengthy and cumbersome. But the security screening by South Korean authorities is absolutely necessary to make sure that North Korean refugees are actually North Korean (and not Chosun jok, or Chinese citizens with Korean heritage), North Korean spies, or North Koreans who already resettled in South Korea and go back to another country to try to gain admission to the US as a refugee.
Still, I have to disagree with Kim in his assertion that it is US policy to limit the number of North Korean refugees. While I can understand your impatience and months in deplorable conditions in immigration detention centers, you’re going to have to wait like every other refugee in the world.
On the other hand the lengthy and cumbersome part enters into the equation because of redundant and backlogged DHS interviews. No other refugee population, except the Palestinians, face such a cumbersome process. For more detail, I’ve written about it here.
The Chosun Ilbo reporter finally got something right:
Robert King, who worked as the chief secretary to former House Foreign Affairs Committee chairman Tom Lantos, has been designated as the new U.S. special envoy for human rights in North Korea. But the U.S. government has yet to request a Senate hearing to review the designation. With the Senate in recess during the month of August, it won’t be until September at the earliest that a North Korean human rights envoy is appointed.
Removing DHS barriers is really a job for the Special Envoy for North Korean Human Rights Issues. Former Special Envoy Lefkowitz, who has been under fire from every side, actually did a lot to for DHS compliance with US law (North Korean Human Rights Act of 2004 and its reauthorization). Barriers still remain in the resettlement process, and we’re still waiting on a Special Envoy.
“I thought the U.S. was really interested in protecting the human rights of North Koreans, and it has made it look like its arms are open to North Korean defectors, but that’s not the case,” Kim said.
What EVER gave him that idea? Frankly, I’m becoming more and more inclined to think that we ought to abolish the position of the Special Envoy. Why give refugees false hope and make false promises that human rights will ever be a part of any US administration’s policy? The position gives rhetorical and political cover while not doing anything substantial to realize human rights in North Korea. Let history have unfettered condemnation on administrations that sat back and watched death camps operate.
Finally, to return to the title of the post, a lot of hoopla is being given to Bill Clinton’s surprise visit to Pyongyang. It’s a surprise to the public, not to the Obama administration, not to the regime in Pyongyang. It’s ridiculous to claim that Clinton, as an ex-President and husband of our Secretary of State, is going in as a private citizen and not as a representative of the administration. OFK provides a more than apt assessment here. One can only hope that he does get the two American journalists, as well as the recently abducted South Korean fishermen, and the South Korean man captured in Kaesong a couple months ago. South Korea is our ally, right?
And perhaps before/after this trip, Clinton could advocate on behalf of North Korean refugees in the absence of a Special Envoy…but no one dares to hope for that much.