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North Korean defector numbers slump as controls tighten

The view of North Korea from a South Korean observation post in Paju near the DMZ

Fewer than 100 North Koreans a month defected to the South last year, Seoul said Friday, the lowest for 15 years as Pyongyang and Beijing both tighten controls on movement. A total of 1,127 North Koreans came to the South last year, down 21 percent from 2016, according to data from the unification ministry. It was the lowest figure since 2001. The vast majority of defectors from the impoverished North, which suffers chronic food shortages and is subject to UN Security Council sanctions over its banned nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programmes, go first to China. They sometimes stay there for several years before making their way to the South, often via a third country. "This decrease in arrivals is extremely concerning because it's not that life became that much better in North Korea, it is because the Chinese authorities, while signing up for increased sanctions on the North Korean economy, also stepped up their crackdowns on North Korean refugees," said Sokeel Park of Liberty in North Korea, which helps defectors reach the South. Chinese officials were therefore "complicit in the North Korean government's human rights abuses", he told AFP. "This underlines that amongst the war of words between Trump and Kim Jong Un and international focus on nuclear weapons, it is ordinary North Korean people who face the biggest threats," he added. Seo Jae-Pyong, an official of the Association of North Korean Defectors in Seoul, said that many professional brokers who help arrange defectors' trips through China and Southeast Asian countries to the South have gone underground as a result of Beijing's crackdown. Pyongyang has also been bolstering border controls since the second half of 2015, putting up more guards and setting up high-tension wires to prevent its citizens from fleeing to its giant neighbour. Direct defections across the heavily guarded Demilitarized Zone that divides the Korean peninsula are very rare, but this year there have been four, including a dramatic dash under a hail of bullets by a Northern soldier in November. Another soldier escaped to the South across the DMZ in December but observers said there was no evidence of a trend. As of the end of December, more than 31,000 North Korean defectors had entered the South since 1948, when the two Koreas were officially separated into different states. Numbers peaked at 2,914 in 2009 and have mostly declined in recent years. Female defectors continue to account for a lion's share, with women making up 83 percent of last year's defectors. It is easier for women to leave the North, as men all have assigned jobs, making any absence easier to spot for the authorities.