RFA Interviews North Korean Comfort Women

Paek Sun-Joo was an 18-year-old street child when she was sold to a 38- year-old Chinese man more than two years ago.

“[The traffickers] would gather people wearing rags, appearing to be compassionate and pity them, giving them something to eat and telling them that in China they would be able to feed and clothe themselves adequately,” Paek told RFA reporter Han Min.

“It is easy to be tricked when you are starving, and somebody gives you some food, telling you that there will be plenty more for you if you go with them,” she said.  [Radio Free Asia]

This happens because North Korea flouts its previous commitments  and squanders its money on arms instead of food, because South Korea does everything it can to turn North Korean refugees away, and because China can’t seem to  read the copy of the  U.N. Convention on Refugees it signed.  Our own State Department, after flagrantly disregarding the North Korean Human Rights Act for more than two years,  can’t wait to reward everyone who is responsible for this crime,  even to the point of seriously suggesting that North Korea  may soon  be ready for full diplomatic relations.  On what basis, exactly, should we believe that either China or North Korea  will now begin to honor its commitments to us when  both have  shreded at least a dozen other international agreements and pimped out  an entire people to sustain Kim Jong Il’s belligerence? 

It’s stories like this that deprive me of any ability to get excited about “comfort women” resolutions relating to events 60 years ago.  As terrible as those events were, to me, you lose your moral authority to complain about things that can’t be undone if you’re not saying anything about things that still can be.  I see China and South Korea making enormous political capital out of the comfort women of the past,  but they can’t even bring themselves to pull out of the comfort women of the present.

Some day, there will be a Truth Commission, and I predict here and now  that the South Koreans  will try to sanitize  the fact that the government they elected  provided the  soft background music  while China raped  its sisters and daughters.

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10 Responses

  1. Very sad, I feel sorry for these women. It is also a shame that my own country, the U.S. is not doing much if anything to help them. The North Korean Human Rights act needs to be inforced.

  2. Unfortunately, our country is stretched pretty thin when it comes to foreign affairs…. There’s a lot of bad things going on in the world, and the U.S. can’t try to fix all of them. Sometimes, the countries near the problems (who should be the most interested), should step up and solve them.

    The South Koreans SHOULD be doing SOMETHING…I mean, other than screaming about Dokdo, trying to expand North Korea into China, coming up with ways to excuse North Korea’s behavior, hating the U.S. while stealing our tax dollars, and blaming Japan for not apologizing 101 times.

  3. “Some day, there will be a Truth Commission, and I predict here and now that the South Koreans will try to sanitize the fact that the government they elected provided the soft background music while China raped its sisters and daughters. ”

    Ouch, sadly your prediction will likely be right, IF they ever do get around to a real truth commission on north korea. I could see serious attempts to obstruct or derail the attempt to hold one.

  4. I think what will happen is this Truth Commission will pardon all all Koreans involved because they really were nothing but victims themselves. But rest assured the Americans will be punished for their action-or-inaction, whichever one happens.

  5. The thing is, it looks like the coutries near North Korea (South Korea, China) are not doing much of anything to help either, and in fact helping the North Korean government in some ways. I am not talking about invading at this point, I am just talking about taking in more refugees and speaking out more.

  6. Interesting link. Again, there are striking similarities between this unforgivable act carried out by the Japanese in the 1940s and the actions of present-day South Korea…