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News Articles
February, 2009, National Geographic Online Report
Please click the link below to read this revealing report on sex trafficking in China and the Christians who help the North Korean women get out of North Korea and China through the underground railroad.
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March 2008, North Korean College Students Arrested With Christian Literature
News & Notes - Freedom for North KoreaNorth Korea (MNN) -- The United Nations is voting on a resolution critical of human rights abuses in North Korea. Among those abuses is religious persecution targeting Christians and those involved in Christian work. It's timely, considering the latest, says Voice of the Martyrs' Todd Nettleton. "Ten college students in one of the northern provinces of North Korea have been arrested by the National Security Agency. They apparently were caught reading the Bible and watching a Christian DVD. Because of that, they were all taken into custody. Their situation is very grim." The man who reported the case has since escaped to China to avoid arrest. Nettleton urges prayer. "What we can do now is pray. That is really all we can do. The North Korean government is almost immune to international pressure. So our option, at this point, on behalf of these brothers and sisters who have been arrested, is simply to go to the Lord, to pray for their safety, to pray for justice for them, and pray that their lives would be spared."
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March 2008, North Korea Executes 22 fishermen who strayed into South Korean waters by mistake
News » World news
By RICHARD SHEARS-

North Korea has executed 22 fishermen who strayed out of the country's waters by mistake, it was claimed yesterday. The group were apparently gunned down once they returned to the Stalinist state.

Having drifted into South Korean territory, they had the opportunity to seek asylum, but insisted they never had any intention of doing so. They told South Korean officials they had strayed accidentally while fishing for clams and oysters, so were sent back to North Korea - and to their deaths. Scroll down to read more ...
North Korea Secretive: North Korea, whose citizens worship deceased leader Kim Il-Sung, above, reportedly killed 22 fishermen for straying into South Korean waters by gunning them down
A South Korean newspaper reported yesterday that all the drifters were immediately shot dead in a secret location by agents of North Korea's national security agency.
It was another alleged incident supporting claims that North Korea has a "no tolerance" policy against anyone suspected of trying to leave the country - even in error.
The drama began when two North Korean fishing boats containing 14 women and eight men - among them three teenagers - drifted into waters off South Korea's Yeonpyeong island.
South Korean officials, suspecting at first that the group were intending to defect, questioned them about their plans and were told they had accidentally strayed out of North Korean waters.
There were a large number of women on the vessels, it was explained, because they were needed to clean the oysters and clams.
Satisfied with their story, the South Koreans seized the two boats and sent the group back across the border via an overland route.
Last night, a source with the South Korean national intelligence agency said: "We found the group were neither asylum seekers nor spies. "
They didn't want to stay in South Korea, so we sent them back. "We have heard that they were shot, but we had no idea that would happen."
A source with North Korean contacts added: "They weren't even given the option of going to a prison camp. They were simply executed."
An intelligence official said it was possible the fishing party were executed because they had set out on an expedition without authorisation from North Korea's maritime authorities.
He said if the group had indicated they were defectors, they would not have been sent back to North Korea. "It would be beyond imagination to repatriate a North Korean defector, given the country's poor human rights conditions," said the official.
Four North Koreans claimed asylum when their wooden boat drifted onto Yeonpyeong island last year.
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Hope Flinchbaugh's Book
If you would like to understand more about what goes on inside North Korea, read Hope Flinchbaugh’s novel, I’ll Cross the River. This novel brings the reader into the mindset of a brainwashed, starving North Korean who courageously takes her baby and small son across the river into China.

Those who deny freedom to others deserve it not for themselves. -- Abraham Lincoln
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