S. Korean Accused of Spying for Pyongyang

By Park Sae-jin Posted : May 6, 2010, 14:56 Updated : May 6, 2010, 14:56

By Lee, Jeong-eun

A South Korean man was arrested last week for allegedly spying for Pyongyang and working with its military to kidnap activists who helped North Koreans defect, prosecutors said Monday.

 

The man, identified only by his surname Kim, is also accused of collecting information on people helping North Korean defectors as well as military information for the North, officials at the Seoul Central Prosecutors' Office said.

 

The 55-year-old man took up the spy job after he met a female North Korean agent in 1999 in China's eastern Shandong province, where he was engaged in drug trafficking, the official said on condition of anonymity because an investigation was ongoing.

 

The man traveled to Pyongyang in 2000 for 15 days of spy training and received $10,000 and 4.4 pounds of narcotics from the North, the official said.

 

Kim was sent back to China and started abducting South Korean activists who were helping North Koreans defect from their impoverished, authoritarian homeland. The kidnapped Koreans were sent to the North in cooperation with the female agent, he said.

 

The man also kidnapped North Korean defectors hiding in China and forced them back to the North. He also tried to gather information on South Korean intelligence officers operating in Chinese towns near North Korea, the official said.

 

The official said he has no information on how many activists and defectors the man has kidnapped.

 

Activists claim tens of thousands of North Koreans live in hiding in China after fleeing the North to avoid a harsh political system, poverty and chronic food shortages. If repatriated, they could face severe punishment such as forced labor and years in prison, experts and activists say.

 

An undisclosed number of South Korean activists and missionaries also secretly operate in China to smuggle North Koreans from their homeland and shelter and feed defectors before they take refuge in South Korea, the U.S. and elsewhere in the world.

 

The man was arrested Thursday while making a temporary visit to South Korea, the prosecutors said.

 

The two Koreas remain in a state of war, divided by a heavily fortified border, because their three-year conflict ended in a truce, not a peace treaty, in 1953. More than 18,000 North Koreans have defected to South Korea since the war's end, with most of them coming via China.

 

nvcess@ajnews.co.kr
[아주경제 ajnews.co.kr] 무단전재 배포금지

기사 이미지 확대 보기
닫기