N Korean defectors struggle to send money home amid pandemic
ANSAN,
Choi, who hasn't sent money or talked to her 75-year-old mother since May, believes the silence is linked to the pandemic, which led
Other defectors in the South have also lost contact with their loved ones in
Defectors in the South have long shared part of their income with parents, children and siblings in
Choi, a singer in a North Korean-themed art troupe, last year earned only about 10-20% of what she usually gets because of canceled performances.
“I’m waiting for her call more than ever these days,” said Choi, 47, who lives in Ansan, just south of
About 33,000 North Koreans have escaped to
Many defectors use brokers to stay in touch with their families in the North, but that process is complex, expensive and risky.
Brokers in
The calls are often followed by money transfers, which require defectors to send money to the bank accounts of other brokers on the Chinese side of the border. The brokers in
But North Korea’s year-long border closure has battered the smuggling business, leaving brokers with little money to use for defectors’ remittances, observers say.
Gen.
Brokers in
There are no official, extensive studies on how the pandemic has affected money transfers. But separate surveys of several hundred defectors by civic groups showed 18-26% of respondents sent money to
“They are initially eager to support their families in the North because they know what their lives are like there,” Shin said. After a while, though, it becomes “out of sight, out of mind.”
Each time Choi’s mother called her, she often gave the phone numbers of neighbors who had fled to
When Choi reached some of them, she said they told her that illness or financial difficulties meant they couldn't afford the regular requests for money from their families in the North, where the estimated gross national income per capita in 2019 was one-27th of South Korea’s.
It's not clear how much worse this will make the North's already moribund economy. South Korea’s spy agency last year reported a four-fold price increase of imported foods like sugar and seasoning in the North, while Chinese data show its official trade volume with
“The money we send is a lifeline,” said
Cho said his siblings used to travel for hours to the border to meet brokers and call him for money. But he hasn't heard from his siblings since
Cho said some “robber-like brokers” now ask for a huge cut of the transferred money and that many of his defector friends are waiting for commissions to stabilize before resuming remittances.
South Korean law bans its citizens from unauthorized contact with North Koreans, but authorities don’t strictly apply the regulations to defectors because of humanitarian reasons. North Korean officials often overlook money transfers because they get bribes from those receiving money.
“North Korean police officers are poor, too,” Cho said.
Cho, head of the
South Carolina Region OKs New Flood Maps For First Time In Years
SHAREHOLDER ALERT: Pomerantz Law Firm Investigates Claims On Behalf of Investors of iRhythm Technologies, Inc. – IRTC
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News