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- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea abstract "This is a list of North Korean defectors in South Korea. North Korean defectors typically received a great deal of media attention in the past; however, as their numbers increase, this is becoming less common. Furthermore, the vast majority of defectors from North Korea are unable to proceed to the South; they instead end up settling illegally, typically in northeast China or the Russian Far East.The month, day, and year, when known, refer to when the defector(s) arrived in South Korea. This list can never be exhaustive so long as the threat exists of retaliation by the North Korean government against "traitors" to the regime. Many defectors do not reveal their true identity and give interviews using a pseudonym.1953 21 September — Air force senior lieutenant No Kum-Sok (age 21) flew his MiG-15 to the South. Since this fighter plane was then the best the Communist bloc had, No's defection was considered an intelligence bonanza, and he was awarded the then exorbitant sum of $100,000 and the right to reside in the United States.1968 Kim Shin-Jo – on 21 January, one of a 31-person team sent to the South to assassinate then-President Park Chung Hee. This led to retaliation in what is known as the Silmido incident. After his life was spared, he has become a missionary and has written books on how he found inner peace in Christianity. 1982 Ri Han-yong – nephew of Kim Jong-il; shot to death in 1997 in Gyeonggi-do by unknown assailants widely suspected to be North Korean agents, in what was variously speculated to be an attempt to silence him after his publication of a tell-all book about Kim Jong-il's private life, revenge for his mother Song Hye-rang's defection a year earlier, or a warning to fellow defector Hwang Jang-yop.1992Kang Chol Hwan – Due to North Korea's policy of collective punishment, Kang was imprisoned at age 9 along with his entire family after his father, a Zainichi Korean who'd returned to North Korea, was accused of treason. He was released 10 years later, fled to China and defected to South Korea in 1992, where he became a prominent human rights activist and a columnist at the Chosun Ilbo. In 2001 he published a memoir titled "Aquariums of Pyongyang: ten years in the North Korean gulag", describing his experiences in Senghori and Yodok concentration camps. In addition to a human rights advocate, Kang became a vocal critic of South Korea's "sunshine policy" under the Kim Dae Jung administration, arguing that it propped up the Kim family dictatorship and worsened the suffering of the North Korean people. 1994 Jang Gil-su – North Korean movie director who defected to the South and has become a successful director there. 1995 Lee Soon Ok – December – high-ranking party member from northern province defected with son to the South via China and Hong Kong after suffering seven years in a political prisoner camp at Kaechon. She has since written her memoirs, Eyes of the Tailless Animals, and testified before the United States House of Representatives and the United Nations. 1997 Hwang Jang-yop – 12 February – former secretary of the North Korean Workers Party and his aide, who came to the Consular Section of the Republic of Korea Embassy in Beijing seeking political asylum. They arrived in Seoul on 20 April after staying in the South Korean Consulate in Beijing for 34 days and in the Philippines for 33 days. Hwang is the highest ranking North Korean official to defect. Kim Dok-hong, his aide, defected with him. 1999 Jang Gil-su – fled North Korea at age 15, and became famous in South Korea following publication there and in the U.S. media of his chilling crayon drawings, which depict horrific abuses by North Korean authorities against North Korean civilians. Park Sang Hak - Worked in a propaganda unit of the Kim Il Sung Socialist Youth League until his family fled to South Korea. His work to spread information into North Korea resulted in an assassination attempt in 2011. Participated in the Oslo Freedom Forum in 2009 and has Balloon campaigns in Koreareleased balloons from South Korea resulting in multiple arrests. 2002 October – Kyong Won-ha – father of North Korea's nuclear program, defected to the West, taking with him many of the secrets of the atomic program pioneered since 1984. He was one of 20 scientists and military officers who were smuggled out of North Korea during the alleged Operation Weasel. Son Jong-hun – arrived in South Korea in 2002. His older brother, Son Jong-nam, was arrested in North Korea in January 2006; according to fellow inmates, he died in custody in December 2008.2003 26 December – Kim Cheol-woong, a classically trained musician, who now teaches piano in South Korea and has performed in the United States. 2009 Park Yeon-mi↑ ↑ ↑ 3.0 3.1 ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑".
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- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Balloon_campaigns_in_Koreareleased_balloons_from_South_Korea.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_North_Korea.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Category:Korean_migration.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Category:Lists_of_North_Korean_people.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Category:Lists_of_defectors.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Category:North_Korean_defectors.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Category:South_Korea-related_lists.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Film_director.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Gyeonggi-do.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Gyeonggi_Province.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Hwang_Jang-yop.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Jang_Gil-su.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Kaechon.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Kang_Chol-hwan.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Kang_Chol_Hwan.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Kim_Cheol-woong.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Kim_Dok-hong.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Kim_Il-sung_Socialist_Youth_League.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Kim_Jong-il.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Kim_Shin-Jo.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Kim_Shin-jo.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Korean_Peoples_Air_Force.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Kyong_Wonha.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Lee_Soon-ok.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Lee_Soon_Ok.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink MiG-15.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Mikoyan-Gurevich_MiG-15.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink No_Kum-sok.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink North_Korean_Air_Force.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink North_Korean_defectors.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Northeast_China.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Operation_Weasel.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Park_Chung-hee.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Park_Sang-hak.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Park_Sang_Hak.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Park_Yeon-mi.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Pseudonym.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Ri_Han-yong.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Russian_Far_East.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Silmido.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Son_Jong-nam.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Song_Hye-rang.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink United_States_House_of_Representatives.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Workers_Party_of_Korea.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLink Yi_Han-yong.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLinkText "List of North Korean defectors in South Korea".
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wikiPageWikiLinkText "defector".
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea hasPhotoCollection List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea.
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- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea subject Category:History_of_North_Korea.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea subject Category:Korean_migration.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea subject Category:Lists_of_North_Korean_people.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea subject Category:Lists_of_defectors.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea subject Category:North_Korean_defectors.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea subject Category:South_Korea-related_lists.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea hypernym List.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea type Article.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea type List.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea type Article.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea type List.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea type Migration.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea comment "This is a list of North Korean defectors in South Korea. North Korean defectors typically received a great deal of media attention in the past; however, as their numbers increase, this is becoming less common. Furthermore, the vast majority of defectors from North Korea are unable to proceed to the South; they instead end up settling illegally, typically in northeast China or the Russian Far East.The month, day, and year, when known, refer to when the defector(s) arrived in South Korea.".
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea label "List of North Korean defectors in South Korea".
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea sameAs Q6592454.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea sameAs Q6592454.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea wasDerivedFrom List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea?oldid=670499150.
- List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea isPrimaryTopicOf List_of_North_Korean_defectors_in_South_Korea.