Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Thursday, March 31, 2016

Women who came for training to go overseas hospitalized due to food poison

Women who came for training to go overseas hospitalized due to food poison

Mar 31, 2016
26 women who came to undergo a residential training conducted by the foreign employment bureau office situated at Tangalle Godigamuwa prior to their foreign employment, has caused food poison and hospitalized at the Tangalle hospital.

Out of 16 patients who were hospitalized on the 29th, 13 women who got residential treatment has left the hospital yesterday 30th and another ten patients who were admitted yesterday 30th are still taking treatment, said a worker in the Tangalle hospital. He said the women were having diarrhea and vomiting symptoms and the hospital diagnosing the cause for the disease.

Prior to going for employment in Gulf, training would be provided to the women by the foreign employment bureau. There are 121 women who are undergoing this training at the Tangalle office.

The women who undergo training said, the foreign employment bureau give a 40 day residential training prior to the foreign employment and the bureau is charging Rs. 12,822 from each applicant. In addition to this, the bureau is charging another Rs. 12,000 for food. The women also said although we pay the foreign employment bureau they fail to provide us proper meals.

The women came for the training said the food is provided to the training center by a women residing in the Tangalle city. They said the food she supplies is unclean and stale. Although they have complained about this many times to the officers at the foreign employment bureau, they have not taken any consideration in to the matter.

The women who undergo the training say until they change the caterer and provide us with a clean meal they are going to protest against this. When we inquired this from the officer attached to the Tangalle immigration resource centre, he refrained giving us information.

“Earlier we got food in a blue basket, now we get food packets, we cannot eat those. We have paid for our food, therefore we need good food. Sometimes when I complain this I would not be able to go overseas” Said Swarnalatha, a women undergoing training.

When we inquired about this from Upul Deshapriya the spokesperson of the foreign employment bureau said “There was an official lady who supplied food for this training center. The manager of the Tangalle Godigamuwa office stopped this lady and gave the order to a man whose wife is working in our office. That cannot be like that. We inquired in to the matter and reappointed the old lady. On the same day this tragedy happened.

“We have informed the health officers to investigate in to the matter and report us. However the foreign employment bureau spokesperson Upul Deshapriya said he has given instructions to conduct an inquiry about the supply of food without following proper hygienic procedures”
CCTV footage on day of Rajagiriya accident erased - Police


CCTV footage on day of Rajagiriya accident erased - PolicelogoMarch 30, 2016
The case pertaining to the traffic collision in Rajagiriya involving a vehicle belonging to Minister Patali Champika Ranawaka and a youth riding a motorcycle was taken up for hearing at the Colombo Traffic Court today (30).

 Welikada Police informed court that the Minister of Megapolis and Western Development was questioned regarding the incident and that a statement was recorded. 

Police further said that although footage obtained from CCTV cameras were used in the investigation, the footage from the day of the incident had already erased. 

 A report has also been obtained after analyzing 3 telephone numbers of the Minister as per a court order, police said. 

However, attorneys representing the victim declared to the court that the 3 phone numbers provided by the Minister were not used by him at that instance.   

They then submitted to the court 2 numbers allegedly used by the Minister at that time while the court ordered that those numbers also be analyzed and called for a report.

Patali questioned for 7 hours

THURSDAY, 31 MARCH 2016
Minister Patali Champika Ranawaka was questioned for more than seven hours and a statement from him was recorded in connection with the hit-and-run accident at Rajagiriya late last month in which Sandeep Sampath and Manjula Minsuka Abeysundera were injured stated Welikada Police told Colombo Additional Magistrate Chandana Kalansuriya yesterday (30th). Sandeep Sampath is currently struggling for his life at the ICU of the Colombo National Hospital.
The police also told the Magistrate that they had questioned Police officers involved in initial inquiries related to the case as well as from eye witnesses. Altogether, a total of 37 persons had been questioned by the police.
It is alleged that Minister Ranawaka was at the wheel of his vehicle when the accident occurred injuring the two youths and the Minister drove on without stopping at the scene.
The Magistrate then ordered the Welikada Police to obtain a record of calls taken and received on the Minister's mobile phone on the day of the accident. The Magistrate said he would announce whether inquiries on the incident will be handed over to the CID or not at the next hearing.

Are The SLFP CC Members Naive & Day Dreaming?


Colombo Telegraph
By Gamini Jayaweera –March 31, 2016
Gamini Jayaweera
Gamini Jayaweera
The SLFP rebel members well supported by the former President Mahinda Rajapaksa and the “Gang of Four” namely Dinesh, Vasu, Wimal, and Udaya are ignoring and violating the official instructions, warnings, and deadlines given by the SLFP Leadership and the Central Committee on several issues which are detrimental to upholding the discipline and the unity of the party. The warning letters issued by the General Secretary of the SLFP based on the decisions taken by the Central Committee, were torn or burnt by the rebels in public thus humiliating the leadership and the CC of the party. The negative response exhibited by the SLFP rebel members for the recent announcement made by the SLFP CC banning the SLFP members’ participation in the anti-government rally at Hyde Park organized by the “Joint Opposition” need to be dealt with promptly and authoritatively, if the SLFP wants to survive as a major political force in the country. As Lance Armstrong said, “There comes a point in every man’s life when he has to say: Enough is enough.”
Pre-Rally Warnings
Mahinda MaithriOn Sunday 13 March, the General Secretary of the SLFP Mr. Duminda Dissanayake publically declared that all SLFP MPs including the former President Mr. Mahinda Rajapaksa had been informed that they would be barred from attending any meetings, rallies, conferences or discussions that were not organised by the SLFP. He went on to inform the media that the ban would also be applied to the forthcoming anti-government rally scheduled to be held on 17 March.
On 16 March, the Treasurer of the SLFP and Social Empowerment & Welfare Minister Mr. S. B. Dissanayake publically warned the SLFP parliamentarians that they could lose their parliamentary seats if they would attend the “Joint Opposition’s” rally at Hyde Park on 17 March. He went on to say “The SLFP Central Committee has taken a decision that no SLFP member should participate in a meeting or rally organised by other parties other than the SLFP without prior permission from the party,”.

Video: 45 liquor shops directly owned by politicians

THURSDAY, 31 MARCH 2016
Various governments that were in power since 1994 have issued 1098 liquor licenses and it is revealed that 45 of them have been reserved directly by senior politicians represented and representing Parliament. The list with names and addresses of politicians has been revealed and 13 of the 45 liquor licenses for politicians have been taken by 13 politicians representing Kurunegala District.
Despite information revealing that 45 liquor shops are owned by politicians, it is reported that most of the licenses for the liquor shops have been taken under the names of their relatives or close associates.
The attention of the cabinet meeting held yesterday (30th) had been drawn to politicians who possess liquor licenses and it is reported that the President and the Prime Minister possess a list of politicians owning liquor licenses.
At the election for Uva Provincial Council the Leader of the JVP candidates Samantha Viddyaratna revealed names and addresses of politicians in the province who own liquor shops.

Yahapalana 'DIPLOMUTTS' Galore

Yahapalana 'DIPLOMUTTS' Galore
 Mar 30, 2016
Present Government of Sri Lanka has sent an Ambassador to Afghanistan by the name of Mr Najimudeen, native of Akkaraipattu who has later moved to Polonnaruwa to do business.
He has taken his brother-in -law (brother of the wife) to Afghanistan having declared him as his cook. Cook accompanied him when he went to present the credentials to HE the President of Afghanistan. As a result, Protocol Officials of the ministry had to accord the formal welcome inline with the accepted norms although they knew that he was the personal cook of the ambassador.
Embassy of Sri Lanka do not have its own building and it is housed in a hotel in which diplomatic community from various countries live on long term rent. Ambassador patronizes the restaurant at times and he is seen in his sarong and slippers seated amongst the rest of the diplomatic community in the common area.
He is the only Ambassador who is accompanied by his wife and they cook in their room at times. Prior to cooking, Ambassador walks to the kitchen and ask for green chili and onions from the kitchen of the hotel.
According to the papers he has, Ambassador has studied up to the A/L but he introduces himself as a lawyer. This is completely unacceptable. He do not have the language skills or the character to communicate with the government officials of Afghanistan and he do not have any recognition amongst the diplomats present in the hotel or amongst the larger diplomatic corps in Afghanistan. Hotel staff do look-down upon him for reasons listed above.
During the reception held at the hotel to mark the Independence of Sri Lanka in February 2016, Ambassador walked up to the podium and 'wiped his face' on the national flag. His intention was to show that he is a 'patriot' but the grim picture he painted was beyond repair especially in front of the seasoned career diplomats who knew the degree of shame he brought to the diplomatic community.
Those who come to the embassy to obtain visa to travel to Sri Lanka are approached by the Ambassador. They are requested to take goods to Sri Lanka on his behalf that are purchased by the Ambassador for commercial purposes.
Sri Lankan expatriate community has earned respect of the Afghan Government and the diplomatic community. There are Sri Lankans who are now citizens of other countries, working in embassies holding responsible positions and all of them are deeply embarrassed including the Sri Lankan expatriate community living here by the behavior of the ambassador.
Hope the Government that came to power promising good governance will rectify this by recalling him forthwith.
One-year prison sentence for Kumar Gunaratnam

One-year prison sentence for Kumar Gunaratnam

logoMarch 31, 2016
Politburo member of the Frontline Socialist Party (FSP) Kumar Gunaratnam has been sentenced to one year imprisonment by the Kegalle Magistrate’s Court today (31).

 Gunaratnam, who is presently in remand custody over allegedly violating visa regulations, was also fined Rs.50,000, Ada Derana reporter said.  

The former JVP politburo member had arrived in Sri Lanka from Australia on January 01, 2015, just days before the last Presidential Election. 

Gunaratnam, who reportedly holds Australian citizenship, had arrived in the island on a 30-day tourist visa which expired on January 31, 2015.

Israel jails man who protested attack on his home

Woman stands in burned-out room
Maysar Salah in the family’s home set ablaze by suspected Israeli settlers.-Bryan MacCormack

Bryan MacCormack-30 March 2016

Muhannad Saad Salah is being detained by Israel after daring to protest against attacks on his home.
On 10 March, Salah’s home in Shushahla, a small village south of Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank, was set on fire by suspected Israeli settlers.

Salah and his family were not at home at the time. Salah had brought his wife and daughter to stay with relatives in the nearby town of al-Khader after settlers had thrown rocks at their house earlier in the day.

A few days later, Salah and other community activists in al-Khader held a protest against the arson attack. The demonstration was broken up by Israeli forces using tear gas, rubber coated bullets and live ammunition. A 16-year-old boy was shot by the soldiers, with a bullet narrowly missing his heart.

Salah tried to file a formal complaint about the attack on his home. But when he arrived at the Gush Etzion police station, his mother said, he was arrested by Israeli forces for organizing the demonstration. Initially held at the station, he was eventually taken to Ofer, an Israeli military prison in the West Bank, where he remains in detention.

“Protect our land”

Salah’s home has been repeatedly attacked by residents of Neve Daniel, a nearby Israeli settlement, his family say.

Settlers have often “come into the village and stolen our water and disturbed the people,” said Maysar Salah, Muhannad’s mother. “They want to push the whole people to leave.”

As well as starting the recent fire, settlers are suspected of spray painting “Death to Arabs” and “Leave” on a stone wall on Salah’s property. The arsonists broke into the village through a hole in a razor wire fencing between Shushahla and Neve Daniel.
Spray-painted Hebrew letters on landscape
Hebrew-language graffiti left in Shushahla village reads “Death to Arabs.”
Bryan MacCormack
The fire caused extensive damage.

The Salah family say that Shushahla is located in Area C, a zone comprising more than 60 percent of the West Bank that is under full Israeli control.

While many villagers have left, Muhannad Salah has defied the settler attacks by continuing to live and farm there. “It is our land and we must protect it,” his mother said.

The village has suffered enormously since Israel occupied the West Bank in 1967. Hemmed in by Route 60, a highway connecting Israeli settlements, the village’s isolation has made it particularly vulnerable.

Settler violence

Many other Palestinians have encountered similar violence from settlers.
The violence has been encouraged by right-wing activists such as Moshe Orbach, who was convicted of sedition last month. Orbach had been arrested in July last year.
His handbook, Kingdom of Evil, provided advice about how to torch a Palestinian home with the family inside. Shortly after his arrest, such an atrocity was carried out in the West Bank village of Duma. An 18-month-old baby, Ali Dawabsha, was killed, with his parents subsequently dying from their injuries.

Close-up image of healing wound on child's chest
A 16-year-old boy was nearly shot in the heart by Israeli soldiers during a protest against an arson attack on the Salah family home.
Bryan MacCormack
Earlier this month, the home of another Duma resident, Ibrahim Dawabsha, went on fire, following what appears to have been another attack by settlers. Ibrahim is a relative of Ali and his parents and was a keywitness of the attack on their home.

The Israeli authorities seldom take action against the perpetrators of settler violence. In October last year, the Israeli human rights group Yesh Din published an analysis of more than 1,000 complaints filed by Palestinians following violence by Israelis. Almost 92 percent of the files were closed without any indictment being served.

Bryan MacCormack is an organizer, photographer and independent journalist. Website: @LeftInFocus

Flyover collapse in Kolkata kills 14; scores feared trapped

Firefighters and rescue workers search for victims at the site of an under-construction flyover after it collapsed in Kolkata, India, March 31, 2016.
6.

Firefighters, soldiers and rescue workers search for victims at the site of an under-construction flyover after it collapsed in Kolkata, India, March 31, 2016. REUTERS/Rupak De Chowdhuri



ReutersBY SUPRIYO HAZRA-Fri Apr 1, 2016

A flyover under construction in the bustling city of Kolkata collapsed on Thursday on to vehicles and street vendors below, killing at least 14 people with more than 100 people feared trapped.

(See pictures here | See location of the flyover here)

Residents used their bare hands to try to rescue people pinned under a 100-metre (110-yard) length of metal and cement that snapped off at one end and came crashing down in a teeming commercial district near Girish Park.

"The concrete had been laid last night at this part of the bridge," resident Ramesh Kejriwal told Reuters.
"I am lucky as I was planning to go downstairs to have juice. When I was thinking about it, I saw that the bridge had collapsed."

Video footage aired on TV channels showed a street scene with two auto rickshaws and a crowd of people suddenly obliterated by a mass of falling concrete that narrowly missed cars crawling in a traffic jam.

Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, whose centre-left party is seeking re-election in the state of West Bengal next month, rushed to the scene.

"We will take every action to save lives of those trapped beneath the collapsed flyover. Rescue is our top priority," she said.

Banerjee, 61, said those responsible for the disaster would not be spared. Yet she herself faces questions about a construction project that has been plagued by delays and safety fears.

A newspaper reported last November that Banerjee wanted the flyover - already five years overdue - to be completed by February. Project engineers expressed concerns over whether this would be possible, The Telegraph said at the time.

The disaster could play a role in the West Bengal election, one of five being held next month that will give an interim verdict on Prime Minister Narendra Modi's nearly two years in power.

Indian company IVRCL was building the 2-km (1.2-mile) Vivekananda Road flyover, according to its web site. Its shares closed down 5 percent after falling by up to 11.8 percent on news of the disaster.

IVRCL's director of operations, A.G.K. Murthy, said the company was not sure of the cause of the disaster.

"We did not use any inferior quality material and we will cooperate with the investigators," Murthy told reporters in Hyderabad where the firm is based. "We are in a state of shock."

NO ACCESS

A coordinated rescue operation was slow to get under way, with access for heavy lifting gear and ambulances restricted by the buildings on either side of the flyover and heavy traffic.
Police said that 78 injured had been taken to Kolkata's Medical College Hospital after the disaster struck at around noon.

"Most were bleeding profusely. The problem is that nobody is able to drive an ambulance to the spot," said Akhilesh Chaturvedi, a senior police officer.

Eyewitness Ravindra Kumar Gupta, a grocer, said two buses carrying more than 100 passengers were trapped. Eight taxis and six auto rickshaws were partly visible in the wreckage.

"Every night, hundreds of labourers would build the flyover and they would cook and sleep near the site by day," said Gupta, who together with friends pulled out six bodies.

"The government wanted to complete the flyover before the elections and the labourers were working on a tight deadline ... Maybe the hasty construction led to the collapse."

(Additional reporting by Rupam Jain, Tommy Wilkes, Neha Dasgupta and Aditya Kalra and Reuters TV in New Delhi; Writing by Douglas Busvine; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Thai soldiers can now arrest criminal suspects with police-like powers

Thailand's junta chief has given the military broad new police-like powers to arrest and detain criminal suspects. Pic: AP
Thailand's junta chief has given the military broad new police-like powers to arrest and detain criminal suspects. Pic: AP
 
SOLDIERS in Thailand have been accorded new police-like powers that enable them to arrest and detain criminal suspects, drawing criticisms from human rights groups.

The order was issued by junta chief and Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha on Tuesday, a move which has been seen as part of a wider crackdown on civil liberties in the country.

International human rights groups have called it a “recipe for human rights violations”.

On Tuesday, authorities charged a woman with sedition for posting a Facebook photo of herself holding a red plastic bowl seen as “too politically-charged”.

Since leading the May 2014 coup, Prayuth has restricted freedom of speech, barred public protests and detained critics of the junta.


According to the Bangkok Post, the regime claimed a shortage of police officers as a key factor behind its decision.

An earlier report in the paper indicated that soldiers ranked sub-lieutenant and above were allowed to summon, arrest and detain suspects in a wide range of crimes, including extortion, labor abuse and human trafficking.

They will also be allowed to search property without having to obtain a warrant.

In response to the newly-accorded powers, the paper quoted Human Rights Watch researcher Sunai Phasuk as saying that the order showed an ongoing trend by the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) to enforce unchecked powers with total impunity.

“There are no check or oversight mechanisms regulating actions carried out under the government’s plan to crack down on ‘mafia’ and ‘influential’ criminal figures. That is very alarming,” Sunai said, adding that the NCPO did not tolerate any form of scrutiny or criticism.

Additional reporting by Associated Press
Iran's Khamenei hits out at Rafsanjani in rare public rebuke

Supreme Leader rejects criticism of ballistic tests by reformist ally of President Rouhani, saying: 'How can we say age of missiles has passed?'

A picture released by the office of Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on 20 March (AFP) - 


Thursday 31 March 2016
A bitter and public row has broken out in Iran between the country's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and Hashemi Rafsanjani, an influential former president and key reformist ally of current President Hassan Rouhani, triggered by the country's recent missile tests.
In comments published on his official website, Khamenei hit back at Rafsanjani over criticism of the Revolutionary Guard, which carried out the ballistic missile tests, saying that missile power was key to the country's future security and that diplomacy alone could not keep Iran safe.
Khamenei, who has the final say in all matters of state in Iran, praised the powerful Revolutionary Guard for its "show of advanced and precise missiles" in recent tests that drew Western criticism.
"In this jungle-like world, if the Islamic Republic seeks negotiations, trade and even technology and science, but has no defence power, won't even small countries dare threaten Iran?" Khamenei said.
"Our enemies are constantly enhancing their military and missile capabilities, and given this how can we say the age of missiles has passed?"
He went on to say that whoever proposed that Iran should cut down its missiles had to either be ignorant or a traitor.
“He who claims, without knowledge … that we may let pass,” Khamenei said. “But he who says so with knowledge is a traitor, and this is regarded as great treason against the Iranian revolution and the Iranian people.”
His comments appeared aimed at Rafsanjani, a senior leader of the reformist and moderate camp and the leader of the influential Expediency Discernment Council, who last week tweeted: "Tomorrow's world is the world of dialogue not missiles."
The moderates won parliamentary elections in February and have enjoyed widespread support in Iran since Rouhani secured a nuclear deal with the West last year that paved the way for an easing of sanctions.
However, Khamenei in his comments also accused Rouhani and his government of failure to resolve the economic problems despite the lifting of sanctions.
They also came a day after the United States, France, Britain and Germany said Iran's recent ballistic missile tests violated UN Security Council resolutions.
The same four countries, along with Russia and China, reached the historic agreement with Iran last year that saw Tehran scale down its nuclear programme in exchange for the lifting of sanctions.
A joint letter from the US and other Western powers sent on Monday to the UN Security Council said that the two kinds of missiles fired by Iran on 8 and 9 March, the Shahab-3 and Qiam-1, were a breach of UN resolutions because they were "inherently capable of delivering nuclear warheads," something Iran denies.
Regarding the government's handling of the country's economic problems, Khamenei said: “We are tired of reiterating economic slogans. Economic programmes are proceeding rather lazily and have not accomplished the objectives we have been aspiring for.”
According to sources close to Rouhani, quoted by Arabi21 website, Rouhani had threatened to tender his resignation if he was subjected to further political pressure from the country's hardliners.
"Many of the political and economic decisions by the Iranian president have been met with total rejection from the Supreme Leader [Ayatollah Ali] Khamenei personally," one source told the website.
Since the February election, the Revolutionary Guard has stormed the residences of a number of the president's supporters, the website added.
It also claimed that Rafsanjani believed that a “grand conspiracy” was being hatched by the Revolutionary Guard in order to revert the nuclear agreement.
Iran has twice tested ballistic missiles since the deal, prompting Western condemnation and new US sanctions.
Iran was quick to dismiss Western claims that the missile tests violated last year's deal and the Security Council resolution that enshrines it, with AFP obtaining a letter written by Iran's defence minister, General Hossein Dehghan, in which he said that he was “certain” the international community would not act.
"I am certain that the Security Council and the United Nations will not respond as our actions are neither a breach of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action [the July nuclear deal] nor are they against Resolution 2231," Dehghan said.

Brazilian billionaire and owner of the Gherkin charged in bribery scheme

Joseph Safra accused of corruption in relation to a conspiracy to pay 15.3m reais ($4.2m) in bribes to Brazilian tax officials
The Gherkin is one of London’s most recognisable skyscrapers. Photograph: Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images

 and agencies in New York-Thursday 31 March 2016 

The billionaire owner of the Gherkin, one of London’s most recognisable skyscrapers, has been charged in an alleged plot to bribe Brazilian officials in an attempt to cut his family company’s corporation tax bill.

Joseph Safra, the world’s richest banker with an estimated $18.3bn (£12.8bn) fortune according to Forbes magazine, was on Thursday accused of corruption in relation to a conspiracy to pay 15.3m reais ($4.2m) in bribes to tax officials, Brazilian prosecutors said.

Safra, who bought 30 St Mary’s Axe – better known as the Gherkin – for a reported £726m in 2014, was charged over the alleged 2014 scheme designed to reduce the tax bill for Banco Safra, Brazil’s 10th biggest bank which he owns the majority of.

The Brazilian authorities said Safra was not directly involved with the alleged corruption scheme, but said there is evidence that an employee was acting on his instructions when he arranged the alleged deal.

The authorities said they had wire taps of conversations between a Safra executive, João Inácio Puga, and tax officials.

“He [Puga] limited himself to negotiating, interacting with the other
people under investigation,” the prosecutors said of the alleged
scheme. “But the decisions were taken by [what Puga called] the
‘staff’, that is, Grupo Safra’s majority shareholder and president,

Joseph Y Safra. Therefore, Puga was Joseph’s agent.”

A spokesperson for the Safra Group said: “The allegations being promoted by a Brazilian prosecutor are unfounded. There have not been any improprieties by any of the businesses of The Safra Group. No representative of the group offered any inducement to any public official and the group did not receive any benefit in the judgement of the tribunal.”

The charges filed are a follow-up to a Brazilian police inquiry, known

as “Operation Zealots”, into kickbacks by companies through lobbyists. Dozens of other Brazilian firms have also been under investigation for suspected kickbacks.

Safra and his family control the São Paulo-based bank as part of a international conglomerate operating in 19 countries.

When it bought the Lord Foster-designed Gherkin in November 2014, Safra Group said: “While only 10 years old, this building is already a London icon that is distinguished from others in the market, with excellent value growth potential. We intend to make the building even better and more desirable through active ownership that will lead to a range of enhancements that will benefit tenants.”

Safra is Brazil’s second-richest person after Jorge Paulo Lemann, who owns a big stake in Anheuser-Busch InBev, the brewing giant behind Budweiser, Corona and Stella Artois.

Safra was born into a rich banking family in Lebanon. The family moved to São Paulo in 1952. He and father Jacob Safra founded Banco Safra in the 1960s
Kim Yong-sil recounts her experience fleeing from North Korea. Since she defected to South Korea in 2006, her mother and brothers defected and settled down in the South one by one. She now lives in a rented apartment provided by the South Korean authorities. (Photo by Jun Michael Park for The Washington Post) (Jun Michael Park/For The Washington Post)
By Anna Fifield-March 31

SEOUL – First came Kim Yong-shil, in 2006. Then her husband, her two grown daughters, her teenaged son. Two years later, out came her mother, then one brother, then in 2012, the other.
One by one over the last decade, the members of this family have escaped from North Korea, the ones who made it out first earning money and meeting brokers so they could bring out the others.

This process – called “chain defection” – is almost the only way to Kim Jong Un took control of the state four years ago.
escape from North Korea now, as security along the border has tightened dramatically since

In the last 20 years, some 29,000 North Koreans have fled hunger and repression at home by escaping across the river that forms the country’s border with China. The flow of refugees had been tracking steadily upwards until plummeting during Kim’s first year in power. By last year, fewer than 1,300 people had escaped, less than half of the peak recorded in 2009.

The vast majority of the people making it out now are those with family members who escaped to South Korea before them and can rustle up the $12,000 it currently costs to extract one person from the North.
 
“If you don't have family living outside North Korea, it's impossible to come out because someone has to pay,” said Jung Kwang-il, a defector who now works as a human rights activist in South Korea.

Families in the South cobble together their often meager wages to try to extract relatives. There is now a well-established process involving defectors in the South who act as brokers, traders on the border between North Korea and China who move money back and forth, and soldiers in North Korea who can be bribed to show would-be defectors where and when to cross.

For the Kim family, Yong-shil, now 56, was the first link in the chain. After two failed attempts, she finally managed to escape in 2006, spending three years in China before making it to South Korea.

After her husband, daughters, and son got out,she arranged through a broker in South Korea to secret out her mother, who’s now 77.

But three younger siblings were still in North Korea. Her youngest brother was working as a trader on the border and managed to call Yong-shil from a Chinese cell phone to tell her that the next older brother had resorted to begging and was starving.

So Yong-shil, who’s worked in a bath-house and is now trying to start a restaurant with other defectors, contacted a broker about getting him out, too. “I worked with a broker for a year to get him out,” Yong-shil recalls.
 
Now 45 years old, he works here in the South as a night security guard.

But the younger brother remained in North Korea with his wife and two sons. He had twice been caught crossing the river for his trading activities and was worried he would be arrested if caught again, so Yong-shil encouraged him to escape, too. (The brothers did not want their names used for fear of jeopardizing family still in North Korea.)

“I found someone who said that if [the youngest brother] could get himself to China, he could take him from there,” Yong-shil said.

He was successful on his second attempt, but it cost the family $8,000. “It was cheaper back then,” Yong-shil said. Now, it costs about $12,000 to extract someone from North Korea.

In the South, the younger brother lives a grim existence. He drives a truck six days a week and lives with his sister. He spends little on himself – he hadn’t eaten all day when he met reporters for dinner after work – so he can send money to his family.

“I work this hard, work these long hours, with my family in my mind,” he said, saying he sends them about $3,000 a year. “But $3,000 goes a long way in North Korea.”

He talks to his wife on the phone every three months. His sons are well fed and well dressed – but not too well dressed, for fear of attracting attention – and they’re doing well at school.

But the chain has been broken. It’s become so difficult – and consequently, so expensive – to get people out of North Korea that the youngest brother has little hope of seeing his family again.

“Now, it could take as much as $40,000 to get them out and even then, there’s no guarantee that they will get to safety,” he said, pulling his Samsung Galaxy phone out of his pocket with his oil-ingrained hands, to show reporters photos of his family.

There is still one Kim sibling left in North Korea:a sister, who has a husband and two children. They want to come out, too. But this would also cost tens of thousands of dollars that the family doesn’t have. “Plus, they’re scared,” Yong-shil said.

Brokers say that the price has sky-rocketed because it’s become much more difficult to get people out in the last four years.

“I heard that there was an order from Kim not to take the money, just arrest them,” said one defector who now works as a broker, asking not to be named because so few people do this work.

That means as many as eight people must be involved in extracting North Koreans: the main broker in South Korea who plans everything, the broker in North Korea, the person who gets the would-be defector across the river, a person waiting on the Chinese side, another person to take the defector down through China. Then there are other brokers in Thailand, Laos and Vietnam, through which the migrants generally travel on their way to South Korea.

“And all these people are working for money,” the broker in Seoul said.

Brokers in South Korea are often considered to be vultures preying on naïve defectors, all of whom stand to get about $17,000 in government benefits when they arrive in the South, two-thirds of it earmarked for housing.

But this broker said he makes only about $1,000 for each North Korean he helps – and that their families often try to avoid paying. “I feel for these people. I feel for them but if there was no money then why would I do it?” he said.

For now, the younger brother tries to avoid places where he might see happy families spending time together. Instead, he spends his Sundays sleeping or distracting himself with video games.

“When I left North Korea, I told my family that maybe it would be the last time we would see each other,” he said. “But when it actually happens, it’s so hard.”

Yoonjung Seo contributed to this report.
 
Anna Fifield is The Post’s bureau chief in Tokyo, focusing on Japan and the Koreas. She previously reported for the Financial Times from Washington DC, Seoul, Sydney, London and from across the Middle East.