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Politics

North Korea's Forced Labor

9 replies

MsAmerica · 18/02/2025 03:00

Inside North Korea's Forced-Labor Program
Workers sent from the country to Chinese factories describe enduring beatings and sexual abuse, having their wages taken by the state, and being told that if they try to escape they will be “killed without a trace.”
The New Yorker
By Ian Urbina

The workers, all of whom are women, described conditions of confinement and violence at the plants. Workers are held in compounds, sometimes behind barbed wire, under the watch of security agents. Many work gruelling shifts and get at most one day off a month. Several described being beaten by the managers sent by North Korea to watch them. “It was like prison for me,” one woman said. “At first, I almost vomited at how bad it was, and, just when I got used to it, the supervisors would tell us to shut up, and curse if we talked.” Many described enduring sexual assault at the hands of their managers. “They would say I’m fuckable and then suddenly grab my body and grope my breasts and put their dirty mouth on mine and be disgusting,” a woman who did product transport at a plant in the city of Dalian said. Another, who worked at Jinhui, said, “The worst and saddest moment was when I was forced to have sexual relations when we were brought to a party with alcohol.” The workers described being kept at the factories against their will, and being threatened with severe punishment if they tried to escape. A woman who was at a factory called Dalian Haiqing Food for more than four years said, “It’s often emphasized that, if you are caught running away, you will be killed without a trace.”...

“They work hard,” the manager said. The factory has exported thousands of tons of fish to companies that supply major U.S. retailers, including Walmart and ShopRite. (A spokesperson for Donggang Haimeng said that it does not hire North Korean workers.). At times, China aggressively conceals the existence of the program. Alexander Dukalskis, a political-science professor at University College Dublin, said that workers have a hard time making their conditions known. “They’re in a country where they may not speak the language, are under surveillance, usually living collectively, and have no experience in contacting journalists,” he said...

Jobs in China are coveted in North Korea, because they often come with contracts promising salaries of around two hundred and seventy dollars a month. (Similar work in North Korea pays just three dollars a month.) But the jobs come with hidden costs. Workers usually sign two- or three-year contracts. When they arrive in China, managers confiscate their passports. Inside the factories, North Korean workers wear different uniforms than Chinese workers. “Without this, we couldn’t tell if one disappeared,” a manager said. Shifts run as long as sixteen hours. If workers attempt to escape, or complain to people outside the plants, their families at home can face reprisals. One seafood worker described how managers cursed at her and flicked cigarette butts. “I felt bad, and I wanted to fight them, but I had to endure,” she said. “That was when I was sad.”...

Although it's illegal in the U.S. to import goods made with North Korean labor, the law can be difficult to enforce. Some eighty per cent of seafood consumed in America, for example, is imported, and much of it comes from China through opaque supply chains. To trace the importation of seafood from factories that appear to be using North Korean labor, my team reviewed trade data, shipping contracts, and the codes that are stamped on seafood packages to monitor food safety. We found that, since 2017, ten of these plants have together shipped more than a hundred and twenty thousand tons of seafood to more than seventy American importers, which supplied grocery stores including Walmart, Giant, ShopRite, and the online grocer Weee! The seafood from these importers also ended up at major restaurant chains, like McDonald’s, and with Sysco, the largest food distributor in the world, which supplies almost half a million restaurants, as well as the cafeterias on American military bases, in public schools, and for the U.S. Congress...

The workers described crushing loneliness. The work was arduous, the factories smelled, and violence was common. “They kicked us and treated us as subhuman,” the worker who processed clams in Dandong said. Asked if they could recount any happy moments, most said that there had been none. A few said that they felt relieved when they returned home and got some of their pay. “I was happy when the money wasn’t all taken out,” the woman who did product transport in Dalian said. One woman said that her experience at a Chinese plant made her feel like she “wanted to die.” Another said that she often felt tired and upset while she was working, but kept those thoughts to herself to avoid reprisals. “It was lonely,” she said. “I hated the military-like communal life.”
The most striking pattern was the women’s description of sexual abuse. Of twenty workers, seventeen said that they had been sexually assaulted by their North Korean managers. They described a range of tactics used to coerce them into having sex.

Some managers pretended to wipe something from their uniforms, only to grope them. Some called them into their offices as if there were an emergency, then demanded sex. Others asked them to serve alcohol at a weekend party, then assaulted them there. “When they drank, they touched my body everywhere like playing with toys,” a woman said. The woman who did product transport in Dalian said, “When they suddenly put their mouths to mine, I wanted to throw up.” If the women didn’t comply, the managers could become violent. The worker who was at Haiqing for more than four years said, of her manager, “When he doesn’t get his way sexually, he gets angry and kicks me. . . . He calls me a ‘fucking bitch.’ ” Three of the women said that their managers had forced workers into prostitution. “Whenever they can, they flirt with us to the point of nausea and force us to have sex for money, and it’s even worse if you’re pretty,” another worker at Haiqing said. The worker from Jinhui noted, “Even when there was no work during the pandemic, the state demanded foreign-currency funds out of loyalty, so managers forced workers to sell their bodies.” The worker who spent more than four years at Haiqing said, of the managers, “They forced virgin workers into prostitution, claiming that they had to meet state-set quotas.”

For the whole article:

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2024/03/04/inside-north-koreas-forced-labor-program-in-china

OP posts:
logicisall · 18/02/2025 10:07

Informative article, but what point are you trying to make OP? That Americans need to demand their Government find ways to enforce existing laws because:

"Although it's illegal in the U.S. to import goods made with North Korean labor, the law can be difficult to enforce"

That new, enforceable laws need to be in place?

Or are you calling for a boycott of companies such as Walmart, McDonald's etc which use the products of forced NK labour?

StandFirm · 18/02/2025 16:10

My takeaway from this article and others highlighting human and worker rights abuses in much of the world is that we need to fight for the rules and regulations protecting us in the West. Supply chains being opaque is already an issue but with the wrecking balls in power in the US, it seems that whatever was opaque will get even murkier and that less safeguards will protect workers and consumers. We in the UK need to be mindful of that and look towards the EU as the last rampart to enforce some sort of standards.

MsAmerica · 22/02/2025 23:40

StandFirm · 18/02/2025 16:10

My takeaway from this article and others highlighting human and worker rights abuses in much of the world is that we need to fight for the rules and regulations protecting us in the West. Supply chains being opaque is already an issue but with the wrecking balls in power in the US, it seems that whatever was opaque will get even murkier and that less safeguards will protect workers and consumers. We in the UK need to be mindful of that and look towards the EU as the last rampart to enforce some sort of standards.

Well said. Thank you.
For me, it's also a reminder that so many things that we give little thought to have a dark underbelly.

OP posts:
logicisall · 23/02/2025 21:35

@StandFirm I'm not unsympathetic, but how does, "we need to fight for the rules and regulations protecting us in the West" transfer into specific actions that yield the changes we want?

I'm just getting fed up of generalisations and talk. How many of us actually boycott these businesses; phone up our MP; write letters to the editor; post about it on SM? It's time to walk the walk if you truly believe in what the article says.

logicisall · 23/02/2025 21:39

And I'm back to say that my MP is probably desperate to avoid my calls. I also called the Bishop to complain that it was one-sided to be told by him to "pray for the people of Israel". #grumpywoman

StandFirm · 24/02/2025 07:48

logicisall · 23/02/2025 21:35

@StandFirm I'm not unsympathetic, but how does, "we need to fight for the rules and regulations protecting us in the West" transfer into specific actions that yield the changes we want?

I'm just getting fed up of generalisations and talk. How many of us actually boycott these businesses; phone up our MP; write letters to the editor; post about it on SM? It's time to walk the walk if you truly believe in what the article says.

I think the best thing we can do is not vote for parties that advocate deregulations. That's a great start. Musk supports Trump because he wants wholesale deregulation. That's very specific and not generic at all. Now that his man is in power, he can achieve that goal. So, as voters in the UK it would mean not voting for Reform.

StandFirm · 24/02/2025 07:50

I am fed up with how little understanding there is about the impact of politics on our lives. The guys who have the power matter. They're the ones shaping our choices and taking them from us. We have to use our democratic power (as long as we have it) to prevent our choices being taken from us. So, concretely beware of any party that has a so-called 'libertarian' agenda - that's code for fuck consumer protections and human rights. Hope that's hands on enough.

logicisall · 24/02/2025 22:13

I think that in general people, especially post-covid, understand the effects of politics on daily life. The problem we have is with the appalling quality of our current batch of politicians. A politician with mental strength, integrity, intelligence, and a genuine desire to work for the good of the people/country is proving to be a unicorn.

MsAmerica · 26/02/2025 00:50

logicisall · 23/02/2025 21:35

@StandFirm I'm not unsympathetic, but how does, "we need to fight for the rules and regulations protecting us in the West" transfer into specific actions that yield the changes we want?

I'm just getting fed up of generalisations and talk. How many of us actually boycott these businesses; phone up our MP; write letters to the editor; post about it on SM? It's time to walk the walk if you truly believe in what the article says.

Absolutely. It's time to telephone/write your elected representatives, time to make donations to good candidates, and time to do volunteer work.

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