SEOUL: Thirteen North Koreans who worked at a restaurant run by the isolated state in a third country are seeking political asylum in South Korea, the South said on Friday, describing the defections as unprecedented.
The workers, 12 women and a man who managed the restaurant, arrived on Thursday in the South, which admitted them on humanitarian grounds, said Jeong Joon-hee, a spokesman for the South’s Unification Ministry, which handles North Korea issues.
"There was a shared wish to go to South Korea and nobody was resistant to that," Jeong quoted a person in the group as telling authorities.
He said the workers likely faced increased pressure from Pyongyang to send cash earned from the restaurant back home as other income sources are crimped by tough UN sanctions.
South Korea has discouraged its citizens from eating at North Korean restaurants abroad after it imposed new sanctions against Pyongyang in March following a UN Security Council resolution triggered by the North’s fourth nuclear test. Media reports have said business has suffered.
The restaurants, in countries such as China and Cambodia, generate an estimated $10 million in income annually which is channelled to the North, according to the South’s Unification Ministry.
The North Korean restaurant workers often perform musical routines in addition to serving food, and are chosen in part for their perceived loyalty to the regime.
Jeong said it was unprecedented that such a group had defected from the same North Korean restaurant abroad.