New York, August 21, 2003The Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ) condemns the continued detention of South Korean journalists Kim
Seung Jin and Geum Myeong Seok in Shanghai.
On August 7, Shanghai police arrested Kim and Geum as they were filming
North Korean refugees who were attempting to gain asylum by forcibly entering
a school run by the Japanese government. Police also detained Japanese
citizen Fumiaka Yamada and South Korean citizen Kim Gi Ju, both of whom
work with the Japan-based Society to Help Returnees to North Korea (HRNK),
and seven North Korean refugees, including two children, according to
HRNK.
Kim is a freelance cameraman whose footage has been used by television
networks in Japan and South Korea, according to a former colleague of
Kim's. Kim, who now lives in New Zealand, has spent the last several months
in China, where he has been reporting on North Korean refugees. Geum is
a freelance photographer.
On August 12, a spokesperson for the Shanghai government confirmed the
arrests, according to the official Xinhua News Agency. According to the
Xinhua report, the detainees were suspected of "organizing illegal border
crossings and attempting to forcefully enter a foreign school in Shanghai."
Three South Korean journalists are now in prison in China. In January
2003, authorities in Yantai, a town in China's eastern Shandong Province
arrested South Korean photographer Jae Hyun Seok as he filmed North Korean
refugees attempting to board boats bound for South Korea and Japan. On
May 22, Seok was sentenced to two years in prison on charges of "human
trafficking."
"Once again, Chinese leaders have used draconian measures to silence any
news about the plight of North Korean refugees inside China," said CPJ's
executive director Ann Cooper. "Like Jae Hyun Seok, Kim Seung Jin and
Geum Myeong Seok are in prison for documenting a story of great humanitarian
importance. We demand their immediate release."

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