Latest news with #AssociationoftheFamiliesofThoseAbductedbyNorthKorea


Korea Herald
08-07-2025
- Politics
- Korea Herald
Families of abductees halt anti-North Korea leaflet campaign
A South Korean civic group representing families of abductees held in North Korea officially announced Tuesday that it would halt its distribution of anti-Pyongyang leaflets across the border. 'We were moved after receiving direct phone calls from Unification Minister candidate Chung Dong-yong, Vice Unification Minister Kim Nam-jung and Rep. Yoon Hu-duk (of the Democratic Party of Korea),' said Choi Sung-ryong, head of the Association of the Families of Those Abducted by North Korea. 'We promise to the people that we will halt our distribution of leaflets containing information about our abducted family members.' The remarks were made at a press conference held at Imjingak, in Paju, near the demilitarized zone dividing the two Koreas. The Lee Jae Myung administration had ramped up measures to stop the launches of anti-Pyongyang leaflets, detailing information about South Koreans abducted by the North after the 1950-53 Korean War, calling the act 'illegal.' The leaflets included messages that criticized the North Korean regime, such as 'If only Kim Jong-un disappears, our abductees will return.' Choi expressed hopes that the group's decision would cater to President Lee's efforts to 'hold a summit and revive dialogue' with Pyongyang, so that the families divided by war could be reunited soon. 'We hope that the families divided by war, (families) of war prisoners and those abducted by the North could meet (at the border city) of Kaesong, even if (the meeting) is held behind closed doors,' Choi said. 'We hope the Lee Jae Myung administration could resolve our suffering by allowing us to smoothly communicate with our family members (abducted by the North).' The civic group, which began launching the leaflets across the border in 2008, had halted the campaign for over a decade in 2013, heeding to the request of the then-Park Geun-hye administration. However, it had relaunched the campaign in October last year and has since dispersed leaflets multiple times, despite calls from the Unification Ministry for them to stop. The group attempted to officially launch the leaflets through an open event in October last year and April this year, but was stopped by police and border area residents. Instead, they unofficially sent the leaflets without government authorization in April, May and June this year. Despite the government's long-standing efforts to halt the leaflet campaign, South Korean courts have sided with the civic groups that organized such activities, deeming them legal. In September 2023, the Constitutional Court ruled the anti-leaflet law unconstitutional, nullifying a provision in the Inter-Korean Relations Development Act that banned such activity. In March 2025, the Seoul High Court also rejected an injunction seeking to halt leaflet campaigns by North Korean activist groups, including one representing families of abductees.


Korea Herald
16-06-2025
- Politics
- Korea Herald
Anti-North Korea leaflet launches will end if Lee meets us, say abductee families
A South Korean civic group representing families of abductees held in North Korea said it would halt the distribution of anti-Pyongyang leaflets if President Lee Jae-myung takes steps to confirm the abductees' survival and meets with their families. Choi Sung-ryong, head of the Association of the Families of Those Abducted by North Korea, held a news conference on Monday in front of the government complex in Seoul, as the Lee administration cracks down on the sending of anti-North Korean propaganda leaflets across the inter-Korean border. Choi warned that the group would resume sending anti-North Korea leaflets — detailing information about South Koreans abducted after the 1950-53 Korean War — either by balloon or even using drones. The leaflets also include the phrase, "If only Kim Jong-un disappears, our abductees will return.' Choi called on President Lee to meet with the families of the abductees — including Kim Tae-ok, the mother of Lee Min-gyo, who was abducted by North Korea in August 1977, and Kim Sun-rye, the mother of Hong Geon-pyo, who was abducted in August 1978. Both abductees were students at the time. 'If President Lee Jae-myung meets with the two mothers of the students abducted to North Korea and offers them words of comfort, I will stop sending leaflets,' Choi said. 'And not just leaflets. I will also stop other acts of hostility toward North Korea. I ask once again.' The Association of the Families of Those Abducted by North Korea dispersed leaflets on April 27, as well as in May and on June 2, despite repeated requests from the Unification Ministry to exercise restraint. On June 9, the Unification Ministry publicly expressed regret over the group's launch of anti-North Korea leaflets and 'strongly urged' an end to such actions, signaling a shift in stance on the issue under President Lee Jae-myung's administration. Choi underscored that 'our request is simply to verify whether our loved ones are alive through inter-Korean dialogue — and yet the authorities treat us like criminals.' 'Dialogue between the two Koreas needs to happen first. And when it does, we're not even asking for their return right away — we're just saying, let's start by confirming whether they're alive,' Choi said. Choi challenged the rationale behind the Lee administration's decision to ban anti-North Korea propaganda leaflets, which had previously been deemed legal by the courts. 'I won both the first and second trials. The Constitutional Court ruled that this is a matter of freedom of expression. But such rulings have been completely ignored,' Choi told reporters. The Constitutional Court ruled the anti-leaflet law unconstitutional in September 2023, nullifying a provision in the Inter-Korean Relations Development Act that banned such activity. In March 2025, the Seoul High Court also rejected an injunction seeking to halt leaflet campaigns by North Korean activist groups, including one representing families of abductees. In response, the Unification Ministry in Seoul on Monday said the ministry will 'give full consideration to the voices of the families of abductees by North Korea.' 'The Unification Ministry will make its utmost efforts to create conditions for resolving the issue, including the resumption of inter-Korean dialogue,' Koo Byoung-sam, the ministry's spokesperson, said during a televised briefing Koo concurrently admitted that Seoul 'has not previously raised such a matter through the inter-Korean Red Cross channel,' referring to the main communication channel between the two Koreas for discussing humanitarian issues, including the reunions of separated families. However, Koo said the government's 'request to halt leaflet launches does not violate the Constitutional Court's decision, considering the management of the Korean Peninsula situation and the lives and safety of the people.' The South Korean government held an interagency meeting at 10 a.m. on Monday at the government complex in Seoul to discuss the establishment of a comprehensive, pan-government response regarding anti-North Korean leaflet distribution, including preventive measures and punitive measures as instructed by the President, according to the Unification Ministry. The meeting, presided over by Deputy Minister for Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs at the Unification Ministry Kang Jong-suk, was attended by working-level officials from the Prime Minister's Office; the National Intelligence Service; the Ministry of the Interior and Safety; the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport; and the National Police Agency. The meeting was held at the order of Lee after an unidentified civic group launched anti-North Korea leaflets on Ganghwa Island early Saturday morning.