Living hell of North Korea’s ‘paradise on Earth’ scheme back in spotlight in Japan
It has been more than six decades since Eiko Kawasaki left Japan to begin a new life in North Korea.
Instead, they encountered something closer to a living hell.
They were denied basic human rights and forced to endure extreme hardship.
A few, like Kawasaki, managed to flee and alert the world to what critics of the scheme say amounted to state-sanctioned kidnapping.
“I’m sure the North Korean government will just ignore the court order,” she said.
The Japanese government and the Red Cross were not targeted in the compensation suit.
Photograph: Martin Bureau/AFP/Getty Images This week’s verdict was the first time “a Japanese court exercised its sovereignty against North Korea to recognise its malpractice”, Atsushi Shiraki, one of the lawyers representing the plaintiffs, said of the “historic” ruling.
The emigrants included 1,830 Japanese women who had married Korean men.
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