Quick access to main page (top) Direct access to main contents Quick access to main page (bottom)

Families of North Korean Abductees Halt Leaflet Campaign Amid Government Request

koreaherald Views  

Choi Seong-ryong (center), the head of a civic group representing the families of those abducted by North Korea, says his group will no longer send anti-Pyongyang leaflets across the inter-Korean border at a press conference in Paju, Gyeonggi Province, Tuesday. (Yonhap)]A civic group representing the families of those abducted by North Korea announced Tuesday it will no longer send anti-Pyongyang leaflets across the inter-Korean border, after the South Korean government requested that it discontinue the campaign.

Choi Seong-ryong, who heads the group, stated at a press conference held at Imjingak in Paju, approximately 30 kilometers northwest of Seoul, that members will trust the government and cease sending the leaflets. He expressed hope that President Lee Jae Myung will address the issue of North Korean abductions through active dialogue with the families.

The abductee families’ group had a phone conversation with Vice Unification Minister Kim Nam-jung on June 23. During this call, Kim conveyed the government’s sympathy for their plight and requested they suspend the leaflet campaign. The Unification Ministry reported that Kim also pledged to consider the abductee families’ perspectives on the matter.

A day after the conversation, Choi’s group declared its intention to stop sending the leaflets.

The group also called on other civic organizations to follow their lead.

Since the Moon Jae-in administration agreed to discontinue loudspeaker broadcasts of anti-regime propaganda at the border in 2018, leaflet campaigns have become a primary method for civic groups to disseminate information against Pyongyang and expose North Koreans to outside realities. While loudspeaker broadcasts resumed in 2024 during heightened inter-Korean tensions, they were halted last month shortly after President Lee took office.

However, these leaflet campaigns have sparked intense debate in South Korea. While many South Koreans condemn North Korea’s ongoing human rights violations and nuclear programs, a significant portion of the public believes that the leaflets escalate tensions on the Korean Peninsula, potentially doing more harm than good.

In 2020, North Korea severed communications with the South, citing the leaflets as the reason. A survey conducted by local broadcaster KBS in June of that year revealed that 60.6 percent of respondents believed civic groups should cease distributing the leaflets.

Another poll by Real Meter in the same month showed that 50 percent of respondents thought sending anti-Pyongyang leaflets should be made illegal, while 41.1 percent opposed the idea of a legal ban.

koreaherald
content@www.kangnamtimes.com

Comments0

300

Comments0

[LATEST] Latest Stories

  • Ahn Gyu-back's First Trip Abroad: A $6.5 Billion Tank Deal with Poland
  • Elon Musk Teams Up with Samsung: A New Era in AI Chips?
  • South Korea's Heat Wave: Brace for Scorching Temperatures This Weekend!
  • Blackpink Breaks Records Again: 'Jump' Hits 100 Million Streams in Just 17 Days!
  • Monsta X's I.M Hits Pause on Activities Due to Back Injury
  • Sesame Street Characters Get a Colorful Makeover in Macao Art Show!