Saturday, June 14, 2008

The Trafficking of Human Beings

In my heart of hearts, I believe the DPRK government was not lying in September 2002. One way or another, eight of the 13 Japanese citizens believed kidnapped by North Korean agents in the 1970s died long ago. Intellectually, I can accept the possibility that one or two may still be alive, either in a reeducation camp or a mental facility. However, my heart tells me it is unlikely to be so.

I am also not sure whether or not the DPRK turned over the remains of Yokota Megumi. However, I am fairly sure that running DNA tests on cremated bits of bone and ash was a futile exercise (hence my problems with this report).

Ever since Kim Jong-il tossed caution to the winds and not only confessed to the kidnappings but also, incomprehensibly, let the kidnapped and their families leave the DPRK (the marked, inexcusable exception being the daughter of Yokota Megumi, of course) the families and their ultra-right defenders have been overstaying their welcome as the nation's official sufferers-in-chief. The Japanese government's shift to a hardline, intransigent stance over the abductees crippled efforts to rein in the DPRK's nuclear program--with predictable results.

[Not that Japanese intransigence would have mattered much in the long run. In the long run, the the DPRK regime could not shake itself of the belief it needed an atomic capability as a deterrent. Somehow possessing tens of thousands of fanatical commandos trained in guerilla warfare techniques and enough artillery tubes to flatten Seoul under a hailstorm of fire and steel were not deterrent enough. ]

A reopened investigation into the fates of the abductees holds risks. At best, it will not find much in addition to what has already presented. At worst, new information will be "discovered," the facts of which will likely be so awful as to send the relationship spiraling back into the abyss.

The "reinvestigation-for-loosened-sactions" deal is nevertheless a good start -- one that perhaps only a deeply wounded Fukuda Administration could have ever accepted.

What is more intriguing is the possibility that the DPRK may have offered to hand over

1) the surviving Yodo hijackers and

2) their spouses who lured Ishioka Tōru (yes, it's the mind-bending Spain photo) and Arimoto Keiko to their doom.

[An aside - The press and the government are Yokota Megumi freaks--practically by statute. The Ishioka-Arimoto tragedy is the more compelling one, however. Leftist idealism and naiveté made the victims complicit in their own capture and stupidity made their families possibly complicit in what one must assume were their murders and the murder of their infant. ]

Apart from the still-at-large perpetrators of the 20 March 1995 Sarin gas attack on Tokyo's subway system (oh where oh where did they go?) the Yodo hijackers plus Mori Junko and Wakabayashi Sakiko are the National Police Agency's most wanted criminals. There is nothing the NPA would love so much as the chance to put them all behind bars for the rest of their natural lives.

That there is serious talk about the DPRK and Japan cutting a deal over the Yodo hijackers demonstrates that both sides are willing to place huge bets on the future.

And that is a very, very interesting development indeed.

2 comments:

  1. Anonymous3:57 PM

    I suspect that they are all unfortunately deceased too, but one never knows with North Korea. What is rarely mentioned is that North Korea did the same sort of things to South Korean for decades.

    The Japanese government has to have known that North Korea had been kidnapping Japanese for decades. The Japanese residents of Hokuriku region certainly knew it in the 80s and 90s while the government pretended not to notice anything. Perhaps it did not believe its own citizens.

    When one looks at how Megumi Yokota's fate has been manipulated by the Japanese government (we recall the very, very questionable results of the DNA tests by Japan on remains returned by North Korea), one has to wonder exactly what Japan wants. A full accounting and investigation? Fair enough. But at what point will Japan accept the results? Is Japan prepared to trash the nuclear issue over this? Perhaps so, but then the question of why it took so long for the government to care about the fate of its own citizens needs to be addressed.

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  2. Anonymous1:49 PM

    "What is rarely mentioned is that North Korea did the same sort of things to South Korean for decades."

    It's in the J-press and frequent topic among the Kazoku-kai.Shizon Abe brought always bring this up when meeting Koreans.

    "The Japanese government has to have known that North Korea had been kidnapping Japanese for decades. "

    Well,they had some vaugue evidence.But not enough to accuse Pyongyang.Some has suspected South Korean manipulation behind it.

    "one has to wonder exactly what Japan wants. A full accounting and investigation? Fair enough. But at what point will Japan accept the results? "

    Wait a minuite.You are accusing GoJ for ignoring the missing citizens and now accusing them for searching them? I'm confused.
    Yeah,full accounting and investigation is nice,if it happens.So far there are no such measure taken by Pyongyang,thus we think it's too early to have case closed.

    What is it with you guys?
    I undersstand Japan poking is a trendy game among the knowing expats.But blaming the victim won't solve this case.

    Aceface

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