I hate to say it, but for the orient, this is all business as usual. The trade in wives is not new and here we have a situation ready made for a much larger level of activity than ever previously contemplated.
The North Korean household is typically destitute, particularly after the badly bungled currency exchange which liquidated the black market. In China we have men with the necessary money.
The sex trade component is always out there operating in the shadows and would otherwise go unremarked unpleasant as it is.
This is a continuing reflection of the slow moving North Korean economic collapse. It could culminate in a far larger shift of population out of North Korea itself. These women could well be the forerunners even if they appear exploited. They all have families and they all write letters. In a culture which traditionally accepts been married off at the parent’s behest, there is little resistance to all this.
Buy a North Korean Woman for Less Than a Used Car
by Amanda Kloer
May 07, 2010 07:00 AM (PT)Topics:
The global recession has affected China like every other country in the world. But despite a dip in the Chinese economy, at least one imported product remains affordable there: North Korean women. In China , a woman can be imported from North Korea for about $1500, less than the price of a decent used car. And the business of trafficking women from North Korea to China is booming.
Sex trafficking is also going strong, serving the Chinese men who are looking to get laid rather than married. Sometimes, women are offered jobs in the Chinese tech industry. Those jobs turn out to be stripping for Internet webcasts and/or forced prostitution. North Korean women who are forced into prostitution face even more risks than those forced into marriages, because if caught, they face additional punishments back home.
Both the forced marriages and the sex trafficking are leading to a generation of Chinese-Korean children without a clear home. The children of trafficked women and their husbands or johns often end up not just homeless, but stateless as well. Usually, this happens when the Korean mother is caught in China without proper documentation and deported to North Korea , often to prison or a labor camp where she can't bring the child. If the Chinese father doesn't take responsibility for the child, then the kid ends up an orphan which no parent or country able and willing to take care of him or her.
The cross-border trafficking of women from North Korea to China has become an epidemic in the truest sense to the word. It's spreading farther into both countries than the border region and infecting thousands of women. It's even affecting a new generation of children, living without a family or a country to call hom