INNER MONGOLIA (ANS) -- According to ChinaAid, Christians Li Mingshun and Zhang Yonghu were indicted by the Erlianhaote City People's Procuratorate on July 31, 2009, for aiding North Korean refugees fleeing toSouth Korea through China.
Li and Zhang were among several Christians helping to provide food, shelter, and transportation for the 61 refugees crossing Northern Chinese provinces intoMongolia, where neutral state laws permit residents to seek asylum in South Korea.
Alerted as the refugees crossed into Mongolia, the Border Brigade of Erlianhaote city traveled to Qindao,Heilongjiang province, and arrested Li Mingshun on April 29, 2009.
A ChinaAid spokesperson told ANS, "The trial was held August 17, 2009 in the Erlianhaote City People's Court.Human rights lawyers defending Li and Zhang hoped to raise awareness concerning the Chinese government's treatment of North Korean refugees through this case.
"On August 30, 2009, Ms. Li was found guilty for her humanitarian activities by the Erlianhaote Procuratorate, (officially charged with 'human smuggling across the border'). She was sentenced to ten years in prison. Ms. Li's family in Qindao City received the verdict the morning of August 30.
"Mr. Zhang received a seven-year sentence for organizing transportation for the refugees to Inner Mongolia. Li's family reports they will be submitting an appeal for Li and Zhang's lawful release.
"The verdict underscores years of continued persecution for North Koreans in China, who have been denied refugee-status by the Chinese government and repatriated in violation of the UNHCR Convention andProtocol Relating to the Status of Refugees, which China signed in 1982."
The ChinaAid spokesperson went on to say, "The costs of repatriation are dire. Refugees face charges of treason upon their return to the home country, punishable by death, detention and/or lifelong imprisonment in labor camps. Detained Korean women and children in China are frequently sold into the sex-slave trade, disappearing from the formal record into the human trafficking void. Many Chinese and Korean Christians, like Li and Zhang, work with underground networks to aid these refugees as they seek freedom from persecution, only to be arrested and charged as criminals."
President of ChinaAid Xiqiu "Bob" Fu responded to Li and Zhang's sentences, saying: "I am shocked at how the Chinese government treats its own humanitarian workers. They are innocent! We must urge the international community to voice their concerns for the persecuted North Korean refugees and the humanitarian workers who serve them in their time of need."
He further called for the Chinese government to honor the Li family's appeal, find them innocent under the Chinese law, and release Li Mingshun and Zhang Yonghu."
Copyright 2009 ASSIST News Service
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