13 North Korean restaurant workers defect to South Korea - Action News
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13 North Korean restaurant workers defect to South Korea

Thirteen North Koreans working at the same restaurant in a foreign country have defected to South Korea, Seoul officials said Friday.

Unclear yet if they defected directly from North or from another country

A vehicle is checked at the demilitarized zone (DMZ) in Paju, South Korea in a February 11 file photo. A South Korean official said one male and 12 female North Korean workers arrived in the South on Thursday. (Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images)

Thirteen North Koreans working at the same restaurant in a foreign country have defected to South Korea, Seoul officials said Friday.

People working in North Korean-operated restaurants overseas have previously defected, but this is the first time multiple workers have escaped from the same restaurant, South Korean Unification Ministry spokesman Jeong Joon Hee told reporters in Seoul.

North Korean defections are a bitter point of contention between the rival Koreas. Pyongyang usually accuses Seoul of enticing North Korean citizens to defect, something Seoul denies.

Overseas North Korean workers are usually thought to be chosen largely because of their loyalty.

Jeong said one male and 12 female North Korean workers arrived in the South on Thursday. He didn't reveal the country where they were working to avoid diplomatic problems and possibly endanger North Koreans still working in the country.

The North Koreans told South Korean officials that they learned about the South and began to distrust North Korean propaganda by watching South Korean TV dramas and movies and from searching the Internet while living overseas, Jeong said.

South Korean officials believe overseas North Korean restaurants have been suffering economically since stronger international sanctions were applied against North Korea over its recent nuclear test and long-range rocket launch. Jeong said the defectors told South Korean officials that their restaurant was struggling to meet demands from North Korean authorities at home for foreign currency.

South Korea recently advised its citizens not to patronize North Korean restaurants, although such visits are not illegal. South Korea's spy agency estimates that North Korea runs about 130 restaurants in other countries about 100 in China and the others in Russia, Southeast Asia and South Asia.

The Unification Ministry's website says more than 29,000 North Koreans have defected to South Korea as of March.