A man who fled hardship and oppression in North Korea has revealed how he cycled for 12 days through China to freedom.
Park Young-jin, 24, was on his second attempt to flee last year when he packed a few essentials and rode away on his bike.
He faced extreme danger even in China, as the country refuses to grant refugee status to North Korean defectors and considers them illegal economic migrants.
The Chinese authorities arrest and deport hundreds of defectors back into North Korea, sometimes in mass immigration sweeps. Chinese citizens caught aiding defectors face fines and imprisonment.
“One time I was sent back to North Korea through a broker so I couldn’t trust anybody any longer. So when I came out to China again I got a map and a compass and a bicycle, I just went”, he told The Guardian.
“I prepared a little mini tent, a change of clothes, a little of the money I earned.
“I didn’t know how long it was going to take so I couldn’t bring food”.
At first, he said, if was fun - he felt “young and free”. But as he got closer to Mongolia and felt the temperature drop he realised “it wasn’t going to be that much fun”.
Eventually, when he reached Mongolia, Park was able to travel to South Korea, arriving around a year ago.
Since 1953, between 100,000 and 300,000 North Koreans have defected, most of whom have fled to Russia or China.
No, there is no suggestion that this was his defence in court.
Greater Manchester version is probably a pretty good bet then. Thanks for the reply.
(Grauniad) Cycling to school almost became extinct - until one man revived the bike bus...
No problem with ultegra - have replaced the BB before and regreased. My wife's bike was the problem one. Ended up removing the chain rings instead !
I did wonder that. If you disassemble your cassette you would get a few sprockets!...
Beginner??? Where do I start? No mention of tyre levers, or a floor pump, or ordinary simple hand tools like screw drivers and pliers (needle nose...
Next time ask them about cycle infra!
I think Reach.plc and all the other local news purveyors could save themselves and their readers a lot of bother if they turned it into one...
Just a reminder that one of the relevant councillors dropped in to the comments of the story linked in the last paragraph to say that it wasn't...
Are you riding them on British roads? In which case that's indistinguishable from gravel anyway.