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North Korea
This Week in AsiaPolitics

North Korean workers endure slave-like conditions in Russia: ‘prison without bars’

Defectors describe working 18-hour days for almost no pay in bug-infested containers, all while facing constant threats of violence

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A North Korean defector in Seoul who has escaped from working in Russia under harsh conditions for seven years. Photo: EPA-EFE
SCMP’s Asia desk
North Korean construction workers sent to labour-strapped Russia have been forced to endure slave-like conditions of 18-hour days, two days off a year and bug-infested sleeping quarters, according to their accounts reported in the media.

Working on Russian high-rise flats and other construction sites, these labourers often toil from 6am until 2am the next morning, sometimes in the dark with little safety equipment, the BBC reported on Tuesday, citing testimonies from six defectors.

They were not allowed out of the construction sites for fear that they would escape.

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“I felt like I was in a labour camp; a prison without bars,” one worker, who managed to escape Russia last year, told the BBC.

Whatever little sleep they had was in dirty and bug-infested shipping containers or on the floor of unfinished buildings.

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“Some people would leave their post to sleep in the day, or fall asleep standing up, but the supervisors would find them and beat them. It was truly like we were dying,” said another worker.

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