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		From prison camp to ballot box: North Korean defector seeks British 
		election win
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		 [March 24, 2021] 
		By Natalie Thomas, Andy Bruce and Phil Noble 
 BURY, England (Reuters) - Sixteen years 
		after she was left to die unremembered outside a labour camp in North 
		Korea, Jihyun Park will enter the British political history books if she 
		wins office in local elections this May.
 
 Human rights activist Park said she wants to repay a debt of kindness 
		shown by residents in the northern English town of Bury, her home since 
		2008, by becoming a councillor in the local government.
 
 She is standing in the May 6 election as a candidate for Prime Minister 
		Boris Johnson's Conservative Party in the Moorside electoral ward of 
		Bury, a former industrial town lined with old red brick houses.
 
 "I am really confident because I have already fought totalitarian evils 
		twice, because I escaped North Korea twice," Park, 52, told Reuters from 
		her house adorned with the flag of England and Britain's Union Jack.
 
		
		 
		
 "People were really nice to us. I want to pay back this debt," she said.
 
 She grew up in the mountainous North Hamgyong province of North Korea 
		but, hungry and desperate, in 1998 Park fled with her younger brother to 
		China where they fell into the hands of human traffickers.
 
 They were separated - her brother never to be seen again - and she was 
		sold to a man whose family used her as a slave.
 
 "One day I wanted to give up my life but I found that I was pregnant. I 
		had changed my mind because this child was my last family member - and 
		maybe this child would give me hope," she said.
 
 She hid her pregnancy and, fearing arrest in hospital with no ID or 
		papers, gave birth to a boy on her own.
 
 The pair struggled on for five years before Park was captured by the 
		Chinese authorities and sent back to North Korea without her son - a 
		parting of "unspeakable" pain, she said.
 
 Imprisoned in a squalid labour camp, she grew seriously ill from a leg 
		injury.
 
 "The police told me that you cannot die inside the camp, you die 
		outside. So they released me," Park said, adding that she prayed to 
		survive so she could be reunited with her son.
 
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			Jihyun Park, who fled North Korea before settling in Britain, poses 
			for a photograph after deciding to stand for election as a 
			Conservative party candidate in the upcoming local elections in the 
			Moorside Ward in Bury, Britain, March 22, 2021. Picture taken March 
			22, 2021. REUTERS/Phil Noble 
            
			 
            She regained enough strength to return to China and in 2005 she 
			found her son, who had been treated badly by her former masters.
 Park resolved to find a safe place for them.
 
 She met her now-husband during an abortive move to the Mongolian 
			desert and in 2007 a Korean pastor in Beijing put them in touch with 
			the United Nations, which relocated the family to Britain.
 
 They settled in Bury, birthplace of Robert Peel, a 19th century 
			prime minister and a founder of the modern Conservative Party.
 
 Asked why she joined the Conservatives, whose immigration policies 
			have been criticised by campaign groups like Amnesty International, 
			Park said their emphasis on family values and individual freedom 
			appealed to her.
 
 "Britain taught me what is freedom, and what is human. So that's why 
			I want to help. Last year was a very difficult year and many people 
			lost their family members," Park said, referring to the COVID-19 
			pandemic.
 
 She now spends her time helping other refugees from North Korea 
			adjust to life in Britain.
 
 While Park leads a happy life in Bury and has now raised three 
			children, her thoughts still turn to the past - and her younger 
			brother.
 
            
			 
			"I still don't know whether he survived or not, but I never give up 
			my hope. One day I want to be reunited with my brother," she said.
 (Writing by Andy Bruce; Editing by Giles Elgood)
 
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