The highest-level North Korean diplomat to defect to South Korea said Wednesday that he decided to flee last year because he didn’t want his children to live miserable lives in the North.
Thae Yong Ho, a former minister at the North Korean Embassy in London, told reporters that he was lucky to have been able to bring both of his sons to London, unlike other North Korean diplomats who are forced to leave some of their children at home as “hostages. ”
After his sons, now 20 and 27, learned about life in Britain, they began asking him questions such as why North Korea barred use of the Internet and executed people without proper legal procedures, he said.
Their British friends at school made fun of them over the nature of their homeland, he said. For instance, when they grew long hair, their friends laughed and asked whether they could be arrested in North Korea because they had heard all young men were required to have short haircuts.
“These kinds of questions bombarded my sons,” Thae said.
Thae, who said as a diplomat abroad he had the privilege of access to outside information, said he decided to talk frankly with them about North Korea. He concluded that his sons would have miserable lives if they returned home because they had come to know the truth about the country.
Ahead of their defection to South Korea, Thae said, he told his sons that he was going to “cut the chains of slavery and you are free men. ”
He said his sons are happy and “feeling a true sense of freedom” in South Korea.
Thae said his disappointment with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un was another reason he defected. He said he initially had some hopes for Kim but eventually fell into despair after watching him execute officials without proper reasons and pursue development of nuclear weapons.