2 KOREANS TELL OF ABDUCTION AND FILM MAKING

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000100890031-1
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
July 20, 2010
Sequence Number: 
31
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 15, 1986
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00552R000100890031-1.pdf140.33 KB
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/20: CIA-RDP90-00552R000100890031-1 STAT i0t NEW YORK TIMES ON PAGE 15 May 1986 2 Koreans Tell of Abduction and Film Making By BERNARD GWERTZMAN the possibilities of exporting North Ko- Central Intelligence AaAnCV Rich Special to The New York Times rean films to the West. a se to A ent ~Park While in the Austrian capital they ee uiar ne was BALTIMORE, May 14 - A South Ko- hatched their plan to stay in the West. our er direc ors aga ern- rean film director and his actress wife, With the help of a Japanese journalist Inn Miss iss ol, w e y was who both disappeared into North Korea Mr. Shin had known in the past, they vorced from Mr. Shin at that time, was under mysterious circumstances eight shook off a North Korean agent in a running an acting school in Seoul when h h years ago, emerged here today and said they had been kidnapped on the di- rect orders of the son of President Kim II Sung of North Korea. Shin San Ok, the director, and his wife, Choi Un Hui, met with two report- ers here and told a story that they found more bizarre than any screen- play. They said Kim 11 Sung's son, Kim Jong II, who is widely regarded as the most important Communist Party offi- cial in North Korea today and the likely successor to his father, was a movie buff, with a personal collection of 20,000 films. The elder Mr. Kim is both head of the Government and the party. "Kim Jong 11 told us later he had or- dered our kidnapping," Mr. Shin said. The four-and-a-half hour interview was conducted through an interpreter, with Mr. Shin occasionally using English. Mr. Shin said the younger Mr. Kim told them he wanted to upgrade his country's film industry and had or- dered North Korean agents to kidnap them separately, six months apart, in Hong Kong, and transport them to Pyongyang, where he sought their assistance. Miss Choi, 54 years old, who was seized first, said she refused to help and was kept under house ar- rest. Mr. Shin, 59, who was kidnapped later, said he was told his wife was dead and refused to cooperate also. Twice, he said, he tried to escape, but after his second effort he was impris- oned for four years in Prison No. 6, out- side of Pyongyang, along with 2,000 other political prisoners. Finally, he said, in March 1983, after being reu- nited with Miss Choi for the first time, they agreed to cooperate in Kim Jong Il's plans while all the time looking for ways to make their escape together. After that, they were taken to Bel- grade, Yugoslavia, in April 1984, with instructions to declare that they had gone to North Korea voluntarily. They complied and repeated this on subse- quent occasions. South Korean authori- ties maintained that they had been kid- napped. The two said they had won Kim 11 Jong's confidence after being awarded several movie prizes in eastern Europe for their productions in North Korea. Traveled to Eastern Europe Then they were allowed to travel to eastern Europe together. Two months ago, while on a trip to Budapest to dis- cuss a joint North Korean-Hungarian movie on Genghis Khan, they stopped in Vienna, with permission, to probe taxi c ase t rough the city and sought asylum in the United States Embassy. They also paid Kim 11 Jong back for his kidnapping, they said, by tricking him into depositing in the Bank of America branch in Vienna $2.3 million that is still in Mr. Shin's name. Mr. Shin said he regarded the money as .an insurance policy," but he has not yet decided what to do about it. In its only comment on their escape to the United States, North Korea has ac- cused them not of seeking freedom but of trying to abscond with funds. For the last month, they have been fed in "safe houses"y Central n1`0111-1. A-, and Vtate De officials, A State Department of- ficio said they had convinced Amer- ican authorities that their story was credible and would probably be given permission to live in the United States. Express Concern for Safety Throughout the interview with this reporter and Don Oberdorfer of The Washington Post, the first they have given since they sought asylum March 13, both expressed concern for their safety. They said they had been told by North Korean authorities that if they ever escaped, they would be assassi- nated. American security guards stood outside the room in the hotel. "I do believe there is a possibiity that they will try to kill us," Mr. Shin said. They have been regarded as "a find" by American intelligence oecause o the intimate details e have e been- -0 e a Inner ruim North ores w e next to A l - 9 9 i o e comm s coup a ut which least is wn. n pa is ar, they were a e to to officials about Kim Jong II, who is 47 years old and who has been variously described as close to death or in complete charge. Described as Very Intelligent They described him as a very intelli- gent, ruthless official, who made every decision, even the most seemingly in- significant. "He is a micro-manager," Mr. Shin said. He said the funds for his film- making company in North Korea were handled directly by the younger Mr. Kim, who had a large projection room in his house and who seemed to have a deep interest in films. It has never been reported before that Kim Jong Il was so intrigued by movies. While they are largely unknown in the West, Mr. Shin and Miss Choi had celebrity status in South Korea and 77 when this story begins said. icerise to direct He also was transferred by boat to a films in South Korea because a sa cargo ship and taken to North Korea. Ko today, of a dispute with the- orean When he askeLlALiafsllmation about she was told that a Chinese business- to --W,w film for her. -- On Jan. 14, 1978, while in Hong Kong, she said, she was told by someone who had worked for her husband that the businessman was out of town, but that she should wait. A Korean woman, who later turned out to be a North Korean agent, took her on a tour. While at Repulse Bay, a part of Hong Kong, a group of men who seemed to know who miss Choi was suggested a "short" boat ride, and after first resist- ing, Miss Choi agreed. "I didn't know my way around and did not know how to get back to my hotel. by myself." "I realized the boat was going straight to sea," Miss Choi said, sti- fling tears with a tissue. "I felt uneasy. I thought this must be a robbery. I was thinking about the money in my hand- bag. I asked the woman what this was about, and she just kept quiet and began smoking cigarettes." Awoke Being Carried to Ship One of the men, she said, who looked like a leader, said to her, "We are head- ing for Kim 11 Sung's embrace." "I didn't quite understand what he said," she said. "He repeated it. I felt ill, I felt like the blood was being drained. I fainted." When she awoke, she said, she was being carried aboard a cargo ship at sea, where she was taken to the cap- tain's cabin for the trip to Nampo, the port near Pyongyang. When the ship berthed, she was met by Kim Jong Il. She said she was given the use of a for- mer house of Kim Jong Il and was asked repeatedly to work for North Korea, which she said she refused to do. Mr. Shin said that when his wife did not return to South Korea as scheduled, he called up the man who had served as his wife's host. "He told me that he could not speak over the phone and asked me to come to Hong Kong." He said he flew to Hong Kong and was told by the intermediary that his wife had "disappeared." But nothing more. He returned to Hong Kong in July 1978. On his way to dinner at the Re- pulse Bay Hotel with a Korean, who later turned out to be a North Korean agent, he said, his car was stopped by a number of men, one of whom was armed with a knife. They put a sack over his head, and doused him with L-- -- --- .. . . .- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/20: CIA-RDP90-00552R000100890031-1