49c-3-222
Thus for the first time the famine brought North Koreans to the outside world. At the peak, perhaps 80,000 North Koreans were hiding in north-east China looking for food, work or a clandestine route to South Korea. These crossings bred a habit: whereas leaving North Korea was unthinkable before, since the mid-1990s more than 500,000 North Koreans have crossed into China, legally or illegally. Most have eventually returned (indeed, many make multiple trips), with startling evidence of a very different world outside.
Surveys among these North Koreans in China's border provinces offer the best insights to date about ordinary life in North Korea. Ground-breaking work by three scholars, Yoonok Chang, Stephan Haggard and Marcus Noland, published this year by the Peterson Institute for International Economics (IIE), offers a psychological as much as a material portrait of North Korea. It is clear that the famine and the government's brutal mismanagement of it (both in denying food to those who most needed it and in criminalising people's response to hunger) cast a long shadow.
In their survey of 1,300 North Koreans, the authors draw a harrowing picture. Some 23% of men and 37% of women say family members died of hunger. More than a quarter report being arrested, and of those who were held in political detention (about a tenth of the survey sample), 90% witnessed forced starvation, 60% saw deaths due to beating or torture and 27% said they had witnessed executions.
A. ¾îÈÖ
peak ÃÖ°íÁ¡, »êºÀ¿ì¸®. clandestine route ºñ¹Ð Åë·Î. breed-bred-bred ³º´Ù.
whereas ...ÀÎ ¹Ý¸é¿¡(Á¢¼Ó»ç). multiple ´Ù¼öÀÇ. startling ³î¶ó¿î. survey Á¶»ç.
insight ÅëÂû, ãÛ̸(½Ä°ß). offer the best insights °¡Àå Àß µé¿©´Ùº¸°Ô ÇÏ´Ù.
to date ÇöÀç±îÁö. ground-breaking work °³Ã´ÀÚÀûÀÎ ÀÛ¾÷(ÀÛǰ).
psychological ½É¸®ÇÐÀûÀÎ. portrait ÃÊ»óÈ, ¹¦»ç. brutal ¾ß¸¸ÀûÀÎ, ÀÜÀÎÇÑ, ºñÀεµÀûÀÎ.
management ó¸®, °ü¸®. criminalize À¯ÁË·Î ÇÏ´Ù.
harrowing °¡½¿ÀÌ Âõ¾îÁö´Â, ºñÂüÇÑ. detention ¾ï·ù, °¨±Ý. a tenth 1/10.
forced starvation °¿äµÈ ä»ÞÝ(¾Æ»ç). due to ...¶§¹®¿¡. beating ±¸Å¸.
torture ͸Ùý(°í¹®).
B. ±¸¹®
- More than a quarter report being arrested.
[(Á¶»çÀÚÀÇ) 1/4 ÀÌ»óÀÌ Ã¼Æ÷µÈ ÀûÀÌ ÀÖ´Ù°í ¸»ÇÏ¿´´Ù.]
49c-4-223
The findings underscore earlier clinical reports of psychological distress akin to post-traumatic stress disorder: doctors working with North Korean refugees put rates of distress at 30-45%. Clearly, some of the stress is associated simply with getting to China. But beyond that, the IIE authors find that certain groups of refugees are particularly disturbed. These include those imprisoned by the regime, and those who lost family members to hunger or illness.
Strikingly, the psychological effect is as great or greater among the group of interviewees who were aware of international aid programmes for the starving but who did not believe that they themselves had been beneficiaries. At its peak, the humanitarian programme was supposedly feeding more than a third of the population, yet a large minority of those interviewed had never heard of the programme. Of the majority who had, 96% believed they had not benefited from itthey assumed that the armed forces had appropriated the aid. This group, the authors find, was 'profoundly embittered'. Modelling conservatively, they estimate that 35% of the North Korean population were in a famine area, knew of the aid but thought they were not receiving any of it. That makes it hard to argue that Mr Kim, even as his public appearances are greeted with mass displays of emotion, still commands the people's loyalty. It seems that the regime itself does not think so: it has long classified more than half the population as hostile or at best wavering in their loyalties. Possibly this assessment is no longer paranoid.
A. ¾îÈÖ
underscore ...À» °Á¶ÇÏ´Ù. clinical report ìúßÉÜÃͱ(Àӻ󺸰í).
distress °íÅë. akin µ¿Á·ÀÇ. akin to ...¿Í À¯»çÇÑ. post=after. disorder òðü´(Áúȯ).
post-traumatic stress disorder èâß¿(¿Ü»ó) ÈÄÀ¯ÁõÀ¸·Î ÀÎÇÑ ½ºÆ®·¹½º Áúȯ.
refugee ÑñÚÅ(³¹Î). associate °ü·Ã½ÃŰ´Ù, æáßÌ(¿¬»ó)ÇÏ´Ù.
disturb ºÒ¾ÈÇØÇÏ´Ù, ¾îÁö·´È÷´Ù. strikingly ³î¶ø°Ôµµ.
interviewee ÀÎÅͺ並 ´çÇÏ´Â »ç¶÷. beneficiary áôû³íº(¼öÇýÀÚ). supposedly ¾Æ¸¶µµ.
the armed forces ÏÚÝ»(±ººÎ). appropriate ó·Ü×(Âøº¹)ÇÏ´Ù, Ô¨éÄ(µµ¿ë)ÇÏ´Ù.
profoundly ±íÀÌ, ¿ÏÀüÈ÷. embitter ¾²¶ó¸®°Ô ÇÏ´Ù, ºÐ°Ý½ÃŰ´Ù.
model ¸¸µé´Ù, ¼³°èÇÏ´Ù, ¸ðÇüÀ» ¸¸µé´Ù. conservatively ¿Â°ÇÇϰÔ, Á¶½É½º·´°Ô.
loyalty Ãæ¼º. classify ºÐ·ùÇÏ´Ù. hostile Àû´ëÀûÀÎ. wavering À¯µ¿ÀûÀÎ, Èçµé¸®´Â.
assessment Æò°¡, ÞÛïÒ(»çÁ¤). paranoid ø¶òûÜ»(ÆíÁýº´)ÀÇ.
B. ±¸¹®
- That makes it hard . . . commands the people's loyalty.
[±×°ÍÀº ±èÁ¤ÀÏÀÌ ±×°¡ ´ëÁß ¾Õ¿¡ ³ªÅ¸³¯ ¶§ ¿±¤ÀûÀΠȯȣ¸¦ ¹ÞÁö¸¸ ¿©ÀüÈ÷ ¹ÎÁßÀÇ Ãæ¼ºÀ» ´©¸®°í ÀÖ´Ù°í ÁÖÀåÇÏ´Â °ÍÀ» ¾î·Æ°Ô ÇÑ´Ù.]
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