President Yoon Suk-yeol’s spokeswoman Kang In-sun said: “If they were forcibly repatriated to the North even when they expressed their will to defect, it’s a crime against humanity that violated both international law and the constitution.”
She promised the new administration would expose the truth behind the decision to banish the defectors, as an investigation into the case was re-opened.
But Moon’s former situation room chief and opposition lawmaker Yoon Kun-young hit back at furious critics.
He wrote on Facebook: “President Yoon, are you saying we should have let the grotesque murderers get away with their crime and protect them with our own people’s tax money?”
Moon has not commented on the fresh allegations.
It’s just absolutely shocking to look at these photos. I can’t believe this happened in South Korea, a democratic country.
Ji Seong-ho
Ji Seong-ho, a defector lawmaker with the conservative People’s Power Party who escaped North Korea in 2006, said he was “speechless” after seeing the photos.
He told NK News the fishermen were clearly physically resisting “with all their might not to be sent back to the North.”
He added: “It’s just absolutely shocking to look at these photos. I can’t believe this happened in South Korea, a democratic country.”
And Phil Robertson of New York-based Human Rights Watch also slammed officials involved with the scandal.
He fumed: “The two men’s desperate resistance to being forced back that is so apparent in those photos show that they understood they were fighting for their lives.
“What’s clear is the Moon Jae-in government was so desperate to please North Korean supreme leader Kim Jong-un that they shamefully disregarded basic principles of human rights and humanity, and that is precisely what they did by pushing these two men back to the North.”
South Korean prosecutors have launched an investigation into the case in wake of the controversy.