Questão
Fundação Getúlio Vargas - FGV
2013
Fase Única
NORTH-KOREAN-BRIDESBy431873556cf
NORTH KOREAN BRIDES

By Melanie Kirkpatrick

1 Steven Kim, an American businessman from Long Island, New York, may be the world’s leading expert on the market for North Korean brides. He acquired this expertise accidentally. He likes to say it was God’s plan.

2 A decade or so ago he was living in China, overseeing the manufacture of chairs he sold to retail clients in the United States, when he heard about a secret church that catered to the South Korean businessmen who worked in the Shenzhen industrial zone, not far from his apartment. It wasn’t registered with the Chinese government, as required by law, so it operated underground, billing itself as a cultural association. There was no sign on the door and no cross on the roof. The 100 or so congregants had learned about the church as Kim had, by word of mouth.

3 Kim, a practicing Christian, became a regular attendee. One Sunday he noticed two shabbily dressed men seated in a corner of the room. After worship, he went up to them, said hello, and learned to his astonishment that they were from North Korea. They had escaped across the Tumen River to northeast China and traveled 2,000 miles south to Guangdong province, a journey that took two months. They hoped to find a way to slip across the border into Hong Kong. “They came to church asking for help,” he says. “But the church would only feed them, give them a few dollars, and let them go.”

4 Kim was outraged. “I asked the pastor, ‘Why do you let them go?’” “Because we’re afraid,” the pastor replied. “If we’re caught helping North Koreans, the church will be shut down.” Kim took the two men home.

5 That was the start. Kim began to assist North Korean refugees clandestinely. He provided safe houses, food, clothing, and money; eventually he organized secret passage across China to third countries. Before long, he gained a reputation along the new underground railroad as someone North Koreans could count on for assistance. Many of them turned out to be women fleeing from the Chinese men who had purchased them as brides.

6 Today he runs 318 Partners, a U.S.-based nonprofit organization dedicated to rescuing trafficked women in China.

7 Kim clearly has his hands full. The only practical escape route for fugitives from North Korea is through China, and human-rights groups say roughly 80 percent of those thousands of refugees are women and girls who have become “commodities for purchase,” in Kim’s words.

Adapted from Newsweek, August 27, 2012

Which of the following is most supported by the information in the article?
A
North Koreans now believe that going to China is not the best way to escape from their country.
B
North Korean men and women are often sold into various forms of slavery in China.
C
The only way for anyone to leave North Korea is clandestinely.
D
If the Chinese police find any North Korean living in China, he or she will be immediately deported to North Korea.
E
Many of the North Korean refugees in China are, in fact, running away from Chinese men.