Migrant workers As of May 2008, roughly 200 North Korean citizens worked in Mongolia. In February 2008, Ulaanbaatar and Pyongyang reached an agreement which would allow as many as 5,300 North Korean workers to come to Mongolia over the following five years. The relevant agreement came before the
State Great Hural for approval in May that year.
Defectors , it was estimated that 500
North Korean defectors entered Mongolia each month, largely by way of neighbouring
China. As early as 2004, some South Korean citizens' groups had begun laying plans to construct camps in Mongolia to house North Korean refugees; however, they were denied permission by the Mongolian government. In September 2005, South Korean NGO Rainbow Foundation stated that they had been granted 1.3 square kilometres of land near Ulaanbaatar, and would soon begin construction on a centre which could house as many as 200 North Korean refugees However, during his November 2006 trip to Beijing,
Mongolian prime minister Miyeegombyn Enkhbold denied reports that his country was planning to set up any refugee camps for North Koreans, though he reaffirmed that they would be treated in a humanitarian manner. The Mongolian government does have facilities to provide shelter for North Korean refugees on their territory; in December 2007,
Vitit Muntarbhorn, the
United Nations Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in North Korea, praised Mongolia's treatment of North Korean refugees in an official report, noting that they had made commendable progress in improving such facilities since his previous visit. Both the Mongolian and South Korean governments' policies towards refugees have shifted several times. In June 2007, Mongolia began to turn North Korean refugees away from their borders, reportedly with the aim of improving
their diplomatic relations with North Korea. Similarly, in October 2007, the South Korean side was reported to be "closing the door" to North Korean refugees in Mongolia and Southeast Asia; North Korea watcher
Andrei Lankov, a professor at Seoul's
Kookmin University, attributed this to a deliberate policy by the South Korean government to minimise the number of new refugees. ==See also==