South Korea says Russia importing tens of thousands of North Korean workers


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Summary

Brutal conditions

BBC interviews with six escapees describe up to 20-hour days, only two days off yearly, surveillance, beatings, and bug-infested housing. Most pay is taken as “loyalty fees,” with the remainder withheld until workers return.

Expanding developments

South Korean intelligence told the BBC over 10,000 North Koreans arrived in Russia last year, potentially topping 50,000 despite a 2019 UN labor ban. Many work construction, others in clothing factories and IT centers; a senior Russian official confirmed 5,000 for rebuilding Kursk.

Tightened controls

Some workers fled using contraband phones, but activists report more ideological training and stricter movement limits. South Korean officials say escapes to Seoul halved since 2022, and experts expect deployments to continue beyond the war.


Full story

South Korean intelligence officials told the BBC that Russia is bringing in tens of thousands of North Korean laborers to offset a severe worker shortage linked to the war in Ukraine. They said more than 10,000 laborers arrived in 2024, and the total could exceed 50,000.

Employers assign many workers to construction projects and place others in clothing factories and IT centers, which the United Nations says violate its 2019 ban on North Korean labor abroad.

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The influx comes amid closer Russia–North Korea ties, including repeated military support from Pyongyang through missiles, artillery shells and soldiers. A senior Russian official recently confirmed plans to bring in 5,000 North Koreans to help rebuild the Kursk region, and South Korean intelligence believes Russia could send some of them to areas of Ukraine under its control.

What conditions do the workers face?

BBC interviews with six escapees described punishing workdays of up to 20 hours and only two days off per year. Workers said they were confined to job sites under constant surveillance by North Korean security agents. Sleeping quarters ranged from bug-infested shipping containers to unfinished buildings sealed with tarps.

Construction laborer “Jin” told the BBC he was escorted directly from the airport to a site in Russia’s Far East and ordered not to speak to anyone. “Tae,” another escapee, said his hands would seize each morning from the previous day’s work. Others reported beatings for resting on the job and working in unsafe conditions at night with little protective equipment.

How are the workers paid?

Recruiters reportedly select workers through a strict vetting process and promise them far higher wages than they could earn at home. The North Korean government takes most of the pay as “loyalty fees,” while employers withhold the remaining $100 to $200 a month until the workers return home. Intelligence officials said the system is designed to prevent escapes.

One escapee told the BBC he earned far less than other foreign laborers and felt the sites were “a prison without bars.”

What are the risks of escape?

A handful of workers have fled using contraband smartphones purchased with small daily allowances. One escapee traveled across Russia to meet a lawyer who arranged his journey to Seoul. But activists and academics say the North Korean government has tightened controls, increasing ideological training sessions and restricting outings.

South Korean officials say the number of laborers escaping Russia and reaching Seoul has dropped from about 20 a year in 2022 to around 10 last year. Intelligence officials predict the deployments will continue even after the war, which one expert described as a lasting outcome of closer ties between Kim Jong Un and Vladimir Putin.

“These workers will be the lasting legacy of Kim and Putin’s wartime friendship,” said Andrei Lankov, a professor at Kookmin University in Seoul and a renowned expert in North Korea-Russia relations.

Emma Stoltzfus (Video Editor), Alex Delia (Deputy Managing Editor), and Ally Heath (Senior Digital Producer) contributed to this report.
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Why this story matters

The reported use of North Korean laborers in Russia would violate U.N. sanctions. The accusations raise concerns about workers' rights, breaches of international law and the deepening relationship between Pyongyang and Moscow during the war in Ukraine.

Forced labor and human rights

Many North Korean workers face harsh conditions, surveillance, forced labor and other workers' rights violations.

Sanctions and international law

The U.N. banned North Korean labor abroad, but South Korean intelligence has revealed large numbers of workers in Russia, which would violate international sanctions.

North Korea–Russia relations

Intelligence officials believe these labor deployments are part of a deepening tie between North Korea and Russia. The countries’ military and economic exchanges are taking on greater significance as Russia's war in Ukraine continues.

SAN provides
Unbiased. Straight Facts.

Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

AllSides Certified Balanced May 2025

Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

Find out more

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