脱北者

Seoul dating agency practises its version of Korean unification

Han Seol-hyang blushes as she recounts her memories of teenage dating in Pyongyang.

“Everything was in secret. It wasn’t all out in the open like in South Korea,” says the 30-year-old daughter of a North Korean government official. “It wasn’t that we were scared of being punished; that was just the culture.”

South Korea’s brash dating scene is one of a bewildering range of cultural differences confronting more than 25,000 North Koreans who have made their way south over the past 20 years, with many struggling to integrate socially and economically.

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