The parents of Megumi
Yokota, a Japanese girl abducted by North Korea, have described a meeting with
her daughter as "miraculous," according to the BBC.
Megumi Yokota was kidnapped
by North Korean agents in 1977, and she married a South Korean abductee and had
a daughter in 1994. Her parents, Shigeru and Sakie Yokota, have campaigned for
decades to find out what happened to her.
For the first time, her parents were allowed to
meet Megumi's daughter in Mongolia. The couple has described their meeting with
26-year-old Kim Eun-gyong (Megumi's daughter) in this way: "It was a
miraculous event and it provided great pleasure."
Since the couple did not
want to make the meeting political, they did not ask about the fate of their
daughter.
Megumi Yokota was one of a
number of Japanese nationals abducted by Pyongyang in the 1970s and 80s as a
way of training North Korean spies.
The abduction issue remains
a key issue in the relationship between Japan and North Korea.
Source: BBC