Park decided to leave North Korea in 1998 with her brother after being urged by her father. Her brother was thrown out of the military and military officials came looking for him. Park crossed the border and entered into China with her brother. A smuggler promised Park a "well-paid job", instead Park was sold for 5,000 Yuan[7] into a forced marriage with a farmer, with whom she had a child.[2]
Repatriation and imprisonment
Park was subsequently brought back into the prison camps, where she was forced to work on farms.[8]
Second defection
In year 2004, she again attempted defection, and eventually escaped from North Korea with help of a local broker through mountainous terrain. Once back in China, she stayed a few days in her former shelter, then fled to Beijing with her son, and this time hoped to get help from the South Korean embassy, but later returned back to the border.[8]
Citizenship
In 2008, she went to the United Kingdom as a refugee. Like many new refugees, she struggled initially with the English language and was unable to communicate with anyone for some time. She eventually gained citizenship and settled permanently.[7] She published a memoir, The Hard Road Out: One Woman's Escape from North Korea, in 2022.[9]