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Chinese police offer US$23,000 reward for North Korean prison escapee

  • 39-year-old convict went on the run on Monday night after climbing the facility’s walls
  • The prisoner had less than two years of an 11-year sentence to serve when he fled, according to court documents

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After crossing the border from North Korea into China in 2013, Zhu Xianjian carried out a series of crimes, including stabbing a woman. Credit: Handout
Prison authorities in China’s northeastern city of Jilin have offered a 150,000 yuan (US$23,300) reward for the capture of a North Korean convict who broke out of jail on Monday night, according to a now-deleted notice by Jilin police.
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A reward of 100,000 yuan was offered for information leading to his capture.

The escapee, identified as Zhu Xianjian, 39, was a coal mine worker from North Hamgyong province who crossed illegally into Tumen county in Yanbian, a Chinese border city in 2013.

Once in China, he committed a string of crimes including stabbing a woman to steal 1,482 yuan in cash and bank deposit books, according to a court ruling.

He was sentenced to 11 years and three months in 2016, a term that was reduced in 2017 and again in 2020 for good behaviour and a show of remorse. When Zhu escaped, he had less than two years of jail term to serve, according to court documents.

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In surveillance footage posted on Chinese social media by news agency China News Service, Zhu was working in the prison yard when he climbed onto the top of a shed on the edge of the prison, used what appeared to be a rope to damage the facility’s electric fencing, and then scaled the fence to flee.

Calls to officers Chen and Zhang, whose contact information were given in the reward notice, went unanswered.

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