Journalist and photographer covering human rights, spying, the escapee community and more.
Ifang Bremer
I spent weeks piecing together the story of the man South Korean police recently arrested for flying drones into North Korea — and what may have driven him to do it.
You can read the story here at @nknewsorg.bsky.social 👇
www.nknews.org/2026/03/cros...
Miari Texas — Seoul’s last red-light district — faces forced demolition.
Sex workers resisting eviction say state aid requires them to register as trafficking victims.
Ifang Bremer examines the policy gap behind the standoff: cstu.io/b1593e
Video
On a weekend morning in September, a 30-year-old South Korean man surnamed Oh traveled to a border island and launched a fixed-wing drone over the water, toward North Korea. By his own account, he did...
🚀 I’ve launched my new website. Social media come and go, so I wanted a space to share and update my work consistently. It’s a selection of stories + images that mean the most to me—and a way to connect as I look ahead to new opportunities. Take a look and reach out anytime 👉 ifangbremer.com
In the face of forced evictions to make space for new apartment blocks, they’re not asking for much: just a room of their own, and the chance to live safely with their families and pets.
Behind the barricades I met women cooking and living together. Their workplace has become both shelter and trap—offering warmth and companionship, but also confining them to a place with no future.
I spent time in Miari Texas, Seoul’s last red-light district, where sex workers have welded steel over their doors to resist eviction. Their fight isn’t only about survival, but about dignity and the right to a home.