This study investigated differences in human rights violation experience between North Korean defectors(NKD) repatriated forcefully from China and non-repatriated. 119NKD were surveyed in Seoul, South Korea using the Istanbul Protocol for Torture Experience (The Istanbul Protocol, 1999) from September to December 2017. 81.5% were repatriated and 18.5% were non-repatriated. 30.6% were experienced of human right violence in China by Chinese police. The repatriated were significantly higher than the non-repatriated in number of arrest(t=-2.323, p<0.05), of imprisonment (t=-2.302, p<0.05), of interrogation(t=-3.253, p<0.001), of torture(t=-11.647, p<0.0001), of torture aftereffects(t=-4.031, p<0.0001), of eye witness at public execution(t=-2.185, p<0.05), and of labor(t=-3.165, p<0.01). Average number of arrest was 6.57times, of imprisonment was 5.79times, of interrogation was 2.78times, of torture was 27.97times, of torture aftereffects was 5.90times, of eye witness at public execution was 1.83times, and of forced labor was 3.09times of the repatriated were higher than the non-repatriated. 46.6% of respondents were experienced of torture in China by Chinese police in captivities. To conclude, human rights of the repatriated were significantly violated compared to the non-repatriated so that China should stop violence and forced repatriate them to North Korea and should accept them as political refugees.