Zigner is right, the OPs question is not a legal one. It is a banking one. At its core, it BECOMES a legal one. The OP wants to know how to get the money. The problem is, it is NOT her money. It is the corporation's money. While the OP may own the corporation, that does not mean the assets are hers. I don't get to write a check for my portion of Apple's overseas accounts just because I own a couple of shares.
With that in mind, the theory of what to do is simple. Have the corporation give the OP the money. There seem two ways. First, at the stockholder's meeting, the OP votes her shares to make her manager/president and then gets the money into the corporation and then writes herself a check for the amount. True, there could be some fiduciary and legal problems (depending on the corporation's facts); but, it could be done. The second would be to sue the corporation and president/officers for breach of ownership and/or fiduciary duties to her.
That is the theory. In practicality? It is going to be hard to get legal justice in a foreign country when the people who harmed you are difficult to find.