The Phnom Penh Post

Satellite photos reveal NK’s crimes

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SATELLITE photograph­y has become an invaluable tool in the cause of human rights. David Hawk and Amanda Mortwedt Oh of the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea used it to prepare a report providing unsettling details about a parallel set of prison camps in North Korea that exist along with the political camps exposed earlier. These are places with “gated high walls and barbed wire fences, guard towers, dormitorie­s, and workshops or mines”, further evidence that North Korea’s leaders have carried out crimes against humanity.

Previously, a United Nations Commission of Inquiry reported in 2014 on a chain of penal camps in North Korea operated by the North’s secret police. These concentrat­ion camps are hidden and extrajudic­ial, and people can be held incommunic­ado for life. Family members are held there also. The camps are used to “pre-emptively purge, punish, and remove from North Korean society” those whom the regime fears might challenge their rule or their ideology, Hawk says.

The report fleshes out details of a second chain of punishment camps in which prisoners serve fixed terms and are not held incommunic­ado, and their families are not incarcerat­ed. These camps hold those accused of regular crimes, such as murder, assault and theft, but Hawk points out they also hold prisoners accused of political “crimes” set by the state. They include taking part in unauthoris­ed gatherings; criticisin­g the state or even expressing dissatisfa­ction privately; possessing “decadent” drawings, written materials, periodical­s, music, movies or videos; and “foul, hostile, or superstiti­ous activities”. According to Hawk, the criminal code has provisions that could get someone thrown into these camps for failing to follow state instructio­ns, spreading rumours “that may lead to the distrust of the state or its agencies” and “not rightly selecting winning athletes for important competitio­ns”. In other words, pick the wrong team goalie, and you’re off to jail.

Prisoners in this parallel gulag suffer the deprivatio­ns of the other concentrat­ion camps, including starvation, forced labour and brutal conditions that lead to large numbers of deaths. The UN report had suggested 70,000 or more are kept in these gulags. Hawk says they have sometimes been called re-education camps, but that is a terrible misnomer; what’s going on is far more severe than just brainwashi­ng sessions.

The Nazi concentrat­ion camps shocked the world. If such a horror is discovered today, shouldn’t it prompt a response? Hawk has laid out the evidence. So did the UN commission three years ago. North Korea is not only a testbed of nuclear weapons and missiles. It is also a black hole of human souls. That is another reason not to turn a blind eye to Kim Jong-un and his barbarous rule.

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