The Daily Telegraph

Prison for North Korean parents if their children are caught watching Hollywood films

- By Julian Ryall in Tokyo and Nicola Smith

PARENTS who let their children watch Hollywood blockbuste­rs will be sent to prison camps, North Korea has said.

Pyongyang is intensifyi­ng its efforts to eradicate foreign films and television programmes by telling parents that they will be punished if their children are caught watching illicit overseas movies.

Previously, parents could escape with a stern warning if their children were found in possession of media smuggled into the North from overseas.

Inminban, or compulsory neighbourh­ood watch meetings, are being rolled out to inform parents there will no longer be leniency if their children are exposed to Western media, Radio Free Asia (RFA) reported.

Quoting sources inside North Korea, the report said parents are being instructed to educate their children “properly” in the state’s socialist ideals.

A parent whose son or daughter is caught watching a foreign movie will go to a labour camp for six months – but their children will have to serve five years. Anyone found talking, dancing or singing “like a South Korean” will serve six months, with their parents serving a similar term.

“The host of the meeting emphasises parental responsibi­lity, saying that education for children begins at home,” the source told RFA. “If parents do not educate their children from moment to moment, they will dance and sing of capitalism and become anti-socialists.” Anyone convicted of selling smuggled videos can be sentenced to death.

In October, two teenagers were reportedly executed by firing squad in the city of Hyesan, on the border with China, after watching and distributi­ng South Korean films.

Images have also emerged of a group of children and parents seated before a large crowd as their sentences are read out for breaking the Rejection of Reactionar­y Thought and Culture Act by watching foreign films.

News of the clampdown came as state media said that North Korea test-fired four long-range Hwasal-2 missiles . The move was to hone its rapid-response capabiliti­es towards “hostile forces”, the Korean Central News Agency reported.

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