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The HELL of North Korea’s Punishments and Concentration Camps

When Korea was divided, most people assumed  the northern half would eventually find its   way to become a normal country.

But the  regime taking shape in Pyongyang wasn’t   building a country.

It was building  a machine designed to control every   person inside it completely,  permanently, and without mercy.

Korea did not choose to be divided.

In  August 1945, two American military officers,   Dean Rusk and Charles Bonesteel, sat down with a  National Geographic map and drew a line across the   38th parallel in about thirty minutes.

No Koreans  were in the room.

No Koreans were asked for their   opinion.

A country of 25 million people was split  in two by men who had never even been there.

The Soviet Union took control of the north.

The United States took control of the  south.

Within three years, both sides   had their own governments.

But only one of them  was building what would become a prison state.

The man chosen by the Soviets to lead North  Korea was Kim Il-sung.

He was 33 years old,   had fought as an anti-Japanese guerrilla, and  had spent years studying Stalinist methods of   control.

He was not chosen by the Korean  people.

He was chosen by Moscow.

By 1948,   he had declared the Democratic People’s Republic  of Korea and was rapidly tightening his grip on   power.

His rise was so fast and so thorough  that it worried even some Soviet officials.

Kim Il-sung understood something many leaders  do not.

Fear by itself is not enough.

People   also need to believe.

So he built something that  looked almost like a religion.

He called it Juche,   usually translated as “self-reliance.

” Officially,  it meant Korea would depend on no foreign power   and control its own future.

In reality, it meant  the country’s future belonged entirely to him.

His portrait was placed in every home.

Children  were taught to bow to his image before meals.

Teachers credited him for good harvests and even  clear weather.

None of this happened naturally.

It was carefully planned and organized  from the top down.

And it worked.

But belief alone was not enough.

The regime  needed a way to separate loyal citizens from   disloyal ones, and more importantly,  a way to punish entire families for   generations.

So in the early 1950s, Kim  Il-sung introduced the Songbun system.

Every citizen was given a social classification  based on how loyal their family was considered to   be.

The system originally contained 51 categories  but was later simplified into three main groups:   “core,” “wavering,” and “hostile.

” The  hostile group included families who had   owned land before the revolution, people with  relatives in South Korea, religious families,   and anyone accused of disloyalty since 1945.

Songbun was inherited.

You could not challenge it.

A judgment made against a grandfather could affect  his grandchildren for the rest of their lives.

By the late 1950s, Kim Il-sung had  started removing political rivals.

Not   through trials.

Not through exile.

They  simply disappeared.

The regime needed a   place to send people it could not execute  publicly and could not safely release.

It   needed a place that spread fear without  anyone being allowed to talk about it.

That place became the Kwanliso.

The political prison camp system  was operating by the early 1960s.

By the 1980s, at least six major camps existed  across North Korea’s remote mountain regions.

They were built far from cities and  hidden from the outside world.

Camp 14,   near Kaechon in South Pyongan Province,  covers about 155 square kilometers, making   it larger than Washington D.

C.

Camp 22, near  the Chinese border in North Hamgyong Province,   held an estimated 50,000 prisoners at its  peak.

Camp 16, located in Hwasong County,   has been confirmed through satellite images  reviewed by Amnesty International.

None of   these camps appear on official North Korean  maps.

The government still denies they exist.

A person does not need to commit a crime to enter   these camps.

Under the principle known  as Yeon-jwa-je, or guilt by association,   three generations of a family can be punished for  the actions of one person.

A man makes a careless   comment criticizing the government.

Within  days, his wife, children, and parents may   all be arrested.

They may have done nothing  wrong and known nothing about what he said.

The best-known account of life inside  a Kwanliso comes from Shin Dong-hyuk.

He was born inside Camp 14 in 1982.

He did  not know the outside world existed.

For him,   the camp was the entire world.

From childhood,  he was taught that prisoners existed only to   work.

Food was given according to how much work  a person completed.

If you worked less, you got   less food.

Less food made it harder to work.

It  was a system designed to slowly destroy people.

A former guard named Ahn Myong-chol  escaped North Korea in 1994.

Later, he told   investigators that guards were trained  to see prisoners as less than human.

He described prisoners being beaten  with iron rods, starved as punishment,   and forced to watch public executions inside  the camps.

He admitted that he had taken part   in these abuses himself.

He was only nineteen  years old when he started working there.

In 2013, the United Nations created a  Commission of Inquiry to investigate   human rights abuses in North Korea.

It was led by  former Australian judge Michael Kirby.

For a year,   the commission collected testimony from survivors,  defectors, and former officials.

The final report,   released in February 2014, was 372 pages  long.

It compared North Korea’s prison   camp system to the atrocities committed in  Nazi Germany and the Soviet Gulag system,   not as a political comparison but as a legal  and structural one.

The report estimated that   between 80,000 and 120,000 people were being  held in political prison camps at that time.

Public executions are not sudden events.

They  are carefully planned.

Notices are often given   days beforehand.

Citizens in the area are  ordered to attend.

Schools bring students in   groups.

Factory workers are marched from  their workplaces.

If someone is absent,   people notice.

Questions are  asked.

So nobody stays away.

The Database Center for North Korean Human  Rights in Seoul has recorded more than 1,300   confirmed public executions between 1970  and 2020.

Researchers believe the real   number is much higher.

In 2022, the Korean  Institute for National Unification reported   that executions were regularly carried out  across all nine provinces of North Korea.

The crimes that can lead to public execution  reveal exactly what the regime fears most.

Distributing South Korean media has been  punishable by death since 2012.

Owning a Bible   can result in a death sentence.

Contacting the  outside world through an unauthorized phone can   lead to execution.

Trying to escape the country  can lead to execution.

During the famine years,   even stealing food could lead to execution.

The  actual crime often matters less than the message.

In December 2013, Kim Jong-un ordered  the execution of his own uncle,   Jang Song-thaek.

For years, Jang had been one  of the most powerful men in the country.

He   helped guide Kim Jong-un after the death of Kim  Jong-il in 2011.

During a Politburo meeting,   Jang was arrested in front of senior officials  and accused of treason, drug use, corruption,   and trying to sell national resources  to China.

Four days later, he was dead.

The message was aimed at the ruling elite.

No  one was untouchable.

Not even family members.

In 2014, Hyon Yong-chol, the Minister of  the People’s Armed Forces, was reportedly   executed with an anti-aircraft gun.

The choice of weapon was deliberate.

The larger the weapon, the less  of the body remained afterwards.

Every form of control in North  Korea depends on one thing.

People must not know that another way of  life exists.

The regime understood this   from the beginning.

Controlling information  was just as important as controlling people.

All media in North Korea belongs to the state.

The country’s three television channels broadcast   only content approved by the Propaganda and  Agitation Department of the Korean Workers’ Party.

The main newspaper, Rodong Sinmun, has  been published every day since May 1945   and has never published criticism of the Kim  family.

There are no independent journalists.

Foreign reporters are rarely allowed  into the country, and when they are,   every part of their visit is controlled.

They  see only what the government wants them to see.

The internet, as most people know it,  barely exists in North Korea.

Instead,   the country uses a closed network called  Kwangmyong, launched in the early 2000s.

It provides access only to approved websites,  limited academic materials, and government   email services.

It is not a connection to the  world.

It is a closed system built by the state.

Radios sold legally in North Korea  came pre-set to government stations   and were physically modified so they  could not receive foreign broadcasts.

Every radio and television had to be registered  with local authorities.

Owning an unregistered   device was a crime.

For many years,  this system was extremely effective.

The first major crack appeared along the  Chinese border.

During the late 1990s,   smuggled media began entering the  country.

First came VHS tapes,   then DVDs, and later tiny SD cards that could be  hidden almost anywhere.

The most popular content   was not political material.

It was South Korean  television dramas.

Love stories, family dramas,   and crime shows spread across the country.

But these programs showed something dangerous:   ordinary South Koreans living in modern homes,  driving cars, eating in restaurants, and speaking   freely.

That image was more threatening  to the regime than any political speech.

The government’s response became much harsher  during the 2010s.

Special surveillance teams   known as “Grouper Teams,” working under the  Ministry of State Security, carried out surprise   home searches looking for foreign media.

In 2020,  the Reactionary Thought and Culture Rejection Act   officially made the distribution of South  Korean content punishable by death.

Simply   watching it could result in up to 15 years  in a labor camp.

A second law passed in 2021,   called the Youth Education Guarantee Act, made  it illegal for young people to use South Korean   slang or speech patterns.

The government  was now policing the way people talked.

The fact that these laws had to be passed  reveals something important.

Governments do not   create laws against things that are not happening.

Foreign information had been entering North Korea   for years.

By the time Kim Jong-un began imposing  severe punishments over USB drives and media   files, millions of North Koreans had already seen  glimpses of life outside the country’s borders.

There is no legal way to leave North Korea.

The  border with South Korea is one of the most heavily   fortified places on earth.

It stretches  250 kilometers and is lined with mines,   fences, watchtowers, sensors, and  around a million soldiers on both   sides.

Since the 1953 armistice, almost  no defectors have escaped that way.

Instead, people flee north across  the Tumen or Yalu rivers into China.

The border is heavily guarded.

North Korean  soldiers have shoot-to-kill orders for   unauthorized crossings.

During winter, frozen  rivers can be crossed in minutes.

During warmer   months, strong currents can kill people  before guards even open fire.

Many drown.

Many are shot.

Those who reach China often  find themselves facing a different danger.

China does not recognize North Koreans  as refugees.

It classifies them as   illegal economic migrants.

As a result, people  caught in China are often detained and sent back.

They are handed directly to North Korean  security officials.

Survivors describe   brutal interrogations involving beatings,  sleep deprivation, and stress positions.

Anyone found to have met South Koreans,  missionaries, or consumed foreign media   faces especially severe punishment.

Long prison  sentences are common.

Executions also occur.

Women are especially vulnerable.

Many are  targeted by human trafficking networks soon   after crossing into China.

Some are  sold as wives into rural communities.

Others are forced into prostitution.

A 2019  investigation by the Korea Future Initiative   estimated that more than 70 percent of North  Korean women entering China experience some   form of trafficking.

Women who become  pregnant by Chinese men and are later   returned to North Korea have reported forced  abortions.

Testimony collected by the UN and   human rights groups also describes babies with  Chinese fathers being killed after repatriation.

For those who avoid capture,  the route to freedom usually   continues through Southeast Asia.

Many  travel through Laos and into Thailand,   often with help from underground networks run  by missionaries, NGOs, and defector groups.

The   journey can take months or even years.

If they  reach Thailand and surrender to authorities,   they are usually transferred to South Korea  through long-established diplomatic channels.

The number of defectors arriving in South  Korea rose steadily between 1998 and 2012,   reaching 2,700 in 2011.

After  taking power in late 2011,   Kim Jong-un strengthened border security  with more guards, more fencing, and harsher   punishments.

The numbers dropped sharply.

In 2021, only 63 people reached South Korea.

COVID-19 border restrictions made escape nearly  impossible for several years.

By early 2024,   around 34,000 North Korean defectors had  resettled in South Korea since the late 1990s.

But reaching Seoul does not end the struggle.

Defectors suddenly find themselves in a   fast-moving society filled with information,  choices, and freedoms they have never experienced.

The habits that helped them survive in  North Korea often make life harder in   South Korea.

The government’s Hana Won program  provides three months of training and support,   but many defectors say it is not  nearly enough.

Depression, trauma,   and social isolation are common.

Some eventually return to China.

The world has known about  much of this for a long time.

The 2014 UN Commission of Inquiry report  did not reveal something entirely new.

It   confirmed what researchers, survivors, and human  rights groups had been reporting for years.

In April 2014, Judge Michael Kirby presented  the findings to the UN Security Council.

He   described crimes against humanity carried out over  decades under the authority of the North Korean   leadership.

He recommended referring North Korea  to the International Criminal Court.

China and   Russia blocked the effort.

Kim Jong-un never faced  any legal proceedings.

The report was filed away.

The United Nations has passed resolutions  condemning North Korea’s human rights   record every year since 2005.

North Korea  rejects them as political attacks.

Little   changes.

Elizabeth Salmon, the UN Special  Rapporteur on North Korea since 2022,   has never been allowed into the  country.

Like others before her,   she relies on interviews with defectors and  annual reports that rarely lead to action.

Sanctions have been the main tool used by  Western governments.

The United States and the UN   expanded sanctions significantly in 2016 and 2017,  targeting coal, iron, seafood, textiles, financial   services, and overseas labor.

North Korea’s  response was not to slow down.

It accelerated   its missile program.

In 2022 alone, it carried  out 37 ballistic missile tests, including several   intercontinental ballistic missiles capable  of theoretically reaching the United States.

For Kim Jong-un, nuclear weapons are not a  bargaining tool.

They are a survival strategy.

He watched Muammar Gaddafi give up Libya’s  weapons programs and later die during the   2011 civil war.

He watched Saddam Hussein fall  and be executed.

He drew his own conclusion.

Nuclear weapons are what keep him alive, and no  sanctions package has changed that calculation.

China remains the one country with real leverage  over North Korea.

It supplies around 90 percent of   North Korea’s imported energy and handles most  of its foreign trade.

Without Chinese support,   North Korea would face enormous pressure.

But  Beijing sees a stable North Korea as preferable   to a collapse that could send millions of refugees  into China and possibly create a unified Korea   allied with the United States.

Human rights  concerns have never outweighed those interests.

The generation that grew up after the  famine of the 1990s is different from   the generation before it.

They were  raised around the Jangmadang markets.

They learned to trade, negotiate, and survive  in areas the state could not fully control.

Many have watched South Korean television.

Some have spoken with Chinese traders or   relatives who escaped years ago.

The ideas  built by Kim Il-sung, the belief in Juche,   the near-religious status of the leadership,  and the claim that South Korea is poor and   oppressed still exist, but many people now  know things that challenge those beliefs.

Kim Jong-un understands this.

The anti-culture  laws, restrictions on South Korean speech,   and campaigns against so-called  anti-socialist behavior all point   to a leadership that feels threatened.

Governments do not ban words unless those   words are already spreading.

The harsher  punishments suggest growing concern.

The defector community in South  Korea has also become more visible.

Yeonmi Park, who escaped in 2007 at age 13, has  spoken before the UN, the British Parliament,   and audiences across the United States.

Thae  Yong-ho, a former North Korean diplomat who   defected with his family in 2016, later  became a member of South Korea’s National   Assembly.

He spent years inside the system  and now speaks openly about how it works.

Groups in South Korea continue sending information  into North Korea through balloons carrying USB   drives, shortwave radio broadcasts, and other  methods.

Pyongyang reacts strongly to these   efforts.

In June 2020, North Korea demolished  the inter-Korean liaison office in Kaesong   after balloon launches by defector groups.

The  explosion was shown on state television.

The   message was directed not only at South Korea  but also at North Koreans watching from home.

In 2023, a South Korean court issued an arrest  warrant for Kim Jong-un and other officials over   crimes committed against defectors.

The  warrant cannot realistically be enforced,   but it became part of a growing legal  record.

The UN, South Korean courts,   and human rights organizations  continue collecting testimony   and preserving evidence.

That record will  remain even after the current regime is gone.

Today, the prison camps still exist.

Public executions still happen.

The   border remains one of the most dangerous  in the world.

More than 26 million people   continue living inside this system,  trying to survive one day at a time.

For more than seventy years, the regime has  tried to hide these realities from the world.

But   defectors, survivors, journalists, researchers,  and investigators have kept documenting what   happened.

The idea that nothing can be done is  not true.

People are doing something.

Slowly,   imperfectly, and often at great personal risk.

The harder truth is that it still is not enough.