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Tx4obama

(36,974 posts)
Wed Sep 18, 2013, 08:50 PM Sep 2013

U.N. Investigator: North Korean Prisons Like Nothing Seen Since Nazi Atrocities



U.N. Investigator: North Korean Prisons Like Nothing Seen Since Nazi Atrocities

North Koreans forced into prisons camps live out an existence unlike any seen since the killing fields of Cambodia or the horrors of World War II, according to the head of a U.N. panel assigned to investigate Pyongyang’s human rights violations.

In March, the United Nations Human Rights Council voted to create an Independent Commission of Inquiry into North Korea’s human rights violations, the first of its kind designated to tackle the hermit kingdom’s abuses. Michael Kirby, a retired Australian judge, was named to lead the three-member panel, which North Korea immediately banned from entering the country’s borders, saying that it “totally and categorically rejects the Commission of Inquiry.”

Undaunted, the team began conducting interviews with refugees and defectors in South Korea and Japan earlier this year. One former camp inmate told investigators that he was lucky when a warden ordered the tip of his finger chopped off for damaging a piece of sewing equipment used to carry out forced labor — he could easily have been executed for the transgression.

“We heard from ordinary people who faced torture and imprisonment for doing nothing more than watching foreign soap operas or holding a religious belief,” Kirby told the Human Rights Council on Tuesday in an oral update on his team’s work. “Women and men who exercised their human right to leave the DPRK (Democratic People's Republic of Korea) and were forcibly repatriated spoke about their experiences of torture, sexual violence, inhumane treatment and arbitrary detention.”

Among the testimony team collected included from children who were born into the camps as their parents served out their sentences. “They had to live on rodents, grasshoppers, lizards and on grass and they were subject to cruelty,” Kirby told the BBC World TV. “All in all it is a very horrifying story, the like of which I don’t think I’ve seen or read of since the Khmer Rouge (in Cambodia) and the Nazi atrocities during the second world war,” Kirby continued.

-snip-

Full article here: http://thinkprogress.org/security/2013/09/18/2644061/dprk-prisons-nazi-camps/



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U.N. Investigator: North Korean Prisons Like Nothing Seen Since Nazi Atrocities (Original Post) Tx4obama Sep 2013 OP
How are these people escaping these death camps to tell these stories? Ash_F Sep 2013 #1
With close to 200,000 in the system some are bound to escape. grantcart Sep 2013 #2
That is a little scary, considering that we copy N. Korea with Downwinder Sep 2013 #3
They won't be able to hide much longer treestar Sep 2013 #4

Ash_F

(5,861 posts)
1. How are these people escaping these death camps to tell these stories?
Wed Sep 18, 2013, 09:04 PM
Sep 2013

DPRK would do well to learn a thing or two about releasing people a la GITMO.

grantcart

(53,061 posts)
2. With close to 200,000 in the system some are bound to escape.
Wed Sep 18, 2013, 09:55 PM
Sep 2013

One of the key features in a system of mass fear is that you need to return a number back to the general population to spread the fear.
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