http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/05/world/asia/05korea.html?_r=3 
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/05/world/asia/05korea.html?_r=3&pagewanted=print>
 &pagewanted=print



  _____  

May 4, 2011


North Korean Prison Camps Massive and Growing


By MARK McDONALD


SEOUL, South Korea — New satellite images and firsthand accounts from former 
political prisoners and former jailers in  
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/northkorea/index.html?inline=nyt-geo>
 North Korea have confirmed the enormous scale and bleak conditions of the 
penal system in the secretive North, according to a  
<http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/images-reveal-scale-north-korean-political-prison-camps-2011-05-03>
 report released Wednesday by the human rights group  
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/a/amnesty_international/index.html?inline=nyt-org>
 Amnesty International. 

Former inmates at the political labor camp at Yodok, North Korea, said they 
were frequently tortured and had been forced to watch the executions of fellow 
prisoners, the report said, noting that the North’s network of political 
prisons is estimated to hold 200,000 inmates. 

“North Korea can no longer deny the undeniable,” said Sam Zarifi, the Asia 
Pacific director of Amnesty International. “For decades, the authorities have 
refused to admit to the existence of mass political prison camps. These are 
places out of sight of the rest of the world.” The report says that almost all 
of the human rights protections that international law has tried to set up for 
the past 60 years “are ignored.” 

After comparing recent satellite photos of prison camps with images from 10 
years ago, Mr. Zarifi said, Amnesty International became concerned that the 
“prison camps appear to be growing.” 

North Korea’s work farms and prison factories are the world’s most notorious, 
according to human rights experts. Political prisoners sentenced to hard labor 
initially included landlords, purged party officials and the religiously 
active, according to Stephan Haggard and Marcus Noland, the authors of “Witness 
to Transformation,” an authoritative study of North Korean refugees. 

Political prisons, they said, also now hold “anyone guilty of political or 
ideological crimes or even suspected of disloyalty,” adding that the system 
shows “little pretense of due process.” 

Son Hyang-sun, a woman who defected from North Korea 15 years ago because she 
was starving, said she was caught on her first escape attempt. She was 
convicted and jailed for four months. 

“They tortured me with an electric stick, yes, a cattle prod,” she said  
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/23/business/global/23credit.html> in an 
interview with The International Herald Tribune. “They stuck it everywhere.” 

A recent State Department report on human rights in North Korea said “detainees 
and prisoners consistently reported violence and torture” as well as virtual 
starvation rations. In various accounts, escaped inmates have reported eating 
earthworms and rats to get enough protein to survive. 

Jeong Kyoung-il, a former Yodok inmate who was interviewed last month by 
Amnesty, said that deaths in the prison occurred almost daily. But the deaths 
of fellow prisoners came to be seen in a depraved and desperate light. 
“Frankly, unlike in a normal society, we would like it, rather than feel sad, 
because if you bring a dead body and bury it, you would be given another bowl 
of food,” Mr. Jeong said. 



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