By Tom Head
civilliberty.about.com
North Korean famine |
Night time lights, Korean Peninsula 2003 |
Overview:
After World War II, Japanese-occupied Korea was divided in
two: North Korea, a newly Communist government under the supervision of the
Soviet Union, and South Korea, under the supervision of the United States. The
North Korean Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) was granted
independence in 1948, and is now one of the few remaining Communist nations.
The population of North Korea is approximately 23 million, with an estimated
annual per capita income of about US$1,700.
The State of Human Rights in North Korea:
North Korea is in all likelihood the most oppressive regime
on Earth. Although human rights monitors are generally banned from the country,
as are radio communications between citizens and outsiders, some journalists
and human rights monitors have been successful in uncovering details about the
secretive government's policies. The government is essentially a
dictatorship--previously operated by Kim Il Sung, and now operated by his son,
Kim Jong-il.
The Cult of the Supreme Leader:
Although North Korea is generally described as a Communist
government, it would also be accurate to call it a theocracy. The North Korean
government operates 450,000 "Revolutionary Research Centers" for
weekly indoctrination sessions, where attendees are taught that Kim Jong-il, who
must be referred to as "Dear Leader," possesses supreme supernatural
powers and had a miraculous birth atop a legendary Korean mountain (Jong-il was
actually born in the former Soviet Union).
Loyalty Groups:
The North Korean government divides its citizens into three
castes based on their perceived loyalty to the Dear Leader: "core"
(haeksim kyechung), "wavering" (tongyo kyechung), and
"hostile" (joktae kyechung). Most of the wealth is concentrated among
the "core," while the "hostile"--a category that includes
all members of minority faiths, as well as descendants of perceived enemies of
the state--are denied employment and subject to starvation.
Enforcing Patriotism:
The North Korean government enforces loyalty and obedience
through its Ministry of People's Security, which requires citizens to spy on
each another, including family members. Anyone who is overheard saying anything
perceived as critical to the government is subject to a reduced loyalty group
rating, torture, execution, or imprisonment in one of North Korea's ten brutal
concentration camps.
Controlling the Flow of Information:
All radio and television stations, newspapers and magazines,
and church sermons are government-controlled and focus on praise of the Dear
Leader. Anyone who makes contact with foreigners in any way, or listens to
foreign radio stations (some of which are accessible in North Korea), is in
danger of any of the penalties described above. Traveling outside of North
Korea is also forbidden, and can carry a penalty of death.
A Military State:
Despite its small population and dismal budget, the North
Korean government is heavily militarized--claiming to have an army of 1.3
million soldiers (the fifth-largest in the world), and a thriving military
research program that includes the development of nuclear weapons and
long-range missiles. North Korea also maintains rows of massive artillery
batteries on the North-South Korea border, designed to inflict heavy casualties
on Seoul in the event of international conflict.
Mass Famine and Global Blackmail:
During the 1990s, as many as 3.5 million North Koreans died
of starvation. Sanctions are not imposed on North Korea primarily because they
would block grain donations, resulting in the deaths of millions more, a
possibility that does not appear to concern the Dear Leader. Malnutrition is
almost universal except among the ruling class; the average North Korean
7-year-old is eight inches shorter than the average South Korean child of the
same age.
No Rule of Law:
The North Korean government maintains ten concentration
camps, with a total of between 200,000 and 250,000 prisoners contained therein.
Conditions in the camps are terrible, and the annual casualty rate has been
estimated as high as 25%. The North Korean government has no due process
system, imprisoning, torturing, and executing prisoners at will. Public
executions, in particular, are a common sight in North Korea.
Prognosis:
By most accounts, the North Korean human rights situation
cannot presently be solved by international action. The U.N. Human Rights
Committee has condemned the North Korean human rights record on three different
occasions in recent years, to no avail.
Strict sanctions are of limited usefulness because the North
Korean government has already demonstrated that it is willing to allow millions
of its citizens to starve.
Military action is not feasible, primarily because the
artillery batteries maintained by the North Korean government along the
demilitarized zone could literally result in millions of South Korean
casualties. North Korean leaders have promised an "annihilating
strike" in the event of U.S. invasion.
North Korea maintains a stockpile of chemical weapons, and
may also possess biological weapons.
North Korea has augmented this threat with nuclear weapons
development.
North Korean missiles delivering chemical, biological, or
nuclear munitions can reach South Korea, can almost certainly reach Japan, and
are presently being tested for potential launch against the U.S. west coast.
The North Korean government regularly breaks treaties,
reducing the value of diplomacy as a human rights strategy.
The best hope for North Korean human rights progress is
internal--and this is not a futile hope.
Many North Korean citizens have gained access to foreign
media and foreign radio stations, giving them reason to question national
propaganda.
Some North Korean citizens are even distributing
revolutionary literature with apparent impunity--as the government's loyalty
enforcement system, fearsome though it is, is too bloated to function
efficiently.
Kim Jong-il is rumored to be in spotty health (with diabetes
as well as possible heart and liver concerns), and his successor may or may not
share his priorities.
3 comments:
Well...You don't have to look that far as North Korea. Just take a close look of Cambodia from above at night! The whole Cambodia is dark as hell! The only places are lighted is the palace and AH HUN SEN house!
This is the result of AH HUN SEN Vietcong slave puppet in economic cooperation with the Vietcong government!
Soon Cambodia will enter the new dark age if AH HUN SEN Vietcong slave stay in power any longer!
Mr. Kim Cheese wish to send a message back to earth, especially to Norodom Sihanouk: Please, Norodom, don't come to this place I'm at, because I'm being eaten alive by worms and maggots; I'm being torture without mercy by demon spirits. They mock me saying, "so, you think that you are a god? all that think they are a god come to this place as a proven ground that you are but a human." Please, don't come here, it is eternity without end in torturing mode.
Ah Sihanouk came from the hell and
he will be back to hell.
Few more days,few more weeks,few
more months,or few more years you
will go back where you are belong.
Remember,when you go,don't forget
to take monarchy,and ah Hun Sen
with you.
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