By Eric Leijenaar, BosNewsLife Senior Special Correspondent
The regime of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il persecutes Christians,
Open Doors says. SEOUL/AMSTERDAM (BosNewsLife)-- At least one million
North Koreans, many of them Christians, are believed to be held in
North Korea's concentration camps, more than previously thought,
investigators revealed Monday, September 24.
Netherlands-based Open Doors International, a respected rights group
investigating reports of persecution of Christians, told BosNewsLife
that the concentration camps include eight punishment camps for
political prisoners and 30 forced labor camps. "It's possible that
the number of prisoners are well over one million," said the Open
Doors' North Korea director who identified himself only as 'Brother
Simon' amid security concerns. Many camps are so huge that they can't
be spotted on satellite images," he explained. "The camps are complete
villages."
He refused to say how the Open Doors investigation had been conducted
in the isolated nation, citing concerns about the safety of those
involved in the research. "Many lives could be lost," he said. The Open
Doors revelations come after previous reports of alleged atrocities in
the camps, including in a remote north-eastern corner of North Korea,
close to the border of Russia and China.
LARGEST "CONCENTRATION CAMP"
In the remote town of Haengyong, hidden away in the mountains, Camp 22
- North Korea's largest concentration camp, thousands die each year and
prison guards stamp on the necks of babies born to prisoners to kill
them, North Korean defectors have said.
Witnesses have been quoted by British media, including the British
Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) and The Observer news paper, "watching
entire families being put in glass chambers and gassed." They are left
to an agonizing death while scientists take notes, the defectors said.
Other experiments in these and other camps allegedly include chemical
experiments. "An officer ordered me to select 50 healthy female
prisoners," said Soon Ok-lee, who was imprisoned for seven years. "One
of the guards handed me a basket full of soaked cabbage, told me not
to eat it but to give it to the 50 women. I gave them out and heard a
scream from those who had eaten them. They were all screaming and
vomiting blood. All who ate the cabbage leaves started violently
vomiting blood and screaming with pain. It was hell. In less than 20
minutes they were quite dead," The Observer news paper quoted her as
saying.
MANY CHRISTIANS "VICTIMS"
Many of the victims are believed to be Christians as North Korea’s
Stalinist system of carrying out Communism is based on "total devotion"
of the individual to an ideology promoted by the late leader Kim Il
Sung and his successor and son, Kim Jong Il. Christianity is seen as a
threat, several Christian and other observers have said. North Korean
authorities have denied wrongdoing and say the North Korean people love
to serve the country’s "dear leader".
Brother Simon, who has contacts with tens of thousands of Christians in
North Korea through several networks, is convinced that despite the
apparent dangers, at least 200,000 North Koreans are Christians
"although that number may be even as high as half a million." One in
four Christians in North Korea are believed to be in camps "where
people usually do not survive," he said.
“In North Korea it is strictly forbidden to be a Christian. Who has a
Bible could be sentenced to a punishment camp along with his whole
family." He added that refugees deported from China could face at least
several years imprisonment. "However if authorities find out the
refugee has contact with a Christian he or she may face torture and
even execution," Brother Simon added.
SUPPORT FOR REFUGEES
Open Doors says it is helping refugees in China, although the influx of
people crossing the border apparently decreased in recent months. “It's
very difficult to cross the river near the border. At the North Korean
site [authorities made] dangerous pits with bamboo arrows," Brother
Simon said. "There are also high fences with barbed wire while China
has placed camera's and even promised rewards for those reporting
refugees to authorities. Another problem is that Chinese people helping
North Koreans crossing the border illegally can face high fines," he
added
Brother Simon told BosNewsLife that his group has urged supporters to
pray for North Korean Christians fleeing persecution. "We have noticed
a dramatic increase of spying activities [in China] in areas where
refugees are accommodated. North Korean spies are attempting to
infiltrate in groups helping North Korean refugees."
He said there are "strong indications" that China wants to send back
many refugees this year, "so that it can be a sympatric host to the
outside world during the preparations of the Beijing
Olympics" in 2008. "If there was one moment when North Korea needs
prayer, it's now," Brother Simon said.
Open Doors began a three-year round-the-clock prayer action for North
Korea on January 1, 2005. About 3,000 Christians in the Netherlands and
Belgium are involved in the prayer plan, Open Doors said. North Korea
is leading Open Doors annual World Watch List of over 50 nations with
the "worst religious freedom" violations. (With reporting by
BosNewsLife's Stefan J. Bos and BosNewsLife News Center).
Original
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One Million North Koreans In "Concentration Camps"
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