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North Korean Defectors Tell Of Mass Graves And Public Executions

North Korean Defectors Tell Of Mass Graves And Public Executions

North Korea is carrying out public executions on river banks and on school grounds for minor crimes including thefts of corn and rice, a new report says.

The report, by a Seoul-based non-government group, said the often extra-judicial decisions for public executions are frequently influenced by “bad” family backgrounds or a government campaign to discourage certain behaviours.

The Transitional Justice Working Group (TJWG) said its report was based on interviews with 375 North Korean defectors from the isolated state over a period of two years.

Suspected body site groupings by province
TJWG
Suspected body site groupings by province

The TJWG report, which was released on Wednesday, also maps the locations of such executions and mass graves. It said executions are carried out in prison camps to incite fear and intimidation among potential escapees, and public executions are also carried out for charges such as stealing copper from factory machines, distributing media from South Korea and prostitution.

SEE ALSO: North Korea Cannibalism Fears Amid Reports Famine-Stricken Citizens ‘Forced To Dig Up Corpses & Eat Their Children’

Most of the executions are administered by shooting, though testimonies also showed people can be beaten to death, with one interviewee saying: “Some crimes were considered not worth wasting bullets on.”

TJWG/ Google Earth

Government officials were executed on corruption and espionage charges, and bureaucrats from other regions would be made to watch “as a deterrence tactic”, the report said.

Defectors from the North have previously testified to having witnessed public executions and rights abuses at detention facilities.

The TJWG is made up of human rights activists and researchers and is led by Lee Younghwan, who has worked as an advocate for human rights in North Korea.

Kim Jong Un reacting during a test launch of a ground-to-ground medium long-range strategic ballistic rocket Hwasong-12 in May
- via Getty Images
Kim Jong Un reacting during a test launch of a ground-to-ground medium long-range strategic ballistic rocket Hwasong-12 in May

It receives most of its funding from the US-based National Endowment for Democracy, which in turn is funded by the US Congress.

The TJWG report aims to document the locations of public killings and mass burials, which it says had not been done previously, to support an international push to hold to account those who commit what it describes as crimes against humanity.

“The maps and the accompanying testimonies create a picture of the scale of the abuses that have taken place over decades,” the group said.

TJWG

North Korea rejects charges of human rights abuses, saying its citizens enjoy protection under the constitution and accuses the United States of being the world’s worst rights violator.

However, the North has faced an unprecedented push to hold the regime and its leader, Kim Jong Un, accountable for a wide range of rights abuses since a landmark 2014 report by a United Nations commission.

UN member countries urged the Security Council in 2014 to consider referring North Korea and its leader to the International Criminal Court (ICC) for crimes against humanity, as alleged in a Commission of Inquiry report.

The commission detailed abuses including large prison camps, systematic torture, starvation and executions comparable to Nazi-era atrocities, and linked the activities to the North’s leadership.

Harrowing sketches depicting torture, starvation and death in a North Korean prison were published in a UN report into human rights abuses in 2014
Harrowing sketches depicting torture, starvation and death in a North Korean prison were published in a UN report into human rights abuses in 2014

North Korea has rejected that inquiry’s findings and the push to bring the North to a tribunal remains stalled due in part to objections by China and Russia, which hold veto powers at the UN Security Council.

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