AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
PRESS RELEASE
10 April 2012
North Korea: Catastrophic human rights record overshadows Day of the Sun
North Koreas Day of the Sun – the official title for the centenary of founder Kim Il-sungs birth – is an opportunity to shed light on the countrys abysmal human rights record, Amnesty International said.
According to the North Korean government, the birth centenary on 15 April is the day on which the country will become a strong and prosperous nation.
Nearly a million North Koreans have died of starvation since the 1990s, while millions more suffer the health effects of a persistent food crisis.
Today, hundreds of thousands of people deemed to oppose the state are detained in brutal prison camps, such as the notorious political prison camp at Yodok. Freedom of __EXPRESSION__ is non-existent in the country.
The Authorities speak of strength and prosperity but in reality that is a pipedream for North Korean citizens, said Rajiv Narayan, Amnesty Internationals Korea Researcher.
To achieve a strong and prosperous nation North Koreas new leader Kim Jong-un would have to reverse the repression that has been characteristic of the country for decades. He would also have to prioritize taking effective measures to ensure essential food and health care for the whole population.
Hundreds of thousands of people exist in prison camps in the most inhuman conditions imaginable. These are places out of sight of the rest of the world, where almost the entire range of human rights protections are ignored.
The political prison camp at Yodok, home to around 50,000 men, women and children, is one of six known political prison camps in North Korea, in which a total estimated 200,000 political prisoners and their families are imprisoned without trial or following grossly unfair trials.
Testimonies from former guards and former inmates of Yodok have revealed that prisoners are frequently subjected to torture, forced labour and execution.
Family members of those suspected of crimes are also sent to Yodok - a system of guilt by association used to silence dissent and control the population through fear.
In January 2012, at least 31 North Koreans who had been detained in China were reportedly forcibly returned to North Korea. These people could be sent to political prison camps where they are at risk of torture, forced labour, or execution.
North Korean authorities refuse to acknowledge the existence of these political prison camps.
Amnesty International activists around the world have been signing petitions and writing appeals to the North Korean authorities, urging them to close Yodok and other political prison camps.
North Koreas authorities must acknowledge these camps exist - they must close Yodok political prison camp, and stop these appalling, systematic human rights abuses, said Narayan.
Notes to Editors
On 12 April, Amnesty International experts on North Korea are available for interview in London and Washington DC.
Images, including satellite images of political prison camps, are available
Amnesty International activists around the world have been signing petitions and writing appeals to the North Korean authorities, urging them to close Yodok political prison camp. Over 165,000 actions have been collected and will be delivered to the authorities via the North Korean embassy in Switzerland on 12 April.
Previous Amnesty International statements on North Korea:
Fears for nine forcibly returned from China to North Korea (29 Feb 2012)
North Korea: Kim Jong-ils death could be opportunity for human rights (19 December 2011)
North Korea: Images reveal scale of political prison camps (3 May 2011)
For more information or to arrange interview please contact press officer Katya Nasim
Public Document
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