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Yodok Prison Camp 
Date : November 24, 2011
A report on the nature of Yodok Prison Camp - discussing treatment, crimes involved, prisoner and guard conduct including testimonies.   Source: Amnesty International
World Report 2011: North Korea 
Date : November 11, 2011
HRW's 2011 report assessing the current Human Rights issues faced in North Korea.   Source: Human Rights Watch
The Hidden Gulag: Exposing North Korea's Prison Camps 
Date : November 11, 2011
By David Hawk.   This report describes a number of penal institutions in the DPRK administered by two different North Korean police agencies: the Peoples Safety Agency and the more political National Security Agency. It outlines two distinct systems of repression: first, a North Korean gulag of forced-labor colonies, camps, and prisons where scores of thousands of prisoners — some political, some convicted felons — are worked, many to their deaths, in mining, logging, farming, and industrial enterprises, often in remote valleys located in the mountainous areas of North Korea; and second, a system of smaller, shorter-term detention facilities along the North Korea–China border used to brutally punish North Koreans who flee to China — usually in search of food during the North Korean famine crisis of the middle to late 1990s — but are arrested by Chinese police and forcibly repatriated to the DPRK.   Source: U.S. Committee for Human Rights in North Korea
Lives for Sale: Personal Accounts of Women Fleeing North Korea to China 
Date : November 11, 2011
This report calls the worlds attention to the suffering of North Korean women who have become the victims of trafficking and forced marriages when escaping their country for a new life in China. Not only are the political and economic rights of these women neglected by their own government, but also by the government of their country of asylum. Too often the failure of both North Korea and China to protect them has been overlooked by the international community.   Source: Committee for Human Rights in North Korea
Failure to Protect: The Ongoing Challenge of North Korea 
Date : November 11, 2011
A follow up report to the previous "Failure to Protect". Two years later, the situation remains unchanged. Although there has been some halting progress in the Six-Party Talks over the nuclear issue, discussions about the human rights andhumanitarian challenges within North Korea remain largely an issue of secondary concern. As a result, this new report is commissioned to both elevate the importance of this discussion and to propose an additional set of recommendations to enhance the prospects of achieving some meaningful incremental progress.   Source: DLA Piper and U.S. Committee for North Korean Human Rights 
Failure to Protect: A Call for the UN Security Council to Act in North Korea 
Date : November 11, 2011
The intent of this report is to apply a new doctrine of international law – the responsibility of all states to protect their own citizens from the most egregious of human rights abuses – to the situation in North Korea. Based on a comprehensive review of published information and first-hand interviews, this report concludes that North Korea has violated its responsibility to protect its own citizens from crimes against humanity being committed in the country, that North Korea has refused to accept prior recommendations from UN bodies to remedy the situation, and, therefore, UN Security Council action is warranted.   Source: DLA Piper and U.S. Committee for Human Rights in North Korea
Emergency and Humanitarian Action - Country Report: DPRK 
Date : November 9, 2011
A Hazard profile and summary of the recent and/or current threats or emergencies facing North Korea, including natural and human induced disasters, health hazards, and humanitarian issues. It discusses the current disaster management system and outlines the World Health Organization's role within it.   Source: World Health Organization
A Matter of Survival: The North Korean Government's Control of Food and the... 
Date : November 9, 2011
This report covers the nature of the past and ongoing food crisis and the North Korean regime's culpability in it. It discusses in detail the actions of the DPRK government and how they contributed to the crisis, and what needs to be done by them, the ROK government and the International community in order to solve North Korea's hunger.   Source: Human Rights Watch
Building Bridges not Walls: The Case for Constructive, Critical Engagement with ... 
Date : November 9, 2011
This report is a contribution to finding a way towards a permanent peace treaty, which itself would pave the way for reunification and denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula. It suggests confidence building measures, and examines the human rights situation in North Korea.   Source: Jubilee Campaign
Taken! North Koreas Criminal Abduction of Citizens in Other Countries 
Date : November 9, 2011
An in-depth and comprehensive history and analysis of North Koreas state-sponsored policy of abducting citizens of other countries. This criminal enterprise dates back to the earliest days of the regime, and to policy decisions made by Kim II-sung himself. Those abducted came from widely diverse backgrounds, numerous nationalities, both genders, and all ages. During the 1960s, 93,000 Koreans were lured from Japan and held against their will in North Korea. A decade later, children of North Korean agents were apparently kidnapped in order to control their parents.   Source: The Committee for Human Rights in North Korea
A Prison Without Bars - Refugee and Defector Testimonies of Severe Violations of... 
Date : November 9, 2011
An update and expansion of the previous report, "Thank You Father Kim Il Sung".   Source: United States Commission on International Religious Freedom
"Thank You Father Kim Il Sung" 
Date : November 9, 2011
By David Hawk, 133 pages.   Eyewitness Accounts of Severe Violations of Freedom of Thought, Conscience and Religion in North Korea. This paper reports on the forceful suppression of North Korea's once vibrant religious and intellectual life, the establishment of a quasi-religious cult of personality centered on Kim Il Sung and his son Kim Jong Il, and the survival of very limited religious activity in North Korea.   Source: United States Commission on International Religious Freedom
July-December, 2010 International Religious Freedom Report 
Date : November 9, 2011
The most recent albeit brief outline of the current state of religious freedom in North Korea.   Source: U.S. Department of State
Report of the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the DPRK 
Date : November 9, 2011
This report covers the second half of the 2010 and the beginning of 2011. That period saw some of the most volatile situations in the Korean Peninsula since the inter-Korean war and attempts made to change the leadership in the DPRK.Source: Human Rights Council (At the UN General Assembly)
#72: Religious Freedom Conditions in the DPRK 
Date : November 9, 2011
There continues to be a pressing need on the international level for further, more effective action that addresses the ongoing repression of religious freedom and other human rights in North Korea and the persistent problem of North Korean refugees in China. The international communitys understandable focus on nuclear security should not diminish diplomatic efforts to address human security in North Korea—indeed nuclear security and human security should be linked.   Source: U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom
 
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