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New satellite images show scale of North Korea’s repressive prison camps

A satellite image from Kwanliso 16, taken on 26 May 2013. Close to the main entrance, shows two more housing units under construction, showing ten 4 x 3.5 meter units in each building. In October 2013, Amnesty International commissioned analysis of satellite images of political prison camp (kwanliso) 15 at Yodok in South Hamgyong province and kwanliso 16 at Hwaseong in North Hamgyong province. The images show that instead of heeding the growing calls for closing its political prison camps, repression by the North Korean authorities has continued and the prisoner population in kwanliso 16 appears to have slightly increased. The North Korean authorities’ on-going investment in the country’s political prison camps is part of the continuing systematic, widespread and grave violations of human rights throughout the country. Copyright Credit: Analysis secured by Amnesty International. © DigitalGlobe 2013
A satellite image from Kwanliso 16, taken on 26 May 2013. Close to the main entrance, shows two more housing units under construction, showing ten 4 x 3.5 meter units in each building. In October 2013, Amnesty International commissioned analysis of satellite images of political prison camp (kwanliso) 15 at Yodok in South Hamgyong province and kwanliso 16 at Hwaseong in North Hamgyong province. The images show that instead of heeding the growing calls for closing its political prison camps, repression by the North Korean authorities has continued and the prisoner population in kwanliso 16 appears to have slightly increased. The North Korean authorities’ on-going investment in the country’s political prison camps is part of the continuing systematic, widespread and grave violations of human rights throughout the country.
Copyright Credit: Analysis secured by Amnesty International. © DigitalGlobe 2013

WASHINGTON, D.C. – North Korea’s vast infrastructure of repression is further exposed in new satellite images showing the on-going development of two of the country’s largest political prison camps, Amnesty International said today.

In a comprehensive assessment of camps 15 and 16, known as kwanliso, Amnesty International found new housing blocks, an expansion of production facilities, and continued tight security.

The analysis, along with newly released testimonies, is included in Amnesty International’s latest briefing North Korea: Continued Investment in the Infrastructure of Repression.

A former security official at kwanliso 16 – the largest political prison camp in North Korea – has never spoken publicly before. He describes detainees being forced to dig their own graves and women being raped and then disappearing.

“The gruesome reality of North Korea’s continued investment in this vast network of repression has been exposed,” said Rajiv Narayan, Amnesty International’s East Asia Researcher. “We urge the authorities to immediately and unconditionally release all those prisoners of conscience held in political prison camps and close the camps immediately.”

Amnesty International has shared the latest evidence with the U.N. Commission of Inquiry investigating human rights abuses in North Korea.

Hundreds of thousands of people – including children – are detained in political prison camps and other detention facilities in North Korea. Many of those have not committed any crime, but are merely family members of those deemed guilty of serious political crimes.

They are detained as a form of collective punishment, “guilt-by-association.”

Kwanliso 16 is approximately 560 km2, three times the size of Washington, D.C. It is one of the least investigated areas in the vast political prison camp system. In 2011, an estimated 20,000 people were believed be imprisoned at kwanliso 16.

The latest images, taken in May 2013, indicate a slight increase in kwanliso 16’s population with new housing blocks clearly visible. The pictures captured housing being built, giving a possible insight into the living conditions detainees face.

Significant economic activity – such as mining, logging and agriculture – is clearly visible in the satellite images. The images show an expansion of an industrial area within kwanliso 16.

Forced hard labor is common in North Korea’s political prison camps. Testimony from former detainees and officials reveals how detainees spend most of their time being forced to work in dangerous conditions with little time to rest.

Security remains tight, with perimeter fences and security points clearly marked. Movement appears to be restricted and controlled through secured entrance gates, guard towers and internal check points.

Mr. Lee, a former security official at Camp 16 in the 1980s until the mid-1990s, told Amnesty International in an interview in November 2013 of the methods used to execute prisoners. Detainees were forced to dig their own graves and were then killed with hammer blows to their necks. He also witnessed prison officers strangling detainees and then beating them to death with wooden sticks.

According to Mr. Lee, women were disappeared after being raped: “After a night of ‘servicing’ the officials, the women had to die because the secret could not get out. This happens at most of the political prison camps.”

Kim Young-soon, a former detainee in Camp 15 between 1980 and 1989, described a public execution she witnessed of two detainees who were caught attempting to escape: “They were brought to a stage after they were badly beaten. The prisoners were tied to wooden stakes and shot three times in their head, chest and feet.”

The recent images of Camp 15 – also known as Yodok – show that 39 housing blocks have been demolished since Amnesty International last assessed satellite pictures of the camp in 2011. Only six new housing blocks have been built. The decrease in housing could indicate a slight reduction in the kwanliso population. However, Amnesty International is not able to verify the prisoner population or the fate of the detainees.

Kwanliso 15 covers an area of 370 km2 and is located in central North Korea around 120km from the capital Pyongyang. In 2011, an estimated 50,000 people were imprisoned within the camp and the population is concentrated in river valleys.

Similar to kwanliso 16, security remains tight in Yodok, and there is significant economic activity. For example, logging activities are clearly visible, as is the processing of raw lumber in a likely furniture factory.

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