Deutsche Welle, 5 December 2013
Human
rights group Amnesty International says satellite images suggest that the
inmate population of North Korea’s prison camps appears to be expanding. The
group urged Pyongyang to acknowledge the camps’ existence.
Amnesty
released on Thursday satellite imagery of two camps where it claims physical
and mental abuse of political prisoners is routine.
The
organization used satellite imagery in their study of Kwanliso (Camp) 15 and
Kwanliso 16.
Amnesty
claimed that the latter appeared to have expanded in population size, given an
increase in the number of structures though to be housing units. Operations at
Kwanliso 15 appeared to be continuing, it said, although the population may
have declined.
"Based
on the satellite imagery analysis of Kwanliso 15 and 16, the political prison
camps seem to be active and infrastructure maintenance on-going," said the
report's conclusion.
Executions,
torture
"The
analysis demonstrates a possible increase in the population in Kwanliso 16, a
population that is subjected to grave human rights violations including
torture, executions, forced labour and horrific living."
The images
detail significant economic activity such as mining and logging, which were
carried out by a prison labor force, according to witness statements included
in the report.
In addition
to prisoners working long hours in dangerous conditions, it said, they were
also subjected to denial of food as a form of punishment.
Murder,
rape and torture
Details of
extreme abuses were also included in the report's backgrounder, which carried
testimony from a former prison camp guard, as well as former inmates.
The guard,
named only as Mr. Lee, said he had seen prisoners forced to dig their own
graves before being killed with hammer blows to the head.
Other
inmates, he said, were beaten to death with sticks. Mr. Lee also recounted that
several women had disappeared after being raped by officials, concluding that
they had been secretly executed.
Large areas
The study
noted the size of the camps, with Kwalinso 16 covering an area of 560 square
kilometers (216 square miles) and Kwalinso 15 covering 370 square kilometers.
Tight controls appeared to exist, it said, with a proliferation of guard towers
and internal checkpoints.
In its
conclusion, Amnesty urged the North Korean government to acknowledge the
existence of the camps, something Pyongyang currently denies.
Amnesty
also called for their immediate closure and the release of all prisoners of
conscience and those held on the basis of "guilt by association."

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