A South Korean soldier, left, undergoes an experience on what it is like to be held in a North Korean cell. Picture:
AHN Myong-Chol saw many nightmarish atrocities during his years as a
prison guard — including one horrific incident in which ferocious dogs
attacked and killed innocent school kids, according to a shocking new
report.
“There were three dogs and they killed five children,” the 45-year-old Ahn told the French news agency AFP.“They killed three of the children right away. The two other children were barely breathing and the guards buried them alive,” said Ahn, who worked in one of the communist country’s brutal prison camps for eight years before fleeing in 1994.
North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un
reacting to participants of the 8th conference of the ideological
officials of the Workers Party of Korea (WPK) in Pyongyang.
“People in the camps are not treated as human beings. They are like flies that can be crushed,” said Ahn, speaking at a conference for human rights activists was under way in Geneva.
He was one of many North Koreans who had fled the hellish country and testified for a United Nations investigation that led to a stomach-churning 400-page report on rampant human rights abuses in North Korea.
A North Korean man walks near a big
screen on a street near a residential complex which is lit at night in
Pyongyang, North Korea.
“It’s my life’s mission to spread awareness about what is happening in the camps,” said Ahn, who now heads up the human rights group Free NK Gulag.
The UN estimates there are as many as 120,000 political prisoners in North Korea.
A North Korean man talks on the phone against the Juche Tower along the bank of Daedong River in Pyongyang, North Korea.
Guards were told to practice their martial arts skills on prisoners — and ordered to shoot to kill if anyone tried to bust out.
“We were allowed to kill them, and if we brought back their body, they would award us by letting us go study at college,” he said.
South Koreans on a bus bid farewell
to their North Korean relatives before they return to their home after a
family reunion having been separated for 60 years following the Korean
War.
He became disillusioned when he was assigned as a driver and travelled from camp to camp, which gave him a chance to talk to a number of prisoners.
“More than 90 per cent” had no clue why they had been imprisoned, he said.
He learned first-hand that many prisoners were sent to the camps solely because a member of their family had committed a real or imagined offence.
While on leave the same year he fled, he found out his father had killed himself after he got drunk and criticised the government.
A general view shows the North Korean Mount Kumgang resort.
He returned to his assignment at the camp, but grew fearful his own days were numbered.
So he drove his truck to the Du Man River and swam to China, eventually making his way to South Korea, the news agency reported.
A North Korean man walks toward a
large mosaic monument of the late leader Kim Jong II, right, and his
father, North Korea's founder Kim Il Sung in Pyongyang, North Korea.
“The difference is that in North Korea we are still talking in the present tense. These horrors are still happening,” he said.
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