Rights group: North Korea attempting to hide public executions

After recently carrying out seven public executions for watching or distributing K-pop videos from South Korea, the regime has attempted to stifle news of its harsh punishments.

Pyongyang has long been accused of using state killings to instil fear among its population.
Reuters

Pyongyang has long been accused of using state killings to instil fear among its population.

North Korea has tried to stop leaks to the outside world about its public executions in recent years, suggesting Pyongyang may be responding to international scrutiny of its human rights record.

North Korean escapees said executions were carried out at closely monitored sites with authorities keeping a close eye to ensure no information gets out, a Seoul-based research group said in a report released on Wednesday.

"In recent years, North Korea appears to be strategically selecting places away from the border area to carry out these killings," said the Transitional Justice Working Group, which has a stated non-partisan mission of documenting human rights abuses and seeking justice for victims.

"Monitoring and control of the assembled audience at these events is tightening to prevent information on public executions from leaking outside the country."

The NGO analysed satellite imagery and collected testimonies of 23 public executions during the era of Kim Jong Un, who took power a decade ago following the death of his father in December 2011.

TJGW said their findings suggest that the Kim Jong Un regime is paying more attention to human rights issues in response to increased international scrutiny.

Human Rights Watch echoed that concern on Thursday, accusing Kim of "isolating the country more than ever" through "unnecessary and extreme measures".

READ MORE: North Korea executed top official, says South Korea

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South Korean entertainment ban

Seven of the public executions were for watching or distributing Korean pop videos from South Korea, which are banned by Pyongyang, the report said.

Since taking power a decade ago, Kim Jong Un has attacked South Korean entertainment which, he says, corrupts North Koreans’ minds, according to The New York Times.

He believes “anti-socialist and nonsocialist” influences spread in his country, especially through South Korean movies, K-dramas and K-pop, said the Times.

The law, passed last year, allows North Korea to sentence those who distribute South Korean entertainment to the death penalty.

TJWG said North Korea's near-total shutdown of its borders during the Covid-19 pandemic has significantly reduced information coming out of the country, making it difficult to document rights violations during this period.

A popular tactic

Escapee accounts are near-impossible to independently verify because of North Korea's strict control of access to its people and records.

Ahyeong Park, the report's lead author, said the organisation carefully assessed accounts for consistency, only choosing those it found to be most reliable.

Pyongyang has long been accused of using state killings to instil fear among its population, and leader Kim has executed top aides in the past – including his powerful uncle Jang Song Thaek in 2013.

North Korea says it respects human rights, and has dismissed allegations of violations as lies told by defectors.

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