North Korea has renovated a crematorium at one of the
notorious camps where its regime tortures and starves political
prisoners, new satellite images have revealed.
Amnesty International claims the new pictures prove the infamous camp
system is still running because people can also be seen harvesting
crops and new guard towers have been created.
The Kim regime has repeatedly said the facilities - which Amnesty
labelled "hellish" and the sites of "abuse on an industrial scale" - do
not exist, despite the testimony of defectors and the results of UN
human rights reports.
Kerry Moscogiuri, Amnesty's UK campaign director, said: “The
North Korean government is still denying the existence of these hellish
camps, but year after year we’ve documented and photographed a vast
network so massive that it’s visible from space.
“The tens of thousands of people held in the camps face
unimaginable suffering - excruciating forced labour, rampant
malnutrition, violent punishments, rape and even execution.
“These images chronicle abuse on an industrial scale.”
The latest pictures, taken in May and August, reveal the interiors of two 'kwanliso' camps, numbered 15 and 25.
At Camp 15, known as Yodok, more than two dozen agricultural or
industrial support buildings were demolished alongside 14 prisoner
housing units. But
Amnesty said it thought the camp was still active because administrative blocks, guard posts and perimeter fences were kept in order.
The regime appeared to be expanding "labour-intensive activities" at
Camp 25, the group said, after it spotted people harvesting crops in one
image. Six new guard posts were created near what was thought to be a
mine, and the roof of a suspected crematorium was renovated.
A 2014 UN report detailed rights abuses in North Korea by a "state that does not have any parallel in the contemporary world".
It said: "These crimes against humanity entail extermination, murder,
enslavement, torture, imprisonment, rape, forced abortions and other
sexual violence, persecution on political, religious, racial and gender
grounds, the forcible transfer of populations, the enforced
disappearance of persons and the inhumane act of knowingly causing
prolonged starvation."
South Korea and Japan signed a pact on Wednesday to share military
information about the secretive North directly, including satellite
tracking of missile launches, without having to use the United States as
an intermediary.
It came after months of headline-grabbing belligerence from the Communist state that included two nuclear weapons tests.
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