North Korea executes citizens for sharing foreign films.
North Korea has increased its crackdown on freedoms, executing people for sharing foreign TV dramas and films, according to a damning new report by the United Nations Human Rights Office.
The UN report highlighted that the regime has imposed the death penalty on those caught distributing foreign content, including South Korean K-Dramas.
James Heenan, head of the UN Human Rights Office for North Korea, told reporters in Geneva that the number of executions for political and so-called “normal” crimes has risen since the COVID-19 era.
One escapee recalled how authorities “strengthened the crackdowns to block the people’s eyes and ears”, ensuring even the smallest signs of dissatisfaction were silenced.
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Mass Surveillance with AI
The report noted that technological advances have allowed North Korea to expand “mass surveillance” systems, enabling authorities to monitor citizens’ lives more comprehensively than ever before.
The findings, based on interviews with more than 300 witnesses and escapees, concluded that “no other population is under such restrictions in today’s world”.
Over the past decade, repression has deepened, leaving people in constant fear of being punished for minor infractions.
Forced labour and child exploitation
The UN report also highlighted widespread forced labor, including the use of children in hazardous industries such as coal mining and construction.
Heenan described these children as “often from the lower levels of society”, noting that wealthier families can sometimes bribe their way out of such assignments.
Last year, the UN warned that North Korea’s forced labor practices may amount to slavery, potentially rising to the level of crimes against humanity.
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This review builds on a landmark 2014 UN investigation that detailed widespread human rights abuses, including executions, torture, rape, starvation, and the detention of up to 120,000 people in prison camps.
Since then, North Korea has adopted new laws and policies providing a legal framework for its repressive measures, further shrinking the space for basic freedoms.
UN rights chief Volker Turk issued a stark warning: “If the DPRK continues on its current trajectory, the population will be subjected to more suffering, brutal repression and fear.”