PDA

View Full Version : Revealed: The Gas Chamber Horror of North Korea's Gulag



Vance
02-07-2004, 05:08 PM
http://www.guardian.co.uk/korea/article/0,2763,1136483,00.html


A series of shocking personal testimonies is now shedding light on Camp 22 - one of the country's most horrific secrets

Antony Barnett
Sunday February 1, 2004
The Observer

In the remote north-eastern corner of North Korea, close to the border of Russia and China, is Haengyong. Hidden away in the mountains, this remote town is home to Camp 22 - North Korea's largest concentration camp, where thousands of men, women and children accused of political crimes are held.
Now, it is claimed, it is also where thousands die each year and where prison guards stamp on the necks of babies born to prisoners to kill them.

Over the past year harrowing first-hand testimonies from North Korean defectors have detailed execution and torture, and now chilling evidence has emerged that the walls of Camp 22 hide an even more evil secret: gas chambers where horrific chemical experiments are conducted on human beings.

Witnesses have described watching entire families being put in glass chambers and gassed. They are left to an agonising death while scientists take notes. The allegations offer the most shocking glimpse so far of Kim Jong-il's North Korean regime.

Kwon Hyuk, who has changed his name, was the former military attaché at the North Korean Embassy in Beijing. He was also the chief of management at Camp 22. In the BBC's This World documentary, to be broadcast tonight, Hyuk claims he now wants the world to know what is happening.

'I witnessed a whole family being tested on suffocating gas and dying in the gas chamber,' he said. 'The parents, son and and a daughter. The parents were vomiting and dying, but till the very last moment they tried to save kids by doing mouth-to-mouth breathing.'

Hyuk has drawn detailed diagrams of the gas chamber he saw. He said: 'The glass chamber is sealed airtight. It is 3.5 metres wide, 3m long and 2.2m high_ [There] is the injection tube going through the unit. Normally, a family sticks together and individual prisoners stand separately around the corners. Scientists observe the entire process from above, through the glass.'

He explains how he had believed this treatment was justified. 'At the time I felt that they thoroughly deserved such a death. Because all of us were led to believe that all the bad things that were happening to North Korea were their fault; that we were poor, divided and not making progress as a country.

'It would be a total lie for me to say I feel sympathetic about the children dying such a painful death. Under the society and the regime I was in at the time, I only felt that they were the enemies. So I felt no sympathy or pity for them at all.'

His testimony is backed up by Soon Ok-lee, who was imprisoned for seven years. 'An officer ordered me to select 50 healthy female prisoners,' she said. 'One of the guards handed me a basket full of soaked cabbage, told me not to eat it but to give it to the 50 women. I gave them out and heard a scream from those who had eaten them. They were all screaming and vomiting blood. All who ate the cabbage leaves started violently vomiting blood and screaming with pain. It was hell. In less than 20 minutes they were quite dead.'

Defectors have smuggled out documents that appear to reveal how methodical the chemical experiments were. One stamped 'top secret' and 'transfer letter' is dated February 2002. The name of the victim was Lin Hun-hwa. He was 39. The text reads: 'The above person is transferred from ... camp number 22 for the purpose of human experimentation of liquid gas for chemical weapons.'

Kim Sang-hun, a North Korean human rights worker, says the document is genuine. He said: 'It carries a North Korean format, the quality of paper is North Korean and it has an official stamp of agencies involved with this human experimentation. A stamp they cannot deny. And it carries names of the victim and where and why and how these people were experimented [on].'

The number of prisoners held in the North Korean gulag is not known: one estimate is 200,000, held in 12 or more centres. Camp 22 is thought to hold 50,000.

Most are imprisoned because their relatives are believed to be critical of the regime. Many are Christians, a religion believed by Kim Jong-il to be one of the greatest threats to his power. According to the dictator, not only is a suspected dissident arrested but also three generations of his family are imprisoned, to root out the bad blood and seed of dissent.

With North Korea trying to win concessions in return for axing its nuclear programme, campaigners want human rights to be a part of any deal. Richard Spring, Tory foreign affairs spokesman, is pushing for a House of Commons debate on human rights in North Korea.

'The situation is absolutely horrific,' Spring said. 'It is totally unacceptable by any norms of civilised society. It makes it even more urgent to convince the North Koreans that procuring weapons of mass destruction must end, not only for the security of the region but for the good of their own population.'

Mervyn Thomas, chief executive of Christian Solidarity Worldwide, said: 'For too long the horrendous suffering of the people of North Korea, especially those imprisoned in unspeakably barbaric prison camps, has been met with silence ... It is imperative that the international community does not continue to turn a blind eye to these atrocities which should weigh heavily on the world's conscience.'

·This World is being broadcast on BBC2 at 9pm tonight.

Falco
02-07-2004, 05:10 PM
If this proves to be true it will be another blow to Kim's regime

Merik
02-07-2004, 05:38 PM
Lets blow Kim up. p-)

Tengu
02-07-2004, 05:40 PM
If this proves to be true it will be another blow to Kim's regime I don't think he cares.

ShadowNeo
02-07-2004, 05:42 PM
I watched that documentary when it was on, had some pretty gruesome claims about persecution, really made you sick just to hear of the stuff. What was more chilling though, was just the complete sense of paranoia that the North Korean Officials/Military were showing, and the extent of the misinformation that is present.

What sticks with me was when they were filming a class of 6-7 year olds, who had been asked what they thought of America. From the answers that were heard, it seems that this paranoia has already been passed to the next generation.

Operation Ivy
02-07-2004, 05:44 PM
:-*$ :slap: :fork:

Vance
02-07-2004, 05:44 PM
What sticks with me was when they were filming a class of 6-7 year olds, who had been asked what they thought of America. From the answers that were heard, it seems that this paranoia has already been passed to the next generation.
What was some of the stuff they said?

ShadowNeo
02-07-2004, 05:47 PM
I can't remember the exact quotes, but one of the comments was along the lines of:

"America is the great killer, we will resist the killer and strike them before they can strike us"

Vance
02-07-2004, 05:54 PM
Let's see how well they can strike with a cruise missle up their ass. :)

Tengu
02-07-2004, 05:58 PM
Ppl in N korea are being brainwashed. They are trained to hate the US, democracy,.... and to worship their leader, they see him as a god. Poor dumb basterds.

Vance
02-07-2004, 05:59 PM
Ppl in N korea are being brainwashed. They are trained to hate the US, democracy,.... and to worship their leader, they see him as a god. Poor dumb basterds.
Remind you of something?




*Cough* Nazi Germany *Cough*

Tengu
02-07-2004, 06:09 PM
yes idd, say a few docu's and articles about N korea. Things over there are nasty over there.

Groove
02-07-2004, 06:15 PM
There is no oil in N-korea. But a highly alerted army with millions of soldiers and WMD. And the terrain isnt that flat like in a desert region. So the question here is - when will Mr. Bush liberate the citizen of N-Korea from the beloved leader ?

Groove

Vance
02-07-2004, 06:17 PM
Did we fight WWII to liberate the Germans from their beloved leader? :roll:

Ian H
02-07-2004, 07:00 PM
Nazi Germany is a different case. North Korea has been like this since 1948, people have grown up in this environment with next to no knowledge of the world outside; its easy for us to say they believe a load of crap, but they don't see it that way. If the US were to attempt any form of direct action against NK, they would not have an easy time of it even if the army itself were destroyed,it would be like Iraq but with many times more people attacking them.

usa320
02-07-2004, 09:57 PM
This guy will meet the same fate that Saddam and Hitler and Mousalini met. Jail or death...preferably the later.

Seoulstriker
02-07-2004, 10:10 PM
There is no oil in N-korea. But a highly alerted army with millions of soldiers and WMD. And the terrain isnt that flat like in a desert region. So the question here is - when will Mr. Bush liberate the citizen of N-Korea from the beloved leader ?

Groove

:-*$ :bash: :bash: :bash:

mustamato
02-07-2004, 10:17 PM
Ever heard of Unit 731? I guess not. Anyway it was a group of japanese
scientists that made tests on humans, captured chinese mostly. Put them in
pressure chambers until their eyes popped out and nasty stuff like that.
During the tests about 3000 people were killed. POW´s and political opponents.
After the war when the rest of the prisoners carrying germs were released,
they might have killed another 200.000 spreading the diseases.
The case with Unit 731 was taken to a american military court, 29th of August
1946. But on the direct order of General Douglas MacArthur, the trial was
discontinued.

Committee for the Far East came to this conclusion: "The value of the japanese
data about biological warfare is of a such importance to the US national security
that it definitively outhweighs the consideration of punishing these war criminals.

http://www.skalman.nu/731/bilder/obduktion3.jpg
A human research subject

http://www.skalman.nu/731/bilder/general.jpg
Shiro Ishii (1935-1942) and his sucessor, General
Masaji Kitano (1942-45) were the commaders of
Unit 731.

Well who knows, maybe it will be the same thing with these NK scientists?

California Joe
02-07-2004, 10:20 PM
Those cocksuckers should have all fried.

mustamato
02-07-2004, 10:29 PM
Those cocksuckers should have all fried.

"The value of the japanese data about biological warfare is of a such
importance to the US national security that it definitively outhweighs the
consideration of punishing these war criminals."

Would it be different today? By the way, I Googled and found some more
about what happened to some of the Unit 731 members that the
americans didn´t punish, "because they knew so much that could be to
use". Shiro Ishii, commander of Unit 731 during the most part of
the war, lived peace-fully to his death by cancer in 1959. Masaji
Kitano, that was commander of the Unit 731 in the end, became after
the war director of the "Green Cross Corp", producer of bloodproducts
(and guess where they learned that). Hisato Yoshimure froze
people to death and later become a professor at the female University in
Kobe, he was also awarded one of Japans highests awards. Kozo
Okomoto that conducted tests on living prisoners became a medical
chief at the University in Osaka.

California Joe
02-07-2004, 10:43 PM
I don't care why politically they were spared. It was wrong and they deserved to die in painful ways. We also spared a lot of German scientists that helped us get to the moon. I don't really give a rats ass. Everyone of them should have been assraped. As well as the Washington insiders that signed off on letting them live. I don't care that we went to the moon because of their V2 rocket knowledge.

James
02-08-2004, 12:13 AM
What Joe said.

I have two buddies who did duty on the DMZ - one an Army sniper back in the 80's, the othera USN Corpsman for a Marine unit there in 1999. My Corpsman buddy was knifed by an infiltrator one evening.

DPRK is crazy. Cray-zee. I am a lot more afraid of them than Iraq, or Iran, or anyone else, simply because I think Kim Jong Il is insane.

soma
02-08-2004, 01:06 AM
Ppl in N korea are being brainwashed. They are trained to hate the US, democracy,.... and to worship their leader, they see him as a god. Poor dumb basterds.
Remind you of something?




*Cough* Nazi Germany *Cough*

I was thinking Americans, but only diff ;)