The
BBC has broadcast harrowing footage purportedly showing
Sydney Morning Herald
AFP
The BBC has broadcast harrowing footage purportedly showing North Koreans
being publicly executed by firing squad for trying to flee the totalitarian
regime.
The pictures, filmed in secret just over a month ago in towns near the North
Korean border with China, were obtained by the British broadcaster and shown
on television.
They add to a mountain of evidence of massive human rights abuses by
Pyongyang, which the government consistently denies.
"Those who are to be executed are brought in a vehicle, they are gagged and
half dead," one North Korean defector, Kim Young Soon, said.
"Then they say you are being judged in the name of the people because you
tried to escape. They fire a single shot and say you are being shot because
you are an enemy of the people, then these people fall and die on the spot,"
she said, speaking through a translator.
In an exclusive report, the BBC showed shaky footage of prisoners standing
in a field as an off-screen voice gave the order to take aim and fire.
"Aim at the enemy. Single shot. Fire. Fire. Fire. Cease firing," the voice
commanded, according to subtitles.
Kim Young Soon said up to 1,000 local townspeople were forced to watch the
executions and told they too would be shot if they tried to leave.
The BBC said it was impossible to verify the authenticity of the tape due to
the impenetrable nature of the regime, but the pictures corresponded with a
wealth of witness accounts given by people who managed to escape the
country.
"It is very important that we now have this film footage because what we
have been saying for years is happening," said Elizabeth Batha, an
international advocate of the human rights organisation Christian Solidarity
Worldwide.
Bill Rammell, Under Secretary of State at Britain's Foreign Office,
reiterated a call to the international community to consider tougher action
against North Korea if it failed to make progress soon on human rights
abuse.
"Some of the very credible reports that come forward about gas
experimentation, about infanticide, about whole generations of families
being locked up are absolutely appalling," he told the BBC, according to a
separate transcript of the interview.
"I think we're right to put pressure on the regime.
"I think the record, arguably, in North Korea is the worst in the world."
Last week Rammell, who visited the Stalinist state in September 2004,
confirmed European countries were preparing to submit a resolution to the
53-member UN Human Rights Commission, which is meeting in Geneva, condemning
abuse by Pyongyang and continuing the mandate of a UN rights expert to
monitor the country.
The special rapporteur, Vitit Muntarbhorn, was appointed last year but he
has yet been granted access to the country.
http://nkhumanrights.or.kr/NKHR_new/index_eng_new.htm
History of leftist movement and ideology:
http://www.sabre.org/ukrlib/books/ninth.circle/nc.photos.html
http://www.brandeis.edu/departments/sakharov/Reddaway/Reddaway.html
http://www.okay.com/dunc/gulag.htm
http://www.infoukes.com/history/famine/gregorovich/
http://stores.yahoo.com/ihf/377.html
http://humphrys.humanists.net/soviet.html
http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/COM.ART.HTM
http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/RM1.UKRAIN.FAM.BODIES.HTM
http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/RM1.UKRAIANIAN.VICTIM.HTM
http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/RM3.S.FACE.OF.FAM.HTM
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