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Bible Owners Among Dead in Mass Public Executions Across North Korea

November 12, 2013 | Asia
November 12, 2013
AsiaNorth Korea

ICC Note: In the first known large scale executions under the still new regime of Kim Jong-un as many as 80 “criminals” were publicly killed by authorities across the country. Among those executed included individuals guilty of “possessing a Bible”, said the South Korean newspaper that reported on the executions. According to the newspaper the executions took place in about eight different cities. In Wonsan, eight individuals were reportedly tied to stakes at a sports stadium and riddled with machine gun bullets as thousands were forced to watch. Family members of those executed were shipped off to prison camps, were conditions are atrocious and many die from malnutrition. North Korea is the world’s worst persecutor of Christians. The possession of a Bible is illegal, and religious activity can be punished by death or the life imprisonment of three generations of the “criminals” family. 
11/12/2013 North Korea (Fox News) – As many as 80 people were publicly executed in North Korea earlier this month, some for offenses as minor as watching South Korean movies or possessing a Bible.
South Korean newspaper JoongAng Ilbo reported that the so-called criminals were put to death in seven cities across North Korea on Nov. 3, in the first known large-scale public executions by the Kim Jong-un regime.
A source, who is familiar with internal affairs in the North and who recently visited the country, told the paper that about 10 people were killed in each city.
Eight people — their heads covered with white bags — were tied to stakes at a local stadium in the city of Wonsan, before authorities shot them with a machine gun, according to the source.
Wonsan authorities gathered a crowd of 10,000 people, including children, at Shinpoong Stadium and forced them to watch the killings.
“I heard from the residents that they watched in terror as the corpses were (so) riddled by machine-gun fire that they were hard to identify afterward,” the JoongAng Ilbo source said.
Most of the Wonsan victims were charged with watching or illegally trafficking South Korean videos, involvement in prostitution, or possessing a Bible.
Relatives or accomplices of the execution victims implicated in their alleged crimes were sent to prison camps.
There is no clear reason for the executions. One government official noted they occurred in cities that are centers of economic development. Wonsan is a port city that Kim is reportedly planning to make a tourist destination by building an airport, hotels and a ski resort on Mount Masik.

The common theme of the persecution was crimes related to South Korea — like watching South Korean films — or corruption of public morals, especially sexual misconduct. North Korean law permits executions for conspiring to overthrow the government, treason and terrorism. But the country has also been known to order public executions for minor infractions such as religious activism, cellphone use and stealing food, in an effort to intimidate the public.
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