INTERNATIONAL CHRISTIAN NEWS
Report Details Targeting of
Christians in North Korea
Refugees
describe criminalization of faith; execution possible for
owning Bible.
By Sarah Page
BANGKOK,
Refugee testimonies in a report released this
month by a U.S. government body confirm severe persecution
of Christians throughout North Korea.
In the U.S. Commission on
International Religious Freedom’s (USCIRF) report, refugees
said that Christianity remained a key factor in the
interrogation of people repatriated from China to North
Korea. Border guards reserved the harshest punishment for
those who admitted having any contact with Chinese or South
Korean Christians.
The report, released April 15,
found that consequences are harsh for those found violating
state policies on religion.
“For example, recently many
North Korean refugees have Bibles with them when they are
repatriated,” one refugee said. “In North Korea you can get
away with murder if you have good connections. However, if
you get caught carrying a Bible, there is no way to save
your life.”
Most of the refugees
interviewed said they had little exposure to religious
activity before seeking asylum in China, although a few told
stories of grandparents hiding a Bible or other religious
literature – adding that punishment for owning a Bible could
include execution and the imprisonment of “three
generations” of the owner’s family.
“Worshiping God or [contact
with foreign religious groups or leaders] would make one a
political criminal,” another refugee confirmed. “The
government believes that the Christian church is an
anti-national organization.”
Yet another stated
categorically, “There is no freedom of belief or religion …
[We are taught] that if one is involved in religion, one
cannot survive.”
Former security agents
interviewed for the report said authorities told them that
U.S. or South Korean intelligence agencies distributed
Bibles as part of a master plan to destabilize North Korea.
Based on interviews with North
Korean refugees who have sought asylum in South Korea, the
report confirms that some religious practices – of
Christianity, Buddhism and traditional folk religion – have
survived the repression of both Kim Il Sung and his son and
successor, Kim Jong Il.
“The report provides evidence
that the cult of personality surrounding Kim Jong Il and his
family remains strong, and that Kim Jong Il’s regime
perceives any new religious activity as a security threat to
be combated at all costs,” according to a USCIRF statement.
“As a result, stringent security measures have been enacted
to stop the spread of religion, mostly Protestantism,
through cross-border contacts with China.”
Refugees interviewed for the
report also confirmed that the few official churches in
Pyongyang were “sham” churches, and that articles in the
North Korean constitution guaranteeing religious freedom
were included solely for the benefit of an international
audience.
Former North Korean security
agents interviewed for the report said police had stepped up
efforts to halt religious activity at the border. The North
Korean government even provided basic theological training
for border security guards, enabling them to identify and
entrap North Korean converts.
“New believers” who have come
to faith through contact with Christians in China are
considered a greater threat than “old believers” who came to
faith as a result of family tradition.
The Church
– Alive and Well?
The report offers a rare
perspective on the health of the North Korean church.
Interviewees testified to secret church meetings and
missionary activity; officials perceived both as threats to
North Korean security.
The North Korean government
has claimed there are a total of 512 house churches
throughout the country, but one former police agent quoted
in the report said while there were certainly “underground
believers” in North Korea, it was far too dangerous for
“underground churches” – gatherings of more than a handful
of believers – to operate.
Refugees interviewed who had
been to Pyongyang knew about the few official religious
venues in the capital but said they were “showplaces” for
foreigners, and not “real churches like those in China and
South Korea.” These same refugees knew of religious rights
provisions in North Korean law but believed these were
included for “show” and did not reflect reality.
“We … learned in college about
[legal] statutes regarding freedom of religion,” one refugee
stated, “but the professors told us that it was only to show
outsiders and that we should not believe in any religions.”
The constitution of North
Korea “mentions freedom of belief or freedom of religion a
lot,” another stated. “It’s quite different in reality. If
you say the word ‘religion’ you could face consequences.”
Another refugee said the
government did not allow independent religious organizations
for fear that the regime would be endangered, because
“religion erodes society.”
Cross-border contact with
China has definitely contributed to the growth of the North
Korean church in recent years. While it is impossible to
measure this growth, some refugees interviewed for the
report had attended prayer meetings, while former border
guards had been instructed to set up false underground
churches to attract Christian converts repatriated from
China.
Refugees confirmed both
religious activity and religious repression, consistently
reporting that practitioners can be arrested, sent to
political prison camps or executed.
“In 2003, an underground
church called ‘Yuseon’
was uncovered,” one said. “In around 1999 or 2000, one lady
went to China to earn some money and returned to North Korea
carrying two Bibles with her. She was arrested and sent to
the National Security Agency. Then, her whole family
disappeared.”
Caught at
the Border
Testimony confirmed that
Christianity was a key factor in the interrogation of
repatriated refugees. The admission of contact with
Christians in China may result in torture, imprisonment in
North Korea’s labyrinth of labor camps or execution. Those
who escape such punishment face ongoing surveillance and
discrimination.
Protestant Christians are
targeted because of their historical connection with U.S.
missionaries and their present connection with a vibrant
Protestant population in South Korea.
Explaining the official North
Korean viewpoint, a former security guard said that the
United States was perceived as “controlling one-half of the
Korean peninsula” and attempting to “use religion to get the
other half.”
Following the years of famine,
in 1999 the regime recognized that thousands of citizens had
gone to China in search of food. Border security guards may
now overlook cases where refugees have accepted merely food
or shelter from Korean-Chinese churches. But refugees have
also got wiser in recent years; many have learned not to
admit to such contact with religion in China.
International Response
The report concludes that
North Koreans repatriated to China – particularly those who
have any religious connection – have a well-founded fear of
persecution, qualifying them for protection under the 1951
Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees.
“Either they are persons who
have a well-founded fear of persecution had they remained in
North Korea, or they are refugees because of the place to
which they fled,” the report states. “The Chinese government
continues to forcibly repatriate North Koreans who have
entered China without proper authorization back to North
Korea, where they face brutal interrogations, detentions,
forced labor, and disappearance into the infamous
kwanliso or
political penal labor colonies.”
The report reiterates that the
freedom to leave one’s country of origin is a right
protected by both the Universal Declaration on Human Rights
and the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights. North Korea is a party to the latter, yet it is
illegal to leave North Korea without authorization.
The report calls on the
international community to press China to cease repatriating
North Korean refugees and provide protection for them as
required by the 1951 Convention and its 1967 Protocols, to
which China is a party.
“Policy towards North Korean
refugees repatriated to China against their will clearly
requires more urgent attention,” the report concludes.
Entitled “A Prison Without
Bars,” the USCIRF report by David Hawk updates a previous
study, “Thank You Father Kim Il Sung,” released in 2005.
In
January, Christian support organization Open Doors released
its annual World Watch List of the worst religious
persecutors, with North Korea topping the list for the sixth
consecutive year.
“There
is no other country in the world where Christians are being
persecuted in such a horrible and relentless way,” according
to the organization.
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