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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Ahn Myeong Chul

Interviewed August 4, 2014

The existence of political prison camps is essential for maintenance of the [North Korean] regime.

Kim Il Sung created these camps. He wanted to purge people who were against his will.

[Kim Il Sung (1912 – 1994) was the founder and leader of the North Korean state from 1948 until his death in 1994.]

In Kim Il Sung’s doctrine he stated that three generations will be punished for political crimes.

Not your extended family, but the immediate members of your family, meaning your grandfather’s generation, your father’s generation, and your son’s generation. These three generations would be punished.

First, a crime is investigated. If there is any evidence that a person has gone against the system, then the punishment is decided. An individual may or may not have a trial in court.

If you were involved in a very serious crime, you might face a death sentence. As for your family, if a member of your family has engaged in a political crime, a truck comes in the middle of the night and sweeps every family member away from their home. You are then taken to a prison camp.

The family members have no trial, so the family members are suddenly in a prison camp without knowing why. Only after entering the prison camp do you learn what “sin” your family member committed. Then you realize that you also must pay.

If you look at the structure of prison camps in North Korea, there are two kinds of prison camps: one is for economic perpetrators and the other is for political criminals. Regular police are in charge of economic criminals whereas the Ministry of State Security is in charge of political violators. When I say political violators, I’m referring to people who have engaged in some kind of action against or expressed opposition to the North Korean authorities.

There are also two types of areas in prison camps: one that accommodates the perpetrators themselves and another for the perpetrators’ relatives. The prison camp where I worked was for the families.