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(a) Imprisonment

  1. Imprisonment in violation of fundamental rules of international law includes detention that fails to respect the basic principles of due process.1550 These principles are enshrined in articles 9 and 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). Minor failures in ensuring due process to detainees do not amount to imprisonment under international criminal law. However, the requisite level of gravity is reached when persons are detained for long periods of time without ever being brought before an independent judge or being charged, tried or duly convicted for any crime.1551 Fundamental rules of international law are also violated where a person is detained without any valid legal basis that would be compatible with international law, including where the imprisonment resulted from the prisoner’s exercise of human rights guaranteed by international law.1552

  2. The Commission finds that inmates of political prison camps are victims of the crime of imprisonment. Inmates are imprisoned, usually for life, in camps without ever having been brought before a judge in accordance with article 9 (3) and (4) of the ICCPR. They have never been charged, convicted or sentenced to imprisonment, following a fair and public hearing, by a competent, independent and impartial tribunal established by law as would be required by article 14 (1) of the ICCPR.

  3. In addition, inmates are generally not imprisoned for reasons that conform to international human rights law. In many cases, their only transgression was to freely express themselves on political questions, to leave their own country, to hold a religious belief, or to exercise other human rights guaranteed to them under international law. Many inmates are not accused of any personal wrongdoing. They are incarcerated based solely on the principle of guilt by family association. Some are even born prisoners.

(b) Enforced disappearance

  1. International criminal law defines “enforced disappearance” as the arrest, detention or abduction of persons by or with the authorization, support or acquiescence of a state or a political organization, followed by a refusal to acknowledge that deprivation of freedom or to give information on the fate or whereabouts of those persons, with the intention of removing them from the protection of the law for a prolonged period of time.1553

  2. Based on the information received, the Commission finds that inmates of the DPRK’s political prison camps are victims of the crime of enforced disappearance. They are stripped of their citizenship rights and detained incommunicado in remote political prison camps that officially do not exist. Most inmates are imprisoned for life, without any prospect of release. The families of detainees are not informed of the fate or whereabouts of their detained family member. The DPRK authorities commonly refuse to acknowledge the imprisonment outright. In the case of the death of an inmate, the family is not notified, and they are not permitted to collect the body for burial.

  3. The camps are removed from the oversight that the Office of the Prosecutor exerts over ordinary prisons according to DPRK law. The DPRK authorities also consistently deny access to or information about the camps to United Nations human rights bodies. The authorities falsely claim that the camps and their inmates do not exist. These considerations establish that the camps have been set up in order to deprive inmates over a prolonged time period of the protection that oversight bodies, set up under national and international law, could potentially exercise.

(c) Extermination

  1. International criminal law defines extermination as the intentional infliction of conditions of life, inter alia the deprivation of access to food and medicine, calculated to bring about the destruction of part of a population.1554 The crime of extermination therefore requires killing on a massive scale.1555 This can also be carried out by imprisoning a large number of people and withholding the necessities of life so that mass deaths ensue.1556 In determining whether the threshold of mass killing has been reached, the accumulated deaths that are linked to the same overall extermination episode may be aggregated, even if the killings are dispersed in terms of time or geography.1557

  2. The death of large numbers of people does not have to be the goal pursued by the perpetrators for the criminal intent requirement to be satisfied. In the opinion of the Commission, it is sufficient that the perpetrators impose living conditions in calculated awareness that such conditions will cause mass deaths in the ordinary course of events.1558

  3. The Commission’s factual findings on the political prison camps in the DPRK1559 match the definition of extermination. Across the various camps, the living conditions imposed on the political prisoners cause the deaths of thousands of inmates every year. Over the period of the existence of the camp system, hundreds of thousands have died.

  4. The Commission finds that the living conditions in the political prison camps are calculated to bring about mass deaths. Forced to carry out grueling labour, inmates are provided food rations that are so insufficient that many inmates starve to death. Those prisoners who survive do so by devising their own coping mechanisms, often having to resort to means, such as stealing food, that are illegal in the camp and subject to harsh punishment. The death toll is further exacerbated by executions, deaths from torture, the denial of adequate medical care, high incidence of work accidents, lack of shelter and lack of appropriate clothes.

  5. The authorities administering the political prison camps are aware that deaths on a massive scale occur in the ordinary course of events. Information provided to the Commission by former guards and inmates suggests that the camps have the objective of gradually eliminating the camp population by working many prisoners to death. As noted by former political prison camp guard Ahn Myong-chol, political prison camp inmates “are supposed to die in the camp from hard labour”.1560 This corresponds with the instruction, attributed to Kim Il-sung and taught to camp officials, that three generations of class enemies and factionalists must be eliminated.

(d) Murder

  1. The crime of murder under international criminal law requires unlawfully causing the death of a person.1561 The perpetrator must either act with the subjective purpose of causing such death or serious injury or awareness that the causation of death will be the consequence of the impugned acts in the ordinary course of events.1562

  2. The intentional killings of individual inmates in the DPRK’s political prison camps, through summary executions, beatings, infanticide, deliberate starvation and other illegal means, all amount to the crime of murder.

(e) Enslavement

  1. The exercise of any or all of the powers ordinarily attaching to the right of ownership over a person amounts to enslavement.1563 The extraction of forced labour can amount to enslavement if it is accompanied by aggravating circumstances that effectively destroy the juridical personhood of the victim.1564 Relevant circumstances include detention or captivity; the degree of control exercised over the victim’s autonomy; freedom of choice or freedom of movement, including measures taken to prevent or deter escape; fear of violence; abuse of power; duration, conditions and intensity of forced labour; victims’ vulnerability; subjection to cruel treatment and abuse; and intense control of sexuality.1565

  2. The Commission finds that the experience of inmates in political prison camps in the DPRK involves all of the characteristics of enslavement. Inmates are subjected to a lifetime of arduous and perilous forced labour. They are treated as if there were “ploughing animals”, as former inmate Shin Dong Hyuk described their fate.1566 The prisoners are often so weakened from malnourishment and disease that they are literally worked to death. Inmates have no chance of extricating themselves from this situation. Failure to perform forced labour is subject to severe punishment including summary execution, torture and ration cuts that further aggravate starvation. Escape from the high-security total control zones is almost impossible. Anyone who attempts to escape is summarily executed. Inmates are subject to the total control of the camp authorities, who regularly subject them to torture and deny their sexual and reproductive rights.

(f) Torture and subjection to extremely inhumane detention conditions

  1. The Rome Statute defines torture as the intentional infliction of severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, upon a person in the custody or under the control of the perpetrator.1567

  2. The definition of torture under customary international law, as espoused by the ICTY, demands the presence of severe physical or mental pain and suffering, but without requiring custody or control. Instead, the acts in question must “aim at obtaining information or a confession, or at punishing, intimidating or coercing the victim or a third person, or at discriminating, on any ground, against the victim or a third person.”1568

  3. The Commission finds that physical torture is an established feature of the political prison camps in the DPRK, where it is widely used to punish and intimidate inmates held on discriminatory political, religious or social grounds. It is typically carried out in specially constructed punishment blocks. Guards are also authorized and instructed to impose on-the-spot punishments that inflict severe suffering in response to perceived inmate infractions.

  4. Intentionally subjecting persons to extremely inhumane conditions of detention can constitute a crime against humanity.1569 In the case of the DPRK’s political prison camps, the inhumanity of the overall situation is particularly shaped by the policy of deliberate starvation that subjects inmates to a lifetime of physical suffering and mental anguish. Since this severe suffering is inflicted on the prisoners to intimidate and punish them on political grounds, the Commission considers that the threshold of torture may be reached on the ground of their deliberate starvation alone.

(g) Rape and other forms of sexual violence

  1. It is now undisputed that crimes against humanity encompass rape.1570 Although formally prohibited and occasionally leading to disciplinary action, rape is regularly committed in the political prison camps of the DPRK. They are a product of the environment of the prison camps and the impunity generally enjoyed by camp officials. Rape therefore forms part of the overall attack against the camp population. In some cases, female inmates are raped using physical force. In other cases, women are pressed into “consensual” sexual relations to avoid harsh labour assignments, or to receive food. Such cases may also amount to rape as defined under international law, because the perpetrators take advantage of the coercive circumstances of the camp environment and the resulting vulnerability of the female inmates. 1571

  2. The imposition of forced abortions on female inmates who become pregnant without authorization not only results in immediate physically harm,it also interferes with the victim’s reproductive rights and causes severe emotional suffering. Systematic or widespread forced abortions must therefore be considered a form of sexual violence of a gravity amounting to crimes against humanity.1572

  3. The severe pain and suffering of the incarcerated victims of rape and forced abortion, who are targeted on discriminatory political and gender grounds, regularly reach the threshold of torture as defined under the Rome Statute and customary international criminal law.1573

(h) Persecution

  1. International criminal law defines persecution as the intentional and severe deprivation of fundamental rights contrary to international law by reason of the identity of the group or collectivity.1574 The deprivations must be committed with the specific intent of discriminating against the victim. The Rome Statute and customary international criminal law both recognize political and religious grounds among the bases of persecution as a crime against humanity.1575

  2. The Commission finds that inmates in the DPRK’s political prison camps are generally victims of the crime of persecution. They are singled out for punishment involving arbitrary detention, enforced disappearance, torture, starvation, forced labour and other gross human rights violations on the grounds of their religious or political convictions or the socio-political background of their families. Even in the rare cases where political prisoners are released, their persecution continues upon their reintegration into general society as they and their families are restricted to the bottom rungs of the Songbun system.

  3. In the case of women, the persecution on political or social grounds intersects with gender-based persecution.1576 Women are singled out for acts of sexual violence, including rape and forced abortion, because of their gender. In the case of forced abortions, women’s capacity to reproduce is deliberately and systematically targeted in order to prevent the reproduction of so-called ‘class enemies’. In the case of rape, the persecutory intent is not only rooted in the motivations of individual perpetrators. It also manifests itself in a general practice of not making serious efforts to punish the male perpetrators among the guards and other prisoners, even though their action is criminal under the DPRK Criminal Code and also breaches camp rules banning unauthorized sexual contact.

2. Systematic and widespread attack pursuant to State policy

  1. The Commission finds that the inhumane acts perpetrated in the political prison camps in the DPRK are committed on such a scale, and with such a level of organization, that they amount, in and of themselves, to a systematic and widespread attack, pursuant to State policy. Furthermore, the political prison camp system constitutes a core element of the larger systematic and widespread attack on anyone considered to be a threat to the political system or leadership of the DPRK.

  2. The political prison camps were established to achieve a central political objective, namely the elimination of three generations of factionalists and class enemies. Guards and other camp authorities are instructed that this is the objective of the camps, as determined by Kim Il-sung himself. The camps continue to serve this purpose, while also being used to purge from society, anyone else who poses a threat to the political system and its leadership. In addition, the forced labour derived from inmates in the camps’ mines, farms and factories, at minimal cost, assists in the realization of politically important economic objectives, including energy generation and the provision of supplies to the security forces.

  3. The Commission finds that inhumane acts perpetrated in the DPRK’s political prison camps occur on a large scale and follow a regular pattern giving rise to the inference that they form part of an overarching State policy. Across the various political prison camps in the DPRK and over a timespan of six decades, hundreds of thousands of inmates have suffered a very similar pattern of starvation, forced labour and other inhumane acts. Today, between 80,000 and 120,000 prisoners are detained in political prison camps. This represents approximately 1 in every 200 citizens of the DPRK.

  4. Guards and security agents serving in the political prison camps are taught to consider inmates to be sub-human enemies, who no longer enjoy citizen’s rights. Accordingly, they are instructed to treat inmates without pity. This message is reinforced by the activities of the Propaganda Department of the Workers’ Party of Korea and other state institutions, which create hostility towards soc-called ‘enemies of the people’. The combination of indoctrination by specific training and general propaganda creates a psychological environment that eradicates human inhibitions that might otherwise prevent guards from subjecting prisoners to such inhumane acts.

  5. The DPRK has devoted considerable resources to establishing and expanding its sprawling system of camps. The State Security Department (SSD), the country’s elite security agency, is responsible for guarding inmates and administering the camps. An entire SSD bureau is assigned to this task. It is staffed by thousands of agents and guards. Roads and railroad connections have been built so that production taking place in the camps can be fully integrated into the economy. Satellite images viewed by the Commission show continued investment in expanding the camps, their security installations and infrastructure. It is impossible to believe that such a large-scale and complex institutional system could be operated without being based on a State policy approved at the highest level given the strongly centralized nature of the state in the DPRK.

  6. The Commission has received information directly indicating that the camp system is controlled from the highest level of the state. In some cases, the Commission was able to trace orders to cause the disappearance of individuals to the camps to the level of the Supreme Leader. Moreover, the State Security Department, which decides whether to send individuals to the camp, is subject to the directions and close oversight of the Supreme Leader.1577

  7. Despite the increasing futility of such efforts, authorities continue to devote considerable energy to concealing the existence of political prison camps and to preventing information about the crimes committed in them from reaching the international community. Precautions taken by the DPRK authorities even extend to orders from the Supreme Leader to kill all inmates in the case of war or revolution, in order to eradicate the primary evidence of the existence of the camps and the conditions prevailing therein.1578

  8. The Commission finds that the closest analogies, although with shorter duration and different destructive features, are the camps of totalitarian states of the twentieth century. That such political prison camps continue to exist at present in the DPRK is an affront to universally shared human rights rights values and a crime against humanity. It is the duty of the DPRK and the international community to ensure that these camps are dismantled and the surviving prisoners released without further delay.

C. Crimes against humanity in the ordinary prison system

  1. Based on the body of testimony and other information received,1579 the Commission finds that crimes against humanity extend to the ordinary prison system, in particular the ordinary prison camps (kyohwaso) and, to a lesser degree, the various types of short-term forced labour detention facilities.

1. Inhumane acts committed against ordinary prisoners

  1. The Commission finds that the following inhumane acts have been, and are still being, committed:

(a) Imprisonment

  1. Ordinary prisoners in the DPRK are almost always victims of the crime of imprisonment in violation of fundamental rules of international law.

  2. Imprisonment in an ordinary prison camp (kyohwaso) is usually based on a judicial process. However, this is a process that falls far short of a fair and public hearing by a competent, independent and impartial tribunal established by law, as required by international law. Those incarcerated in short-term forced labour detention camps often do not receive a trial at all.

  3. Many inmates in ordinary prisons are imprisoned without substantive reason that would be compatible with international law. Often they are imprisoned is for conduct that constitutes a protected exercise of human rights and should have never been criminalized. Among them are persons who exercised their right to leave the DPRK, who practised a religion or exercised their right to freedom of information by watching foreign films or making international telephone calls.

(b) Extermination and murder

  1. In many respects, the conditions imposed on ordinary prison camp (kyohwaso) inmates in the DPRK are similar to those found in the political prison camps. Differences in the treatment of prisoners are often matters of degree, not principle. Policies that combine forced labour with deliberate starvation, inadequate medical care and poor hygiene conditions cause the death of thousands of inmates annually. The DPRK does not lack the capacity or resources necessary to operate a more humane penitentiary system. Most ordinary prison camps are net producers of food, but food is not given to the prisoners who remain hungry. Moreover, the output of mining and manufacturing carried out in the camps generate revenue that is apparently not used for the benefit of establishing decent conditions of detention. The Commission therefore finds that the inhumane conditions in the camps are a result of a deliberate State policy.

  2. Ordinary prison camps in the DPRK may not have the general objective of eliminating the inmates. Their legally stated purpose at least is to re-educate inmates through labour. Policies emanating from the central government to manage ordinary prisons, however, including the deliberate denial of adequate food and medical care, are being pursued despite awareness that they will cause the death of a large portion of the prison population in the ordinary course of events. This level of criminal intent is sufficient, in the view of the Commission, to establish that crimes against humanity of extermination and murder have been committed.1580

  3. According to the findings of the Commission, individual official acts of murder have taken place in ordinary prison camps, including summary executions of persons who attempt to escape as well as instances of secret executions.1581

(c) Torture, rape and other grave sexual violence

  1. Torture, as defined under international criminal law, is an established feature of the ordinary prisons in the DPRK. Torture manifests itself in the form of solitary confinement in tiny cells, the deliberate imposition of extreme levels of starvation as a disciplinary measure, and the infliction of severe beatings and other atrocities to punish inmates. The suffering resulting from the prolonged starvation, coupled with other inhumane conditions of detention, imposed on inmates to aggravate their punishment generally often also meets the threshold of torture.1582

  2. Although not endorsed as general policy and contrary to prison regulations, the frequent incidences of rape form part of the overall pattern of crimes against humanity. Like in the political prison camps, cases of rape are a direct consequence of the impunity and unchecked power that prison guards and other officials enjoy. The forced abortions to which pregnant inmates have been subjected constitute a form of sexual violence of a gravity that meets the threshold required for crimes against humanity.1583


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