By Ekene Oramalu
North Korea has executed people for distributing foreign films and television dramas, including popular South Korean series, according to a new United Nations human rights report.
The 14-page document,
released in Geneva, paints a bleak picture of worsening repression under Kim
Jong Un, highlighting a surge in executions for both political and
non-political offences since the COVID-19 pandemic. The findings are based on
more than 300 interviews with defectors and witnesses who fled the country.
The report reveals that
laws introduced in recent years have criminalised the possession and sharing of
foreign cultural content, with punishments escalating from imprisonment to the
death penalty. “Distributing South Korean dramas or foreign films is now
treated as a serious crime against the state,” said James Heenan of the UN
Human Rights Office.
Investigators also
found evidence of expanded state surveillance, aided by new technologies, and
the routine use of forced labour. Children, particularly from poorer families,
are reportedly mobilised into so-called “shock brigades” to work in dangerous
sectors such as mining and construction.
While the report notes
some limited improvements — including fewer incidents of violence by guards in
detention facilities and new legal provisions on trial guarantees — officials
say these gains are overshadowed by broader, systemic abuses.
North Korea has
dismissed the findings, rejecting both the report and the Human Rights Council
resolution that authorised it. Pyongyang has consistently denied accusations of
human rights violations, accusing the UN of bias and politicisation.
The report will likely
intensify calls for greater international scrutiny of the isolated state, as
human rights organisations urge governments not to overlook abuses while
focusing on nuclear and security concerns.
The findings underscore
how harsh punishments, including execution, are being used to maintain absolute
control over North Korea’s society.
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