Today, the DPRK is likely the world’s most brutal home to coercive groupthink. There are viciously serious competitors in the totalitarian contest — Eritrea, Turkmenistan, and even China, with “Xi Jinping Thought” increasingly mandated for the Chinese people. Still, North Korea is on to the third generation. Christianity only has God the Son and Father. The North’s godhead has the son, father, and grandfather!
This is the starting point of North Korean politics. The USCIRF explained that all freedoms in North Korea “are in fact subordinate to and overruled by a document known as the “Ten Principles for Establishing a Monolithic Leadership System.” This document’s purpose is to bring each North Korean individual’s thoughts and acts in line with the teachings of Kim Il-sung, Kim Jong-il, and Kim Jong-un. And enforcement is ruthless, “through surveillance of the North Korean leadership and central government and party organs, which in turn command the cadres and provincial organs below them, by means of the Workers’ Party of Korea committee system.”
Propaganda and indoctrination of course are used to promote the worship of Kim and discourage other faiths. The process essentially begins at birth and continues into adulthood. The report cited a WPK manual that “uses an example of a woman who had learned and disseminated what are referred to as ‘religious doctrines that bring disease to a person’s ability for independent thought’ and ‘religious songs’ that had ‘turned [the woman] into a complete minion of the enemy.’ In the directive, it describes how the woman was given ‘the specific task [by a foreign religious person] of gathering people who had gone mad for superstition, to organize them into an anti-state religious group.’”
The North employs a plethora of enforcement agencies. However, the commission noted: “Within law enforcement, the Ministry of People’s Security and Ministry of State Security are the main entities implicated in religious freedom violations.” The law does not specifically bar religious belief or practice, but believers can be charged with harming the socialist order, promoting foreign influences, and engaging in “superstitious activities.”
Lesser offenses tend to be handled by the Ministry of People’s Security. USCIRF reported that one enforcement system “involves a public prosecution process managed by the Ministry of People’s Security and the Prosecutor’s Office, according to the criminal code. Documented sentences for crimes related to religious beliefs handled by the Ministry of People’s Security and the Prosecutor’s Office, which almost exclusively concern adherents of Shamanism, range from six months in a forced labor camp to over three years in a re-education facility.”
The other process involves the Ministry of State Security, which is the more fearsome oppressor since it “proactively gathers information on potential threats against the political system.” Religion certainly qualifies as one of these threats: “Anything that incites or encourages a break from national ideological unity and the Ten Principles is considered a threat to the political system.”
It’s no surprise that the penalties for such offenses are especially harsh. The USCIRF said this system is “a secret prosecution process managed by the Ministry of State Security, with typical sentences ranging from 15 years in a prison camp for an individual found guilty to life sentences in a prison camp for up to three generations of the immediate family of an individual found guilty. The Ministry of State Security exclusively handles cases relating to adherents of Christianity.”
Unfortunately, Christians are much more severely punished than practitioners of other faiths, such as Shamanism. Indeed, North Koreans continue to number among the modern martyrs. According to the commission’s report, Christians have been executed in North Korea. It is noteworthy that details from these incidents come from former security officials, reflecting the level of secrecy with which the state deals with incidents of Christianity that arise domestically.
There obviously are no bourgeois civil libertarian protections for any North Korean citizens, especially religious believers. The Ministry of People’s Security at least faces some procedural constraints, but not the Ministry of State Security. The report notes: “Ministry of People’s Security officers are seen working in public as law enforcement officials, while Ministry of State Security officers operate in secret, in the manner of an intelligence agency. Yet the lack of transparency surrounding arrest and pre-trial detention by the Ministry of State Security extends beyond the moment of arrest.”
Brutal treatment is the norm to intimidate during interrogations, force confessions from those arrested, and punish the guilty, which of course means anyone detained. The UCSIRF says: “We documented multiple instances of torture and other cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment being perpetrated by North Korean pre-trial investigation officers and correctional officers against persons suspected of religious adherence. Such treatment included physical beating; positional torture; deprivation of food, water, and sleep; verbal abuse; contaminated and polluted food; body cavity searches and forced nudity; the use of open toilets; hanging torture (also known as ‘Pigeon Torture’); and exposure to extreme violence inflicted upon fellow prisoners.” Prisoners typically faced multiple forms of torture.
No one stands up for the accused in North Korea. The commission noted: “As for legal representation, criminal defendants cannot themselves engage an attorney, but they may be represented by a state-assigned attorney. In practice, the role of a defense attorney is perceived to be that of defending the state.”
Punishment is used to educate — or, more accurately, intimidate. According to the report: