Bonjour.
First of all, in 2004 I escaped from North Korea. Before I escaped from North Korea, I was in the United Front Department of the central party of North Korea.
The UFD is basically a counter-intelligence operation of the North Korean government. We look at what we're going to do in our operations and intelligence against South Korea. I was responsible for psychological warfare in that department. When I was there, what I mostly did was look at South Korean poetic styles and then write poetry as someone in South Korea would write poetry. I would put North Korean ideologies into this poetry so that South Koreans would be confused and think that it was a South Korean who was praising North Korea. Through this we tried to get both South Koreans and North Koreans to think that Kim Jong-il and Kim Il Sung were the only road to unification.
Now, North Korea treats everything like this. They want everyone in the world to idolize Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong-il as gods. This is the very central point of their propaganda. This kind of propaganda is being used to brainwash North Korean residents. Through all the domestic outlets in North Korea, this propaganda is used to brainwash all of their residents into thinking that the Kim dynasty people are gods.
Today what I want to tell you is that when you look at human rights in North Korea, you mostly focus on the political labour camps there. But if you look at North Korea from a more accurate perspective, the labour camps themselves might be prisons, but society as a whole is also a prison. Every rule in the labour camps is also reflected outside those camps in North Korean society. It's a physical dictatorship. The North Korean government engages in both physical control and mind control. North Korean residents' bodies and minds are completely controlled by the authorities. Like the Gestapo of the Nazis, they go out and hunt people down for their thoughts that might be different from what is prescribed, and they run the labour camps. But North Koreans are worse than the Nazis. The Nazis had labour camps that were directed at people who were not of their nation. North Koreans are putting their own people into these labour camps and under the hardships there.
I'd like to talk a little bit about the mind control aspect of North Korea. Along with physical oppression, North Korea uses mind control to control the minds and hearts of people so that they will deify their leader. All of this is done through propaganda. For mind control, all of the art and literature in North Korea is controlled by the authorities. There is a council that reviews every single piece of art that is released. If that council does not approve, you cannot let a single song out into the public in North Korea.
Everything starts from control of language in North Korea. We have built Kim Il Sung, Kim Jong-il, and Kim Jong-un into a cult. Specific language is used when we are talking about the leaders. By controlling the language first, North Korean authorities are brainwashing the North Korean residents and gaining control over them, in both mind and body.
If we look at the slogans that are forced upon North Korean residents, they talk about how you're only a piece of meat if you don't have your ideologies straight. Basically, a political life is what they're talking about, which means loyalty to the leader. If you don't have loyalty to the leader, then you're not a real human, you're just a piece of meat. That's what that slogan is saying.
You probably have heard of the many public executions that North Korea is carrying out. They're doing this because they want loyalty to their leader, loyalty to the party. If someone no longer has that loyalty, then they're not human.
In this regard, I would like to give you an example of something that I myself experienced. In the United Front Department division that I worked for, one person who also worked there was sent to a labour camp. We went to the home of my colleague to help him pack up as he prepared to go to the labour camp. But you see, this too was about control and brainwashing, a part of life in the organization of the party. What I saw happen at the home of my colleague surprised me. Once he was all packed and ready to move, some North Korean security people came and asked the wife, “Are you going to follow your husband to the labour camp or are you going to follow the party?” The wife was forced to say that she would follow the party. What else could she do? If she said she would follow her husband, then she too would be sent to a political labour camp. The authorities were forcing her to choose on the spot, right then, loyalty to the party or to her husband.
But as soon as she chose, the North Korean security authorities took her infant child away from her. Why? Because North Korea has punishment by association. That baby was this guy's son: he was going to the labour camp with his dad. So the mom lost her baby even though she chose the party, and we really could do nothing but cry. We couldn't show our tears, as that would have been seen as treason as well. We had to be very careful, but all of us were sobbing in our hearts. Think about it; her baby was just taken away from her. She was nursing her baby, and the baby was just taken away from her. She started crying as her milk began to come in again, and for the first time in my life I saw tears in the form of milk coming from a nursing mother's breasts. All of us were sobbing in our hearts.
Public executions in North Korea are a normal happening. In the rural areas, you usually have these public executions held in the market areas, because that's where most of the people are. They choose a place where a lot of people are. It's not just a form of punishment; it's a means of propaganda and it's a means of brainwashing the residents of North Korea.
I escaped from North Korea, and I went into China first. In my heart I realized the cruelty of North Korea when I escaped and looked back on the country I'd left. What I want to tell you today is that we need to make sure we reach the people of North Korea who are suffering under this situation of mind control and physical oppression in North Korea. We need outside help to do this.
When you look at North Korea, you can't think of it as just one entity. You have to separate it into the North Korean authorities and then the residents. I wish Canada would stand on the side of the North Korean residents. What can Canada do? I think the legislation of a North Korean human rights act would be the first step. I'm here today to testify and to urge you to please work on this North Korean human rights act.
Thank you very much.