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A satellite image reportedly shows Camp 22, a prison, in Hoeryong, North Korea. Photo: AFP

One out of 10 North Koreans live as ‘modern slaves’, forced to work by the Kim regime, according to watchdog estimates

The Global Slavery Index found that outside North Korea, the countries with the worst prevalence of slavery were Eritrea, Burundi, the Central African Republic, Afghanistan, Mauritania, South Sudan, Pakistan, Cambodia and Iran

North Korea

North Korea has the highest prevalence of modern slavery in the world, with one out of every 10 citizens victims under the practice, according to estimates included in a new report.

More than 2.6 million people live under modern slavery in the country, the 2018 Global Slavery Index found, with the vast majority forced to work by the state. The report also argued that the North Korean government had the weakest response to slavery out of all the countries surveyed, as the North Korean state itself is involved in forced labour both inside and outside the country.

The report defines modern slavery as slavery itself, as well as human trafficking, forced labour, debt bondage, forced or servile marriage, and the sale and exploitation of children.

Artwork by a former North Korean detainee depicts a prison guard stamping on the hands of a prisoner. Photo: Handout

The findings come amid ongoing negotiations between North Korea and the United States, as well as concurrent inter-Korean talks with South Korea. These talks have focused on denuclearisation and military issues rather than human rights issues such as slavery.

“There’s a strong focus on bombs and missiles, but the North Korean tragedy is much more about lost freedom through the brutal suppression of human potential,” said Andrew Forrest, founder of the Walk Free Foundation.

North Korea is essentially a slave state that uses its own citizens for the Kim regime’s benefit
Amanda Mortwedt Oh, Committee for Human Rights in North Korea

Under the leadership of Forrest, an Australian mining magnate turned anti-slavery campaigner, Walk Free has published the Global Slavery Index since 2013. The index aims to estimate the number of modern slaves in a country, rather than just count reported cases, as the organisation argues the illicit and generally secret practice is more widespread than records show.

In the past some experts, such as human trafficking scholar Anne Gallagher, have criticised the methodology of Walk Free’s estimates, though the organisation has revised its process a number of times in response to criticism. Last year, it joined with the UN-affiliated International Labor Office (ILO) to release a report that estimated 40.3 million people were in some form of modern slavery around the world on any given day last year.

For this year’s index, Walk Free teamed up with Leiden Asia Centre and the Seoul-based Database Centre for North Korean Human Rights (NKDB) in a bid to reach accurate estimates for North Korea, arguably the most secretive nation on earth.

During the research, they conducted interviews with 50 North Korean defectors, all but one of whom said they had been subjected to conditions that met the international legal definition of “forced labour,” according to the index.

“While the information vacuum poses challenges, we are confident that the data reflects the most accurate estimation on the pervasiveness of modern-day slavery inside North Korea,” said Fiona David, Walk Free’s executive director of global research, noting that the research had also involved looking at a variety of pre-existing data from international organisations and non-profit.

Artwork by a former North Korean detainee depicts the prisoners gathered in a crammed detention room to recite the teachings of their “Great Leader” Kim Il-Sung. Photo: Handout

Amanda Mortwedt Oh of the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea, an organisation not affiliated with the research, said she was curious why the 2018 estimate was more than double a 2016 Global Slavery Index estimate. However, she did not dispute the core findings.

“North Korea is essentially a slave state that uses its own citizens for the Kim regime’s benefit,” Mortwedt Oh said, referring to the government led by Kim Jong-un and his father and grandfather before him.

In 2014, the UN Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in North Korea released a report that found that because of the scale of its human rights violations, North Korea “does not have any parallel in the contemporary world.”

The report highlighted North Korea’s political prison camp system: recent estimates have suggested that as many as 130,000 people were being held in four camps for alleged “political crimes”.

Artwork by a former North Korean detainee depicts a prisoner catching a rat to eat. Photo: Handout

North Korea recently announced an amnesty from August 1 for people “convicted of the crimes against the country and people” to coincide with the 70th anniversary of the foundation of the country. Human rights groups have cautioned that there have been previous announcements in previous years and that it was not clear if a significant number of people would be released.

Forrest said that the slavery data showed the need for international pressure.

“The implementation of mass forced-labour programmes, and the sheer scale of modern slavery within North Korea, is the regime’s biggest crime,” Forrest said. “Internationally, both in the US, Europe and beyond, we need to put this issue front and centre of all discussions with Kim Jong-un, and demand immediate freedom as part of any diplomacy or cooperation with North Korea.”

The Global Slavery Index found that outside North Korea, the countries with the worst prevalence of slavery were Eritrea, Burundi, the Central African Republic, Afghanistan, Mauritania, South Sudan, Pakistan, Cambodia and Iran. The report noted that other countries were often complicit through the import of goods at risk of being produced through forced labour – with the United States importing the most at-risk goods of any nations, at US$144 billion a year.

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