INTERNATIONAL CHRISTIAN NEWS
Former North Korean Agents
Tell of Infiltrating Christians
Hunting for
believers includes fabricating ‘mock’ prayer meetings.
by
Sarah Page
BANGKOK,
Former police and security officers in
North Korea told a U.S. government body that their superiors
had instructed them to play the role of Christians and
infiltrate “underground” prayer meetings in order to
incriminate, arrest, imprison and sometimes execute
believers in North Korea.
Interviewed for a report
issued by the U.S. Commission on International Religious
Freedom (USCIRF), the six officers were tasked – before they
fled North Korea – with finding and eliminating small groups
of Christians.
They said the North Korean
government considers religion – and Christianity in
particular – to be the primary threat to national security,
according to the report, released April 15. Four of the six
security agents had worked with the National Security Agency
(NSA), two with the People’s Security Agency (PSA) and
another for the Korean Workers’ Party.
They also had meted our severe
punishment to refugees repatriated to North Korea who
admitted having contact with Chinese or South Korean
Christians.
Border
Patrol
The six security agents said
there were increased attempts to halt religious activities
along the border with China, including setting up mock
prayer meetings to trap refugee converts, and basic
theological training for security agents to enable them to
infiltrate churches in China and search for North Koreans in
attendance.
The agents described their
detention and interrogation of North Korean refugees as
“counter-intelligence work,” since the government believed
South Korean missionary involvement in the refugee crisis
was nothing short of espionage.
One refugee held at a PSA
detention center in Saetbyeol, North Hamgyeong province, was
told directly that if she had carried the Bible of God into
North Korea, she would be “sent to the [labor camps] and
they would kill her there.”
Border police sent another
refugee to the PSA detention center in North Hamgyeong
province and later to the NSA’s prison at Onseong. “They …
asked whether I had contact with Christians. I was kicked
and struck severely. I had to stand all day long and I was
not permitted to move or speak … When they asked again
whether I had heard of Christianity, I admitted that I had.”
If repatriated refugees have
had little or no contact with religious groups, border
police hand them over to the PSA for short-term detention.
If religious contact is discovered, however, they are handed
over to the NSA for possible torture, sentencing to prison
labor camps, or execution.
“There are no preliminary
hearings when religious people get caught,” one agent said.
“[We] regard them as anti-revolutionary elements. When such
an offender is caught in North Korea, the NSA officers
surround the person and kick and beat the person severely
before interrogating.”
Still another agent confirmed
that, “The most important question asked to the repatriated
is whether they have met South Korean missionaries or
evangelists or encountered or experienced religion. If they
confess that they have met missionaries or deacons…then
without any further questions, they will be sent to the NSA
and they are as good as dead. However, only a small number
of cases involve religions.”
Both the PSA and the NSA play
an important role in “counter-intelligence” operations. The
PSA is a more general police force, while the NSA is the
North Korean counterpart to America’s Federal Bureau of
Investigation or Central Intelligence Agency. The PSA
gathers information on every citizen for a dossier that is
kept on file and used by the NSA to “decide whether to
arrest a person,” according to one former NSA officer.
A Strange
Intelligence
The spread of Christianity in
North Korea is regarded as a deliberate conspiracy between
South Koreans and the United States to undermine or destroy
the North Korean government.
“We arrest political offenders
after securing evidence [through] our informants,” one agent
said. “Things like possessing religious books, sharing one’s
faith with others, or preaching cannot exist because they
undermine the Kim Jong Il regime.”
He continued, “All we need [to
arrest someone] is one bit of evidence such as the Bible
with someone’s name on it. If the Bible is found, [the NSA]
leaves it until the real owner shows up.”
Another agent explained that
there were four groups of surveillance teams – “the NSA, the
PSA, the Party, and the neighborhood unit. [We] give
instructions to the neighborhood unit and the Primary Party
Committee to watch [certain] people. We tell them to watch
them closely and report [the list of] people who visit them.
We are to be informed once every 15 days.”
For example, “There were lots
of religious people in Jeongju, Gwaksan, Unjeon, and
Namsinuiju, so people in that area are still prohibited from
moving to other places and no executive party members are
selected from that area. People there are closely watched
[by the PSA] throughout their entire lives.”
Agents are rewarded with
medals, an increase in wages or promotions for identifying
and arresting religious offenders, according to the report,
entitled, “A Prison Without Bars.” Some security agents
become “desperate because if they don’t catch two or more
cases, they cannot get promoted and they might get kicked
out [of the NSA],” one agent explained.
A graduate from the National
University of Security and Defense said the NSA selected
some students to study religion in order to “ferret out
religious people.” He also said the NSA had samples of
Bibles in all languages for use in such training. Another
interviewee said professors taught courses on religion at
Kim Il Sung University “because there are missionaries and
pastors in North Korea.”
NSA officers also learn skills
and techniques for interrogating religious people. One NSA
informant said he was taught to look for “a person who
remains silent with closed eyes and meditates, or when
habitual smokers or drinkers quit smoking or drinking all of
a sudden.”
These people were “enemies of
the state” and should be watched closely, according to NSA
instructors.
According to one former agent,
“We learn that because a religion is a drug, it can be
spread in a second.” Another said, “In a way.... all threats
are related to religion.”
Severe
Penalties
One agent who worked for 20
years in a Political Offense Concentration Camp – where
Christians are often sent – said he witnessed secret
executions where “the [accused] digs the hole to be buried”
before being executed. Other agents however said that public
executions of political offenders – including Christians –
had decreased in recent years due to negative reactions from
the public.
According to one agent,
punishment varies according to the person’s activity –
“whether he was active or in hiding. The fact that a person
keeps a Bible means that this person plans to believe in a
religion in the future … The most severe punishment is
applied to those who are engaged in the [new religious]
activity: those who carry the Bible from China and those
Christians who help North Korean refugees in China.”
As one refugee testified, “My
relative by marriage was caught while giving away a Bible,
so the entire family was taken to Prison 22 [a penal labor
camp]. They were taken there under the category of religious
spy.”
One repatriated refugee was
sent to an NSA prison in North Hamgyeong province for 15
months. He described his prison experience as being “an
animal without a name. It’s up to the condition of the
guards. Because killing a prisoner will do no harm for
them.”
It seems, however, that
strict surveillance and compulsory allegiance to the system
may have begun to backfire. Both security agents and general
refugees interviewed for the report talked of widespread
disillusionment. As one former agent said, “The reason why
the North Korean system still exists is because of the
strict surveillance system.”
When disillusion sets in, more
people may turn to faith – the very thing dictator Kim Jong
Il fears the most.
As one former prisoner in a
labor camp testified, “It seemed like in my cell about 10
people were believers. [They] kept praying. So I started to
pray with them.”
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