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North Korea Executes Christian For Distributing Bible: Rights Group

KWANG-TAE KIM   07/24/09 01:59 PM ET  AP

SEOUL, South Korea — A Christian woman accused of distributing the Bible, a book banned in communist North Korea, was publicly executed last month for the crime, South Korean activists said Friday.

The 33-year-old mother of three, Ri Hyon Ok, also was accused of spying for South Korea and the United States, and of organizing dissidents, a rights group said in Seoul, citing documents obtained from the North.

The Investigative Commission on Crime Against Humanity report included a copy of Ri's government-issued photo ID and said her husband, children and parents were sent to a political prison the day after her June 16 execution.

The claim could not be independently verified Friday, and there has been no mention by the North's official Korean Central News Agency of her case.

But it would mark a harsh turn in the crackdown on religion in North Korea, a country where Christianity once flourished and where the capital, Pyongyang, was known as the "Jerusalem of the East" for the predominance of the Christian faith.

According to its constitution, North Korea guarantees freedom of religion. But in reality, the regime severely restricts religious observance, with the cult of personality created by national founder Kim Il Sung and enjoyed by his son, current leader Kim Jong Il, serving as a virtual state religion. Those who violate religious restrictions are often accused of crimes such as spying or anti-government activities.

The government has authorized four state churches: one Catholic, two Protestant and one Russian Orthodox. However, they cater to foreigners only, and ordinary North Koreans cannot attend the services.

Still, more than 30,000 North Koreans are believed to practice Christianity in hiding – at great personal risk, defectors and activists say.

The U.S. State Department said in a report last year that "genuine religious freedom does not exist" in North Korea.

"What religious practice or venues exist ... (are) tightly controlled and used to advance the government's political or diplomatic agenda," the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom said in a May report. "Other public and private religious activity is prohibited and anyone discovered engaging in clandestine religious practice faces official discrimination, arrest, imprisonment, and possibly execution."

The report cited indications that the North Korean government had taken "new steps" to stop the clandestine spread of Christianity, particularly in areas near the border with China, including infiltrating underground churches and setting up fake prayer meetings as a trap for Christian converts.

Ri, the North Korean Christian, reportedly was executed in the northwestern city of Ryongchon – near the border with China.

"North Korea appears to have judged that Christian forces could pose a threat to its regime," Do Hee-youn, a leading activist, told reporters Friday in Seoul.

The South Korean rights report also said North Korean security agents arrested and tortured another Christian, Seo Kum Ok, 30, near Ryongchon. She was accused of trying to spy on a nuclear site and hand the information over to South Korea and the United States.

It was unclear whether she survived, the report said. Her husband also was arrested and their two children have since disappeared, it said.

The U.S. government commission report cited defectors as saying an estimated 6,000 Christians are jailed in "Prison No. 15" in the north of the country, with religious prisoners facing worse treatment than other inmates.

In Seoul, the rights group said it would try to take North Korean leader Kim to the International Criminal Court over alleged crimes against humanity.

Activists say such alleged crimes – murder, kidnap, rape, extermination of individuals in prison camps – can't take place in North Korea without Kim's knowledge or direction since he wields absolute power over the population of 24 million.

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SEOUL, South Korea — A Christian woman accused of distributing the Bible, a book banned in communist North Korea, was publicly executed last month for the crime, South Korean activists said Frid...
SEOUL, South Korea — A Christian woman accused of distributing the Bible, a book banned in communist North Korea, was publicly executed last month for the crime, South Korean activists said Frid...
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02:38 PM on 08/18/2009
There is no justification for the execution of a woman who provided a Bible to someone who was, as far as we know, interested in that book. This is nothing but a brutal example to the people of North Korea. And to those of you who are cheering this execution you should be ashamed. There is no justification, from the evidence presented, for her murder by the state. I my self am not a Christian and have experienced discrimination and intimidation attempts. However there was a church down the road from me who provided food to my self and my room mates when we were hungry. People are people, some good and some bad. Yes, some of these groups say and do horrible things, but the actions of the few can not be held against all who follow Christ. The remarkable display of hostility here shocked me, but was not that much of a suprise. We all may need a bit more tolerance in our lives.

On the other hand those who knock on my door during dinner to carry out their Great Comission are going to have to tolerate a bit of intolerance.
04:31 PM on 07/29/2009
I never understood why Christians would target Jews for conversion. There is something very sinister in that desire.
03:05 AM on 07/30/2009
Is there a theme here: netflix, utube, email, facebook1? These comments are so identical, I can predict them in advance.
01:19 PM on 07/30/2009
I think there's more going on than meets the eye...
01:58 AM on 08/04/2009
Don't blame agnostics, these comments are too anti-Christian to come from a real agnostic. To me it sounds like someone sympathetic to strict governmental controls on religion (North Korea, China etc.) smells like propaganda
10:47 AM on 07/30/2009
Irrelevant, as there are (I'm guessing) very few Jews in Korea. Even so, is that worthy of execution?
05:09 PM on 07/28/2009
Kandahar and utube, just what kind of cultural contact do you see as permissible between different ethnic groups?
03:20 PM on 07/28/2009
For those charging Christianity with destroying Asian culture, let me point at the following (that I thought had posted, but isn't showing up) in Korea, Christians have brought changes that have reinforced indigenous Korean culture. The Korean language was originally written in Chinese script, although it was very poorly suited to the particulars of the Korean language. Because of that only the aristrocracy of Korea could read. Catholic educators on the other hand saw the value of Hangul, the phonemic script that is now used in North and South Korea. They mandated that all Catholic Korean children should be educated to learn to use Hangul so that literacy should be widespread. And this is how the masses of North and South Korea became literate. Hangul is unique only to Korea and is a true ethnic treasure.
03:32 PM on 07/28/2009
You could have done that without changing their religion and spreading reigeous hatred.
07:30 PM on 07/28/2009
When did Minimalist Syntax change their religion and spread religious hatred? Do you have documents? Photos?
01:50 AM on 07/29/2009
What religious hatred has ever taken place in North Korea except coming from the current government?
12:58 PM on 07/28/2009
For many years, I've defended liberal ideals against charges of "moral relativism" on the grounds that when liberals have flexible morals, they err on the side of love and compassion. I truly believe that the people who excuse or even defend this action have ceded any right to be called liberal, progressive, or even moral.

I'm not in favour of prolesthetizing. When two aid workers were arrested in Afghanistan for surreptitiously teaching about Jesus, I felt little sympathy for them. However, anyone who refuses to see that this is different both in fact and degree is simply delusional.
01:02 PM on 07/28/2009
Communism in dead and its not going to survive. Its gone.

But the Christian religious bigotry is big and growing. Now this should be our focus in addition to Islamists, to make sure they do not harm others.
03:01 PM on 07/28/2009
"Communism in dead and its not going to survive. Its gone."

Tell that to Kim Jong Il. You know, the one who runs the country that we're actually talking about, rather than anywhere with Islamists?
03:35 PM on 07/28/2009
When a Child comes to you and says "Mommy, Jimmy beat me up" and then another day he comes and say "Oh..tommy beat me up today", and then followed by "Joe kicked me",,,,on and on.

You need to first asj your Child, ok son. You are far bigger than them all combined. and you come to me everyday crying that you are victim of all these much smaller kids. Now why is that? What is your behavior that is causing all this conflict? are you giving out notes disparaging other kids's parents? Are you insulting their moms? Maybe?

Thats what you need to do with these Evangalicals instead of news headline "Jimmy beat up my son". "Tommy beat up my son today" etc!
03:47 PM on 07/28/2009
So you're saying that one woman is somehow "bigger" than the entire North Korean government? That she was so dangerous that she shouldn't be allowed to live?

Just STOP it. This is not about evangelizing Asia. This is about one citizen's right to believe what they want in their own country, and their right to disseminate literature without fear of EXECUTION. How can you possibly argue that this is sensationalizing the story? Grow a heart, please.
11:26 AM on 07/28/2009
These Christians go around messing with other people and get into fights. Then, they come back home whining about it asking for sympathy.

Pfffft!

Stop messing with other peoples belief system. Sheesh!
12:38 PM on 07/28/2009
Did you read the article? She was a North Korean, not an outsider.
12:58 PM on 07/28/2009
Then mind your own business.. I didn't see you whin about the Chinese when they harass the Tibetens.
photo
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Zoe Brain
Girl Rocket Scientist
10:31 AM on 07/28/2009
Having read the comments here - I truly believe that many would have defended the National Socialist German Workers Party in the 1930's. Because those who were sent to KZs deserved it for breaking the law, for being found guilty by People's Courts of being Enemies of the State.

North Korea is a Theocracy, where heresy is punishable by death. Not just the heretic, but their family, their friends, their neighbours, their entire village. It is one big prison camp, where only the inner party enjoys such luxuries as having enough to eat.

The victim was 33 - so her children are what, 8? 12? In any event children only have a 3 month life expectancy in the camps. Of course, as the children of someone special, not just the usual "didn't bow head quickly enough in front to the Dear Leader's picture", they may be headed for the canneries, or the bioweapons labs.

Doesn't anyone here know of the things the North Korean regime has done in the past? Need some Japanese translators? Easy, just kidnap a few dozen Japanese. You can always release them twenty years later, those few that survive. Wnat a film made? Kidnap a foreign director, and his wife.

Hasn't anyone studied the history of the 20th century? Or even read 1984? Hasn't anyone travelled outside the USA?
06:35 PM on 07/27/2009
I have a low tolerance for people who prove Godwin's Law and draw parallels between current woes and what happened under the Nazis. I'm especially tired of the excessive quoting of the famous "first they came for the Jews" speech, and I think it's ridiculous for the most part for Christians to consider themselves persecuted. However, the attitudes of people here are so depressing that I feel really tempted to use that quote. The lack of compassion for someone who was killed for nothing more than distributing a book is disturbing, because it seems to fall into that pattern of "well, it wasn't something I believe in, so who cares?" which is exactly how these things start.
03:08 PM on 07/28/2009
Why would you believe a story that says "she was killed because she gave out Bible"?

That is how they usually present a larger mischief to get sympathy. Thats what they did few months ago about "Hindus killing Christians in India".

Go behind the story.
04:07 PM on 07/28/2009
Are you referring to October of 2008, in which 35 Christians (not outsiders but Indians) were killed by mobs of Hindus and thousands of others made homeless following the murder of a Hindu swami? The ones in which rioters attacked both an orphanage and relief camps? Murders that the Indian Prime Minister (who is Sikh, not that it matters) called "a national disgrace?" Or I suppose the Guardian and the Independent are in the tank for the evangelicals.

Obviously the original murders were awful. However, ever head of two wrongs not making a right?
03:59 PM on 07/28/2009
Pax,

Where is all of this sympathy for Christians happening? Anywhere in these threads? We get it--you're fashionably down on Christianity. Hurrah. Medal's in the mail. However, take a moment or two to notice that (around these parts, at least) people of faith have their hands full simply defending their right to breathe. That's the reality. The only pity party taking place is for the poor, persecuted armchair atheists who, they assure us, won't be free or whole until everyone thinks precisely as they do and/or "religionists" shut up and move their churches into the woods someplace.

I'm also disappointed that you would join in the "However..." game when calling out these children for their inhumanity. There's no "however" when it comes to recognizing that human rights are for all humans, including those below the superior-atheist-humanist-cool-cat fashion curve.
04:27 PM on 07/28/2009
"Where is all of this sympathy for Christians happening? Anywhere in these threads? We get it--you're fashionably down on Christianity. Hurrah. Medal's in the mail. However, take a moment or two to notice that (around these parts, at least) people of faith have their hands full simply defending their right to breathe. That's the reality."


I'm baptised in the United Church of Canada, I still attend (semi)regularly, and I would join a Quaker meeting group if I could find one. I am not down on Christianity at all. However, you and I are both big boys, we can handle ourselves. My point is that most of the 2 billion Christians on the planet are not persecuted for their faith, at least not in the way the Jews were in Europe and the Buddhists are in Tibet. I know that it's horrible out there for many, including the poor woman in N. Korea, and there are other spots in the world where it is very, very dangerous to be Christian. But I was referring to the D. James Kennedy types who believe that removing the 10 commandments from a courtroom is one step away from internment camps. that I cannot abide.

I more or less agree with you but I think that evangelicals take it too far when they complain of persecution *in North America*. Someone has been killed for their beliefs, and that is a tragedy. Having the commandments removed from a courtroom? Not so much.
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10:26 AM on 07/27/2009
So sad to see so many HuffPosters white-knighting for North Korea.
01:02 PM on 07/27/2009
I don't think anyone is supporting the murder to suppress free speech angle. I think the reaction is more the "what did you expect" angle...

Would you say that same if she went into Saudi Arabia?

Should these countries improve? Of course. Should you bet your life that they will quite suddenly improve by pushing their limits and buttons? I'd say no.

Especially for something as worthless as spreading fairy tales.
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02:53 PM on 07/27/2009
I don't care what country it happened in or what religion she was. The "Angry Internet Atheist" brigades here seem so darned happy to see one of those evangelicals they hate so much disappear.

I don't give a fig for any organized religion and see it as a waste of my time, nor am I silly enough to believe that shaking my fists and raging about evengelicals on the internet while screaming about "fairy tales" does any good for anyone or anything.

Congrats, you're an atheist. I'm sure it's very important to *you*, but the rest of us don't care.
03:40 PM on 07/27/2009
"Would you say that same if she went into Saudi Arabia?"

She didn't *go into* anywhere. She was a native North Korean.

"Should these countries improve? Of course. Should you bet your life that they will quite suddenly improve by pushing their limits and buttons? I'd say no."

At one point in US history the law required people to return fugitive slaves to their owners. Admittedly, it was not punishable by death, but if some people didn't dare to "push the limits," we'd have a very different world today.

Do not attempt to blame the victim here. This is vile, pure and simple.
10:13 AM on 07/27/2009
Baptists are the enemies of Non Christians.
10:12 AM on 07/27/2009
All religious Buddists, Sikhs, Hindus, Muslims, Jews and others should join to fight Christianity (Baptists). Otherwise your religion and culture is in danger of cleansed out of this earth.

Do not surrender to Baptists. They are your enemies.
10:09 AM on 07/27/2009
The religious War cry of Christians to put down other religions and faith and culture
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Onward, Christian soldiers, marching as to war,
with the cross of Jesus going on before.
Christ, the royal Master, leads against the foe;
forward into battle see his banners go!

Crowns and thrones may perish, kingdoms rise and wane,
but the church of Jesus constant will remain.
Gates of hell can never against that church prevail;
we have Christ’s own promise, and that cannot fail.
(Refrain)
05:56 PM on 07/27/2009
No, that's a great hymn filled with metaphor. It's about spiritual warfare. Hello.

Please tell me you're only pretending to be utterly illiterate. Please.
04:01 PM on 07/28/2009
You're not pretending. Okay.
09:36 AM on 07/27/2009
Villagers furious with Christian Missionaries:

[India News]: Samanthapettai, Jan 16 : Rage and fury has gripped this tsunami-hit tiny Hindu village in India's southern Tamil Nadu after a group of Christian missionaries allegedly refused them aid for not agreeing to follow their religion.

Tsunami orphans - first they lost their parents,
now they are asked to give up their religion in return for biscuits and water

Samanthapettai, near the temple town of Madurai, faced near devastation on the December 26 when massive tidal waves wiped it clean of homes and lives.

Most of the 200 people here are homeless or displaced , battling to rebuild lives and locating lost family members besides facing risks of epidemic, disease and trauma.

Jubilant at seeing the relief trucks loaded with food, clothes and the much-needed medicines the villagers, many of who have not had a square meal in days, were shocked when the nuns asked them to convert before distributing biscuits and water.

Heated arguments broke out as the locals forcibly tried to stop the relief trucks from leaving. The missionaries, who rushed into their cars on seeing television reporters and the cameras refusing to comment on the incident and managed to leave the village.

Disappointed and shocked into disbelief the hapless villagers still await aid.
09:31 AM on 07/27/2009
The Rev. Duleep Fernando, a Methodist minister based in Colombo, brought the Americans to the camp here. Mr. Fernando said they had described themselves as humanitarian aid workers. He and other Sri Lankan Christian leaders say raising religion with traumatized refugees is unethical.

"We have told them this is not right, but now we don't have any control over them," said Mr. Fernando.

The Rev. Jimmy Seibert, the senior pastor of the Waco church, said in a telephone interview that the church would evaluate whether the group's members should identify themselves as aid workers. But he said the church believes missionary work and aid work "is one thing, not two separate things."

The church's Web site says the Americans are one of four teams - for a total of 75 people - dispatched to Sri Lanka and Indonesia who have persuaded dozens of people to "come to Christ."

According to the Waco church group's Web site, its teams in Sri Lanka and Indonesia are performing "children's ministry," seeing "many people saved" and continuing to "minister to families and children through prayer and evangelism." The congregation uses small groups called "cell churches" to attract new members.

A posting from the team in Indonesia says the country's devastated Aceh is "ripe for Jesus!!"

"What an opportunity," it adds. "It has been closed for five years, and the missionaries in Indonesia consider it the most militant and difficult place for ministry. The door is wide open and the people are hungry."
05:57 PM on 07/27/2009
We get it--you approve of executing people for religious beliefs. But many of us (we call ourselves human beings) don't approve of such things.

Try to understand that.
12:51 PM on 07/28/2009
Right at the top of this article it notes that it was a Methodist minister who objected to this prolysthetizing. Kind of ruins your idea of a monolithic Christian conspiracy to destroy other religions.
09:27 AM on 07/27/2009
They run a "sponsor a missionary" scheme where $30 a month buys an indigenous missionary working covertly among non-Christian communities. The FAQ for sponsors states that a sponsored missionaries cannot receive letters from their sponsor as that might blow their cover:

"native missionaries must not be viewed as working for a foreign agency, as this could severely hinder their work among the non-Christian communities"[2].

Gospel for Asia has set up a special ministry to convert Muslims. They offer specific training for working among Muslims, and provide radio broadcasts in Bengali, Dari and Pashto - targeting the Muslims of India, Bangladesh and Afghanistan.[3]
12:59 PM on 07/28/2009
So what? this has nothing to do with this story.