Source: Human Rights Watch
New Testimonies Say Even Children Must Work or Face Detention Camps
(New York) – The North Korean government continues to require forced,
uncompensated labor from workers, including even schoolchildren and
university students, Human Rights Watch said today. In recent interviews
with Human Rights Watch, North Korean defectors say they have faced
years of work for either no wages or symbolic compensation and either
had to pay bribes or face severe punishments if they did not report for
work at assigned workplaces.
Defectors reported to Human Rights Watch that they were required to
work at an assigned workplace after completing school. The effective
collapse of much of the North Korean economy means that many of these
jobs are either unpaid or provide minimal substitute compensation in the
form of food or other rations. Failure to report to an assigned job for
those who try to earn money in other ways can result in being sent to a
forced labor camp for six months to as long as two years.
“The harsh reality faced by North Korean workers and students is unpaid forced labor and exploitation,” said Phil Robertson,
deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “Those who refuse face
being sent to forced labor camps where they must do hard labor, face
physical abuse from guards, and are treated as less than human.”
Human Rights Watch interviewed approximately 65 defectors in South
Korea and Thailand over the past six months. One female North Korean
defector who left North Korea in December 2009 told Human Rights Watch
that “anyone who quits his job … is legally punished for the reason of
being unemployed …” and will be “taken to the forced labor camp for
between three to six months. Anyone who doesn’t work is assumed to be a
criminal in North Korea.” Another male who escaped from North Korea in
March 2011 said that “… if you are placed somewhere [to work], you must
go there without question” and “it is impossible to refuse working
because you didn’t like it, it’s compulsory without a doubt.”
Another defector told Human Rights Watch “After I finished school, the
authorities forced me to work at the government mine but it’s far away
from my home. I had to take care of my sick father because my mother had
died … so I had to bribe the authorities so they would put me in the
ceramics factory nearby … then I was forced to labor at the ceramics
factory …”
Failing to report to work can result in physical punishment at the
hands of work-place managers. A defector told Human Rights Watch “The
factory manager would summon me and beat me and curse at me because I
didn’t go to work. Many people saw me getting beaten…. I told them I
didn’t come to work because I didn’t have anything to eat…The more I
talked, the angrier they got, and they kicked and beat me…It was not
just me, it would happen to other people as well. If a person did not
come to work, the authorities would go to their home to find them. They
would beat them severely and curse at them, saying ‘Why didn’t you come
to work?’”
North Korean defectors said that a lack of pay for work means economic
survival for them and their families depends on their ability to do
their own informal business. For this, bribes must be paid to local
officials and to the enterprise manager to release a person from his or
her daily work requirement for time to start their own business, such as
home production, informal selling of goods at local markets, or
itinerant trading between provinces or even across the border into
China. One female defector told Human Rights Watch, “There were no
rations so I presented some money to the company [where she worked] and
started a business. Unemployed persons are supposed to go to the forced
labor camp…so I constantly paid a certain amount of money to the company
while I secretly ran a business…”
“North Korean government officials force people to work for free and
don’t give them enough to eat, and then extort them when people try to
organize other ways to survive” said Robertson. “This is truly a
predatory regime, with an economic system built on exploitation and
abuse.”
Article 31 of North Korea’s constitution clearly prohibits child labor
while also setting the minimum age for children to work at 16. Yet
parents told Human Rights Watch that children in secondary school
studied in the morning but were regularly sent for unpaid
school-organized work details in the afternoon. A former teacher who
fled North Korea in 2011 told Human Rights Watch that, “I saw one
teacher who would teach in the morning only and bring the students who
were 11 or 12 years old to do outside work…in the afternoon. The kinds
of work students did were planting, repairing roads, participating in
the construction of a swimming pool…students would have lectures until 1
p.m. and then they suffered from [these] kinds of heavy labor….”
Another former student told Human Rights Watch “When I was between 11
and 15 years old I had to work on the government farm almost every day…
We finished class at 1 p.m. and had to rush back home to eat lunch
because the school didn’t provide food for the students. The school
would announce that we’d have to meet back at the school field and bring
our own farm tools. They forced everyone, even the small children, to
work. In the morning the teacher would instruct the students what jobs
they must do during the day and what tools they needed. I felt bad
because this didn’t benefit our family and I had many responsibilities
to do for my family but the government forced me to work for them. I was
always very exhausted as a child.”
Research in 2009 by the Citizen’s Alliance for North Korean Human
Rights found that teachers and school administrators forced students to
work in a variety of situations, including gathering foodstuffs for
re-sale from mountainous areas, cutting down trees for use by the
schools, collecting valuable raw materials according to a quota and
submitting them for recycling as an alleged part of a government
campaign, and working in agriculture on state-run farms. Students start
working during middle-school years, when they are 11 years old, though
in poorer provinces in the north, students are expected to be working as
early as age 8 or 9.
These reports are consistent with the findings of the UN Committee on
the Rights of the Child, which in 2009 stated that North Korean children
“allegedly engage, as part of their schooling, in work which by far
exceeds vocational education goals and is physically highly demanding.”
“While the North Korean government puts on grand shows of children
dancing and performing in synchronized pageants for the world to see,
the daily reality for many children is grinding, forced labor made worse
by a lack of necessary food,” said Robertson.
The accounts of pervasive forced labor, and punishments for failure to
comply with it, are corroborated by a 2009 study by the Korean
Institution for National Unification (KINU). Based on refugee reports,
KINU found that North Korean authorities operate a network of jip-kyul-so (collection center) and ro-dong-dan-ryeon-dae (labor
training centers) camps that hold people for a variety of so-called
crimes, including absence from scheduled work or training, travel
without permission, overstaying a travel permission, including
cross-border travel to China where authorities are convinced the person
was not attempting to go to South Korea, and other crimes.
Human Rights Watch called for North Korea to join the International
Labor Organization (ILO), which would commit the government to follow
the ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work, which
commits member states to eradicate forced labor, child labor, and
respect the right to freedom of association and the right to collective
bargaining. North Korea is one of few countries worldwide that are not
members of the ILO and therefore do not comply with internationally
recognized ILO standards.
“North Korea should end its holdout and join the International Labor
Organization as a first clear step to eradicating forced labor,” said
Robertson. “Adopting international standards will also steer the way to
end child labor and ensure that childhood is a time for nurturing and
learning – instead of toil and abuse.”