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 on Friday.
The 33-year-old mother of three, Ri Hyon-ok, was also accused of spying for South Korea and the US and of organizing dissidents, a rights group said in Seoul, citing documents from the North.
The Investigative Commission on Crime Against Humanity report included a copy of Ri’s 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 on Friday, and there has been no mention by the North’s official Korean Central News Agency of her case.
The alleged execution 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 state religion. Those who violate religious restrictions are often accused of crimes such as spying or anti-government activities.
There are four state-authorized churches: one Catholic, two Protestant and one Russian Orthodox. However, they cater to foreigners only, and ordinary North Koreans cannot attend services.
Still, more than 30,000 North Koreans are believed to practice Christianity in hiding — at great personal risk, defectors and activists say.
The US 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 US 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 was reportedly 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 in Seoul on Friday.
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 US.
It was unclear if she was still alive, the report said. Her husband was also arrested and their two children have disappeared, it said.
The US 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.
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