North Korean Prison Camps
Title
Home
Setting
Three Generations of Brutality
Timeline
The Genesis
The Defectors
The Messenger
The Incarcerated Child
Kim Young-Soon
The Plight
Life in the Camps
Types and Locations of Prison Camps
The Sleuths
United Nations Involvement
Amnesty International Involvement
Conclusion
Supplements
Process Paper
Bibliography
north Korean History
https://www.mtholyoke.edu
1950: Korean war started in 1953. This war was responsible for more than two million lives.
1953: The Korean War ended. This war broke the country in North Korea and South Korea.
1991: North and South Korea join the United Nations.
http://www.un.org/
http://news.nationalpost.com/
1993: North korea starts first non nuclear missile tests. This still continues today.
http://www.biography.com/
1994: Kim Il Sung died and Kim Jong Il took control.
http://birminghamuniamnesty.wordpress.com/
2005: Shin Dong-Hyuk escaped from Camp 14.
2006: North Korea starts first Nuclear missile tests. This still continues today.
http://www.theguardian.com/
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
2011: Kim Jong Il died
https://www.amnesty.org
2011: Amnesty International posted satellite images of North Korean prison camps
http://www.allthingsandersoncooper.com/
2012: Shin Dong-Hyuk was interviewed on
60 Minutes
and told about his life in North Korean prison camps
http://www.dw.de/
2013: A United Nations Panel hearing discussed North Korean prison camps
https://www.amnesty.org
2013: Amnesty International urged North Korea to close two of its prison camps
https://www.amnesty.org
2013: Amnesty International posted more satellite images of prison camps
Back: three generations of brutality
Next: The genesis