Onsong concentration camp
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The Onsong concentration camp was an internment camp in North Korea. It housed approximately 15,000 political prisoners and was located in Onsong County, North Hamgyong. It was officially known as Concentration Camp No. 12.
Ahn Myong-chol, a North Korean defector in the South who had served as a guard at a nearby concentration camp at the time, made the allegation, quoting platoon and squad leaders who participated in the suppression operation. Another North Korean defector Mun Hyon-il who had long lived in the Onsong district also claimed that he learned about the massacre from the villagers when he visited the site after Onsong Concentration Camp had been shut down.
The riot erupted, when a political prisoner working as a coal miner beat a State Security Agency operative to death in protest against excessive torture. Over 200 inmates who were at the scene also beat to death another SS official and attacked their quarters across a hill. Political prisoners who all but gave up on their lives joined the riot to boost their forces to over 5,000.
When the situation got out of control, Concentration Camp No. 12, reinforced by the guards and equipment of a nearby concentration camp and armed with machine guns, encircled the camp, fired at rioters at random, and eradicated all the 5,000 rioters, according to the sources. With the riot suppressed, rioters' bodies were either burned, or buried in groups in the nearly hills, while those of guards and their families were buried in the nearby Sawol-ri cemetery.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- "Escapees from North Korean Hell", Le Monde, May 14, 2001.