North Korean authorities have placed the entire family of a high-ranking cadre in a political prison camp for violations of the law to eradicate “reactionary thought and culture.” The authorities are apparently bolstering their “politics of fear,” punishing cadres if they do not adhere to the law.

In a telephone conversation with Daily NK on Thursday, a source in Pyongyang said party officials had received a notification that the entire family of a cadre in Pyongyang had been dragged off to a political prison camp on Jan. 29 for violating the law on reactionary thought and culture.

According to the notification document, the cadre — a chief official with the Ministry of State Security in Pyongyang — was sentenced to time in the camp because his child — a person in his 20s identified as “A” —  continuously watched South Korean TV programs and distributed illegal storage devices to people he knew.

North Korean authorities forcefully discharged another of the cadre’s children from the military and sent him to the camp, too.

“A” allegedly watched South Korean TV programs with his friends. The case apparently broke after one of the friends got caught talking about the plot of one of the shows.

The source said the report first came through a party organization, and that prosecutors arrested the family rather than Unified Command 82, which is usually tasked with cracking down on “anti-socialist and non-socialist behavior.” Afterwards, however, Unified Command 82 began investigating the case. 

The investigation found that “A” first came into contact with foreign videos through a market merchant who specialized in illegal storage devices with South Korean TV programs and films. Around 50 people allegedly watched foreign videos through “A.”

North Korean authorities put out a wanted notice for the merchant, but he has already disappeared.

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un seen speaking at the Fourth Plenary Session of the Eighth Workers’ Party of Korea Central Committee. (KCNA/Yonhap News)

Meanwhile, the family was sent to Camp 25 in Susong-dong, Chongjin, North Hamgyong Province, a place so notorious that being sent there is regarded as a death sentence.

With the authorities not only sending an entire family to a political prison camp, but also distributing to other cadres notifications about the sentence, some North Koreans believe the authorities have begun trying to bring cadres in line using the law to eradicate reactionary thought and culture. 

North Korea sentenced the child of a Ministry of State Security official — a university student — to 15 years of forced labor early last month because he allegedly watched foreign videos, including South Korean TV programs and news. The family, meanwhile, was exiled to a remote area.

That North Korea is not only continuing to punish cadres, but also announcing during time devoted to “ideological training” that the family of a high-ranking cadre was sent to a political prison camp, suggests that the authorities are trying to put cadres on edge.

Another high-ranking source in the country told Daily NK that North Korean authorities are bolstering their ideological education, as well as inspections and crackdowns, to ensure that there are no cases of political corruption or “unsightly incidents” during the period between late North Korean leader Kim Jong Il’s birthday on Feb. 16 and the anniversary of the founding of the North Korean army on Apr. 25.

The authorities have designated the period the “the greatest celebration period of the nation.”

In fact, during a meeting of the Sixth Politburo of the Eighth Central Committee on Jan. 19, North Korean authorities sent out detailed orders to party and state agencies to make Kim Il Sung’s 110th birthday and Kim Jong Il’s 80th birthday “great celebrations.”

In fact, the notification regarding the Ministry of State Security cadre’s punishment was reportedly a follow-up measure to the Politburo decision.

According to the high-ranking source, the authorities believe powerful cadres are ultimately the ones watching and distributing illegal videos, and are thus launching an intensive crackdown on them.

Please direct any comments or questions about this article to dailynkenglish@uni-media.net.
Read in Korean
Seulkee Jang
Seulkee Jang is one of Daily NK's full-time reporters and covers North Korean economic and diplomatic issues, including workers dispatched abroad. Jang has a M.A. in Sociology from University of North Korean Studies and a B.A. in Sociology from Yonsei University. She can be reached at skjang(at)uni-media.net.