{"id":3836,"date":"2018-08-27T13:43:46","date_gmt":"2018-08-27T04:43:46","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.01.asiapress.org\/rimjin-gang\/?p=3836"},"modified":"2018-08-28T17:16:47","modified_gmt":"2018-08-28T08:16:47","slug":"kotchebi-crackdown","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.02.asiapress.org\/rimjin-gang\/2018\/08\/news\/kotchebi-crackdown\/","title":{"rendered":"\uff1cInside N. Korea\uff1e Vagrant children are being captured and sent to the army at the age of 17."},"content":{"rendered":"
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(Referenced picture) A boy carries a sack and wanders the streets. \"His shaved head indicates that he may have escaped from an orphanage.\" Taken in Pyeongtaek, South Pyongan Province in September, 2013. (ASIAPRESS)<\/p><\/div>\n

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\u25c6<\/strong> Hungry children on the run<\/strong>
\nThe economic downturn continues due to sanctions imposed by the UN Security Council. Unfortunately, with the loss of business, the number of people in need is increasing. In early August, we asked our partner, Kang Ji-won, about the situation in North Hamkyung Province and Yanggang Province.<\/span><\/p>\n

- Are there not many who have been reduced to homelessness?<\/strong>
\n\"If you go to the market, you do not see many of them. Because the authorities are in control. If the children walk around the market, they are immediately caught and sent to an orphanage called a \"secondary academy\". If the children escape, they are immediately caught again.\"<\/span><\/p>\n

- How about adults in need?<\/strong>
\n\"There are a lot of old people in Chongjin City and Hoeryong City. They are forced to beg but people have become cold-hearted and almost nobody gives to them. There are people who pull carts during the day and sleep on them at night. They are no different from vagrants.\"<\/span><\/p>\n

\u00a0<\/span>Our partner in Yanggang Province gave us the following description of the market.
\n\"The young children held in the \u201csecondary academy\u201d escape immediately and come to the market. They escape because there they are only given a little bit of cornmeal and are hungry. There are so many hungry children, it\u2019s unbearable. The number of children begging in the market is really increasing.\u201d
\n<\/span>Next page: Are the vagrant children being rounded up on Kim Jong-un\u2019s orders?<\/strong><\/p>\n

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Kim Jung-un visited a newly built orphanage in Pyongyang. Wearing shoes indoors, he inspected the facilities with his executives. Quoted in Rodong Newspaper, dated January 2, 2015<\/p><\/div>\n

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\u25c6 Vagrant children are being rounded up on the orders of Kim Jong-un<\/span><\/p>\n

According to our partner living in Pyongyang, \"the officials are picking up random children on the streets because of Kim Jong-un's 2011 order to build an orphanage and rid the markets of beggars. He originally gave the order because he was furious about images of vagrant children appearing in South Korean and Japanese media.\u201d
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\nAll across the country, Kim Jung-un has built orphanages with names such as 'nurturing academy', 'elementary academy', and 'secondary academy'. This campaign has been covered often in national media, with accompanying headlines heralding 'Kim Jong-un's loving act for children'. However, what is the actual condition of the orphanages?<\/span><\/p>\n

\"As for the Yanggang Province orphanage, it receives insufficient aid from the state and, as the administrators are embezzling funds, the children are always hungry. If they manage to run away, they are caught and interned again. It\u2019s a cycle. Although they are first made to study, when they reach the age of 17, they are sent to the military or to a youth brigade to work on construction.\u201d<\/p>\n

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\uff1cRelated Article\uff1e<\/div>\n