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Brainwashing of North Korea's children

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Chilling images from inside the mass indoctrination ceremonies where communist 'cult' leaders brainwash North Korea's children


  • Youngsters aged seven to 13 inducted into Korean Children's Union, a group likened to the Hitler Youth
  • Organisation pledges allegiance to warmongering dictator Kim Jong Un whom they refer to as 'father'
  • Despot leader has previously described members as the 'future masters of a most powerful country'
  • Ceremony held in a stadium in Pyongyang as North Korea presses ahead with ballistic missile launch

By SIMON TOMLINSON PUBLISHED: 09:28 GMT, 12 April 2013 | UPDATED: 15:02 GMT, 12 April 2013


They are barely seven years old, but these glum-looking children are already being drafted into a tyrannical regime hellbent on waging nuclear war with the world.Standing in arrow-straight rows, their faces are hardly the picture of happiness as they are forced to pledge their allegiance to North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un and call him 'father'.Troubling images of them being inducted into an organisation likened to the Hitler Youth emerged as their despot leader pressed ahead with plans to launch a ballistic missile, potentially with nuclear capabilities.

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First steps into tyranny: North Korean children stand in line while officers tie bandanas around their necks at a ceremony to induct them into the Korean Children's Union

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Rogue regime: Thousands gathered at the Kim Il Sung Stadium in the North Korean capital of Pyongyang to watch the youngsters be sworn in


Thousands gathered at the Kim Il Sung Stadium in the North Korean capital of Pyongyang today to watch the youngsters be sworn into the Korean Children's Union, a political organisation for children aged seven to 13, in which they pledge to build up strength to defend their nation.Retired military officers helped them tie on red scarves to help complete the ritual.

At a rally last year, members of the KCU wept and jostled to hold Kim Jong Un's hand in what was likened to a welcome given to teen pop idol Justin Bieber than a political leader.In a speech to mark the organisation's 66th anniversary last June, Kim told the young delegates they were the future masters of 'a most powerful country where every home will be full of laughter and everybody lives in harmony'.
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Indoctrinated: Retired North Korean military members tie red bandanas around the necks of the children to complete the ritual

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Followers: Members of the Korean Children's Union chat while spectators take their seats before the ceremony


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Hierarchy: The children stay in the union until the age of 13 when they move into the Kim Il Sung Socialist Youth League


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Brainwashed: The children are taught to be loyal to the Kim dynasty, with education about the accomplishments of the Communist republic's founder Kim Il Sung and late leader Kim Jong Il


N KOREA DEFECTOR TELLS OF LIFE IN 'VIRTUAL PRISON'

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A North Korean woman has told how she was so desperate to escape the pariah state's reign of terror she risked the execution of her entire family to smuggle them out of the country. Lee Hyeonseo, (top), said the communist regime forced people to live in a 'virtual prison' with no concept of human rights. Anyone caught trying to defect is routinely sentenced to death as Kim Jong Un attempts to hide the reality of food shortages, labour camps and indoctrination from the outside world. And because punishment is handed down for three generations, even the husband or wife, children and grandchildren of those who escape are imprisoned. Miss Lee said she made the 'the long and very difficult' journey to South Korea after bribing her way out of the country.

She did not give details how she managed it, but she very likely didn't have any money. Speaking from a drop-in centre for North Koreans at a Seoul University, she told Sky News: 'People in the north don't know the truth about what is going on as they can't hear or see anything about the wider world.' They don't know about human rights or the suffering. They live in a virtual prison.'



The celebrations took place two days after North Korea's military threatened to fire at South Korean media companies unless they apologised for criticisms of the festivities, including a report comparing them to Hitler Youth rallies. They are taught to be loyal to the Kim dynasty, with education about the accomplishments of the Communist republic's founder Kim Il Sung and late leader Kim Jong Il. At the age of 13, they move on to the Kim Il Sung Socialist Youth League. As tensions on the Korean peninsula continued to escalate today, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry touched down in South Korea this morning just hours after a Pentagon agency has concluded that the secretive country could have a likely ability to launch a nuclear-armed missile at its enemies.The details were leased in Pentagon Defense Intelligence Agency documents from last month that were mistakenly marked as unclassified.

The papers detailed that they have ‘moderate confidence’ that Pyongyang is able to launch ballistic missiles armed with nuclear weapons. However, this was later played down the Obama administration. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, who was in London for the G8 Summit, touched down at the Seoul military airport in Seongnam Friday as part of a spearheaded effort to shift power toward Asia and away from Europe and the Middle East. In a landmark speech in Seoul, Mr Kerry gave the strongest indication yet that military force could be used to tackle the escalating crisis on the Korean peninsula.He said: 'The U.S., South Korea and the international community are united in the fact that North Korea will not be accepted as a nuclear power.'The rhetoric we are hearing from North Korea is simply unacceptable. I'm here to make it clear today that the U.S. will defend our allies and ourselves.'He went on to say the ultimate aim was to establish peace and the eventual reunification of the two Koreas.


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Just like Justin Bieber: North Korean leader Kim Jong Un surrounded by weeping KCU children after getting reception more like a pop star on an official visit last year


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Sabre-rattler: In a speech to mark the organisation's 66th anniversary last June, Kim told the young delegates they were the future masters of 'a most powerful country'


Mr Kerry’s trip was long-planned ahead of the crisis in North Korea, and the Secretary of State is scheduled to tour two other nations during his visit. But he will likely seek to cool tensions following weeks of heightened rhetoric from Kim Jong Un. Hours earlier, President Barack Obama demanded an end to the escalating war rhetoric from Pyongyang. In his first public comments since North Korea warned of a nuclear war on the Korean Peninsula, Obama called it time for the isolated nation 'to end the belligerent approach they have taken and to try to lower temperatures.'

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Behind the iron curtain: Women are put to task maintaining an eight-lane road between Pyongyang and the Korean Demilitarised zone in rare pictures taken last year


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Crumbling economy: The eight-lane road between Pyongyang and the DMZ was built by 5,000 students in the 90s, but is now in terrible condition and hardly used


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Secretive state: North Koreans walk past the country's symbol of art in the capital Pyongyang



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Landmark: The Kim Il-Sung villa, where the founder of North Korea spent time between 1948 and the outbreak of the Korean War two years later


North Korea has not specified plans to fire a missile or carry out another nuclear test, but has warned that it has weapons on standby and would be prepared to strike if provoked by the U.S. and South Korea, its Korean War foes. The secret assessment by the Pentagon was brought to the public eye on Thursday at the House of Representatives’ Armed Services committee by a congressman as he questioned senior Pentagon officials over the true threat North Korea has. The documents, which were confirmed to CNN, are an alarming development in the escalating situation in North Korea. Rep Doug Lamborn, R-Colorado, who questioned senior Pentagon officials Thursday, quoted the document, which read: 'DIA assesses with moderate confidence the North currently has nuclear weapons capable of delivery by ballistic missiles, however the reliability will be low.

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Agricultural: A farmer pictured with an ox wagon in between Pyongyang and the DMZ in North Korea. Swedish photographer Bjorn Bergman spent nine days last year capturing the life of locals


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Class divide: Only the most elite class people are allowed to live and work in central Pyongyang. The country is rife with poverty and any dissenters are imprisoned

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Cut off the outside world: A female train hostess stands outside a carriage at the Pyongyang subway, which is also used as a nuclear shelter

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True view: Women pictured transporting material to farmers in North Korea, which attempts to hide the poverty and deprivation from the outside world


The former classified document is titled: ‘Dynamic Threat Assessment 8099: North Korea Nuclear Weapons Program (March 2013).'Dictator Kim Jong-un was warned last night of ‘further significant measures’ if he presses ahead with plans to test-fire missiles or nuclear weapons. At a summit in London led by Foreign Secretary William Hague, the G8 group of nations agreed new sanctions would follow if North Korea continued to threaten its neighbours. This is the first time the world’s most powerful and richest nations – including Russia – have united to warn of consequences for the young Communist leader of the world’s most isolated country.
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