Report: Executions in North Korea Surged During Pandemic, 153 Sentenced or Executed
Executions rose sharply in North Korea during the Covid-19 pandemic, according to a new report from a Seoul-based NGO. The investigation sheds light on the Kim Jong-un regime’s ongoing efforts to enforce cultural control and ideological consolidation.
Key Findings
The report by the Transitional Justice Working Group (TJWG) reveals:
- January 2020 to end of 2024: At least 153 people were executed or sentenced to death.
- Five pre-pandemic years (2015-2019): Only 44 people.
- Total under Kim Jong-un’s rule (2011-2024): 358 people executed.
Pandemic-Era Surge
The report found that executions in North Korea surged in 2020, the year Pyongyang sealed its borders. At least 54 people were executed that year, and 45 the following year — compared to an average of roughly five per year between 2016 and 2019.
TJWG noted that executions peaked in the early years of Kim’s rule, with more than 80 people executed in 2013. The numbers subsequently dipped following a landmark UN inquiry that found Pyongyang was systematically committing human rights abuses. But executions surged again with the pandemic’s onset in 2020.
Most Common Capital Offences
Out of 144 documented cases of executions and death sentences during Kim’s rule, the most common offences — accounting for 29 cases — related to religion, superstitions, and foreign cultural content, including the consumption of K-dramas and K-pop.
K-dramas and K-pop, South Korea’s biggest cultural exports, are strictly banned in the North. Researchers say the Kim regime views the spread of South Korean popular culture as a threat to its ideology.
A rare video in 2024 showed two teenagers publicly sentenced to 12 years of hard labour for watching and distributing K-dramas.
Other offences resulting in executions included criticising Kim or the Workers’ Party, intentional homicide, drug trafficking, and helping others flee the country.
Methods of Execution
According to TJWG, more than 70% of these executions were carried out in public, and the vast majority by shooting. The organisation has also mapped out 46 execution sites across the country used during Kim’s rule.
Research Methodology
The report is based on testimonies from more than 250 North Korean defectors across 51 cities and counties. TJWG was established in Seoul in 2014 by activists and researchers from South Korea, North Korea, the US, the UK, and Canada. It tracks human rights violations and publishes regular reports on the death penalty in North Korea.
Future Risks
TJWG warned in its press release: “As the regime pursues a 4th hereditary succession of power, there is a high risk of increased executions to strengthen cultural and ideological control and maintain political dominance.”
The report refocuses international attention on North Korea’s human rights situation, particularly at a time when global attention is more heavily directed toward other geopolitical issues.
Source: BBC News