What's Happening?
A report by the Transitional Justice Working Group (TJWG) indicates a significant rise in executions in North Korea during the COVID-19 pandemic. From January 2020 to the end of 2024, at least 153 people
were executed or sentenced to death, a sharp increase from the 44 executions in the five years prior. The report highlights that many of these executions were related to offenses such as religious activities, superstitions, and the consumption of foreign cultural content like K-dramas and K-pop. The majority of executions were public and carried out by shooting. The TJWG, based in Seoul, tracks human rights violations in North Korea and has documented 358 executions between 2011 and 2024.
Why It's Important?
The increase in executions in North Korea during the pandemic highlights the regime's continued use of capital punishment as a tool for maintaining control and suppressing dissent. This development raises significant human rights concerns and underscores the challenges faced by international organizations in addressing human rights abuses in North Korea. The report's findings may prompt renewed calls for international pressure on Pyongyang to improve its human rights record. The situation also reflects the broader issue of authoritarian regimes using the pandemic as a pretext to tighten control over their populations.





