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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
An 18 page paper which is written as an address delivered to members of an international human rights’ organization, which discusses the existence of concentration camps (specifically addressing the camp in Yodok) in North Korea and the flagrant violations of individual rights that are taking place there. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
18 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGnkcamp.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the continued injustices currently taking place in North Korea. While many nations are turning a blind eye for whatever reason, investigations into charges that there are concentration camps in
this region have produced some startling and truly horrifying results. It is time to expose at long last what has been North Koreas dirty little secret for far too
long. Beyond an iron curtain of Communist secrecy, the North Korean government has been operating prison camps for years, with at least 200,000 political prisoners presently being detained at
six giant camps (Omestad, 2003). U.S. News and World Report investigative journalist Thomas Omestad (2003) referred to these camps as "nothing short of human black holes, into which purported
enemies of the regime disappear and rarely exit" (p. 10). Out of public view, countless men, women, and children have been starved, tortured, and worked to death, with only
a precious few managing to either escape or survive the abuse, coercion, and degradation. It is the testimonies of those brave
souls that have managed to defect to either South Korea or Japan that have described in chilling detail the pain and humiliation of slave labor, beatings, and of the executions
they have personally witnessed that scream to be heard by the world. They are speaking not only for themselves but also for the silenced corpses and aborted fetuses that
have been prevented by the Kim government to speak for themselves. After one intelligence briefing, a shocked U.S. Senator Sam Brownback (R-KS) declared that these concentration camps arguably represent
"the worst human-rights situation in the world" (Omestad, 2003, p. 10). Given politically correct names like management centers, these camps are subdivided into complete control zones, which involves life
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