A two-year-old in North Korea has been sentenced to life in prison after the toddler’s parents were found with a Bible.
The unnamed tot’s entire family was also jailed under dictator Kim Jong-un’s regime, according to a new International Religious Freedom Report from the US State Department.
And this isn’t the first time religious citizens have been persecuted in the country – one Christian woman and her grandchild were executed by firing squad for their beliefs back in 2011.
Others have been subjected to pigeon torture, which involves having their hands tied behind their backs and their legs tied together before being hung from the ceiling for days on end.
One survivor said: “It was the most painful of all tortures. It was so painful that I felt it was better to die.”
Others were tortured with other methods including sleep deprivation, with one woman in solitary confinement having been driven to suicide in 2020 after prison guards refused to let her sleep.
And even a member of the ruling party wasn’t safe after it was discovered they owned a Bible and were executed in front of a 3,000-strong audience.
It is thought up to 70,000 Christians have been thrown in prison because of their beliefs since Kim Jong-Un took to power, out of a possible 400,000.
North Korea’s constitution claims to guarantee religious freedom for it citizens and the country has several churches in Pyongyang, the nation’s capital, which it claims is proof of its acceptance of the Christian faith.
However the new report slammed the churches as “showpieces for foreigners”.
One defector even reported people could be arrested for hanging around outside the places of worship for too long or listening to music coming from inside – or even driving past them too many times.
One visitor from Illinois, US, visited Chilgol Protestant Church in Pyongyang for a service and told Pen News: “It feels real but like many things indeed it may be somewhat a show for tourists.
“In this case it might be a mixture of showmanship and a few elderly Christians in the area.”
Cunningham also said the congregation didn’t have any children or young people present and was made up of men who appeared over 65 and women over 40.
“What you did not see were children or young working-age people,” he observed.
This finding was backed up by the report that said many Christians in North Korea even hide their religion from their kids to protect themselves.
One defector even reported people could be arrested for hanging around outside the places of worship for too long or listening to music coming from inside – or even driving past them too many times.
One visitor from Illinois, US, visited Chilgol Protestant Church in Pyongyang for a service and told Pen News: “It feels real but like many things indeed it may be somewhat a show for tourists.
“In this case it might be a mixture of showmanship and a few elderly Christians in the area.”
Cunningham also said the congregation didn’t have any children or young people present and was made up of men who appeared over 65 and women over 40.
“What you did not see were children or young working-age people,” he observed.
This finding was backed up by the report that said many Christians in North Korea even hide their religion from their kids to protect themselves.