"I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life"

Father God, thank you for the love of the truth you have given me. Please bless me with the wisdom, knowledge and discernment needed to always present the truth in an attitude of grace and love. Use this blog and Northwoods Ministries for your glory. Help us all to read and to study Your Word without preconceived notions, but rather, let scripture interpret scripture in the presence of the Holy Spirit. All praise to our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

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Showing posts with label life sentence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label life sentence. Show all posts

Friday, November 12, 2021

Bits and Bites from Around the World > Another Siberian Shaman Arrested; Woman Diagnosed with 'Climate Change'; Truth or Dare - Life Sentence; Assange Gets Married

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Russian ‘shaman’ detained by cops after pledge to

‘save humanity from satanist pedophiles’

8 Nov, 2021 09:13 

Screenshots © YouTube / ДЫЛЫК ХААН Дылыков


A man from Russia’s remote Far East purporting to be a traditional spiritual leader has been detained by authorities after blogging his colossal journey across Siberia on foot as part of a self-declared mission to save the world.

On Sunday, law enforcement officials in the Urals city of Ekaterinburg confirmed to local media that Nikolay Dylykov, who goes by the name Dylyk Khan, had been taken into custody as a potential risk to himself and others.

Within the past year, the self-declared spiritual leader had filmed himself on a marathon walk across the vast expanse of eastern Russia, pledging to reach the city, Russia's fourth largest. Local media reports that he had announced he was on a mission “to save humanity from satanist pedophiles.”

He is said to have introduced himself to police as Alexander Gabyshev, a different self-declared shaman who was detained in 2019 after declaring an intention to march thousands of kilometres to Moscow, from remote Yakutia, supposedly to exorcise the soul of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“The police weren’t looking for Gabyshev,” a law enforcement source told Moscow’s Kommersant. It later emerged that the detainee was actually Dylykov, who is reportedly registered with the Ministry of Internal Affairs as a vulnerable person who potentially poses a threat to others.

After an international media storm, a court in the East Siberian city of Yakutsk placed Gabyshev into a secure facility in July after he reportedly threatened to stab a public safety official with a homemade sword. He is now serving his time in the specialist institution for an indefinite period.

In an original plan disclosed to investigators, he claimed he would walk the 7,500 kilometer distance from his native Yakutia to Moscow’s iconic Red Square, where he would light a ritual bonfire of fermented dairy products and horsehair. After uttering a shamanic prayer, Putin would calmly resign, Gabyshev said at the time.




Doctor diagnoses elderly woman with a case of ‘CLIMATE CHANGE’

9 Nov, 2021 16:43

FILE PHOTO: Water droppers battle an out of control forest fire in Prince Albert, Canada, May 18, 2021
© Reuters / David Stobbe

A Canadian doctor got the media’s attention by diagnosing an elderly asthma patient as suffering from “climate change.” However, his headline-grabbing diagnosis may be missing a simpler explanation.

When a woman in her 70s showed up with breathing difficulties at Kootenay Lake Hospital in Nelson, British Columbia, this summer, Dr. Kyle Merritt decided to diagnose her as suffering from a condition not taught in medical school textbooks: “climate change.”

Though the woman had a litany of health problems to begin with – “She has diabetes. She has some heart failure… She lives in a trailer, no air conditioning,” Merritt determined that smoke from wildfires, caused by an historic heatwave that left nearly 600 dead in the Canadian province during July and August, worsened her asthma. He told the Times Colonist that based on this chain of events, he picked up the woman’s chart and wrote in the words “climate change.”

Merritt’s diagnosis did not change how the woman was treated, and could be seen by skeptics as a political statement, especially since he followed it up by banding together with 40 other doctors at his hospital to form an activist group called Doctors and Nurses for Planetary Health. However, he stands by his move.

“If we’re not looking at the underlying cause, and we’re just treating the symptoms, we’re just gonna keep falling further and further behind,” he told Glacier Media.

Merritt’s story made waves in the Canadian media, at a time when world leaders, including Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, are gathering in Glasgow to hash out environmental policies at the UN’s COP26 climate conference. However, while the doctor was confident enough to draw a line connecting climate change to wildfires to his elderly patient’s asthma, forestry experts say the problem is more complex.

“Even if we were able to turn back the dial on climate change we would still have wildfires that are severe and would burn people’s houses down,” Jesse Zeman of the BC Wildlife Federation told the National Post in July. A month earlier, researchers at the University of British Columbia found that by refusing to periodically burn off dead vegetation from the province’s forests, authorities are allowing dry fuel to pile up and ensuring that wildfires are now “much more severe” when they do strike.

While a warmer climate makes fires more likely, humans could better control the blazes by cleaning up the forest floors and getting more comfortable with controlled burning, the Globe and Mail’s editorial board argued in July. “Canada’s massive wildfires are the result of decades of bad decisions,” they wrote. “But tools are available to mitigate and contain the damage.”

The question is, were these bad decisions a result of stupidity or were they intentional?




Granny killer jailed for life after revelation during ‘truth or dare’ game

12 Nov, 2021 14:03

© Getty Images / kali9

A student who revealed in a game of ‘truth or dare’ that he had killed his grandmother has been imprisoned for life, with a minimum jail time of 15 years, for starting a fire at the 94-year-old’s bungalow.

Tiernan Darnton, 21, was jailed for life on Friday for killing his step-grandmother, which was initially ruled to have been an accident.

Mary Gregory, aged 94, was discovered cowering under a table in her bungalow, which was engulfed with smoke in Lancashire, England, in the early hours of the morning in late May 2018. She passed away just four days later.

An investigation conducted at the time by the local fire service eliminated the possibility of foul play from a third party, concluding that the inferno likely started from a discarded cigarette. Based on this evidence, a coroner ruled the death as accidental three years ago.

But police reopened the case in May 2019, a year after the bungalow blaze, following a revelation made by Darnton during his counselling session.

Darnton told his counsellor that during a game of ‘truth or dare’ he had disclosed to his friend that he committed a murder and that this pal’s knowledge could land him in prison. 

“I have a secret I haven't told anyone. I may have killed someone,” the young man said when revealing his “darkest secret” to his two friends just weeks after the 94-year old’s death.

At his trial, Darnton said his remarks to his counsellor were “attention-seeking” and rebuffed any wrongdoing. He also said he wanted to impress his friends in the game.

But after being arrested at his family home in May 2019, investigations into his internet history unearthed disturbing searches, including “urge to kill again.” Just a month before the deadly fire, he had also googled “under 18 murder.”

Drawings of Mrs Gregory’s bungalow were also found at Darnton’s family home that outlined a “good hiding place” and “quick exit.” Attempts to hinder the pensioner’s attempts to escape were discovered, including a tampered smoke alarm.

Explaining the motive behind starting the fire, Darnton told the court that he did not want his step-grandmother to suffer from dementia any longer. 

Lancashire, UK



UK caves, allows Assange to get married in jail


There should be something funny about this - the old ball and chain, the institution, etc., but it's disgraceful that Assange is still in prison. Being persecuted by 3 different American Presidents says much more about America than it does about Assange. It's time to drop the persecution and accept that you just can't get away with spying on anyone and everyone as you please.

12 Nov, 2021 00:29 

FILE PHOTO: Julian Assange and partner Stella Moris are seen in an undated photo shared by Moris on social media November 11, 2021. ©  Twitter / @StellaMoris1 / screenshot


Imprisoned WikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange will tie the knot with the mother of his children at a maximum security UK prison, after Stella Moris sued the “creepy” British government for denying them the right to marry.

“Julian and I now have permission to marry in Belmarsh prison,” Moris tweeted on Thursday evening, explaining that the UK government had “backed down” 24 hours before a legal deadline.

“I am relieved but still angry that legal action was necessary to put a stop to the illegal interference with our basic right to marry,” she added.

Moris, who has two sons with Assange, filed a lawsuit against Justice Secretary Dominic Raab and Belmarsh Governor Jenny Louis on Friday, arguing that “creepy elements of the UK government” engaged in “unfair, irrational and sinister” behaviour to illegitimately interfere in their plans.

Assange and Moris have been engaged for five years, and have been asking officials at the maximum-security prison for permission to arrange a wedding since May. When they finally received a reply, they were told the matter had been referred to the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS).

As the CPS represents the US government in the extradition proceedings against the Australian-born publisher, putting them in charge of the marriage basically gives Washington veto powers, which is “completely outrageous,” Moris told Democracy Now.

Speaking with The Independent, Moris said the interference with the marriage request was a bid to “break [Assange] psychologically” and that there were no legitimate reasons for it.

“It’s a really basic, essential thing, a human thing, and it’s not for the intelligence services, our politicians or anyone else,” she said.



Thursday, April 18, 2019

Montreal Terrorist Sentenced to Life in Prison for 2017 Michigan Airport Attack

'I regret I didn't kill that cop,' Amor Ftouhi tells judge
CBC News 

Amor Ftouhi has been sentenced to life in U.S. prison. (Facebook)

Amor Ftouhi, a Montreal man, was sentenced Thursday to life in a U.S. prison for stabbing a police officer in a Flint, Mich. airport in 2017. 

His lawyers were seeking a 25-year sentence.

"He was crystal clear today. If he had the opportunity to kill more people, he would," said U.S. District Judge Matthew Leitman.

In court, Ftouhi had said he regretted not having a machine gun during the knife attack.

"Do I regret what I did? Never," Ftouhi told the judge in a federal courtroom in Flint. "I regret I didn't get that machine gun. I regret I didn't kill that cop."

Witnesses said he yelled 'Allahu akbar' while attacking Lt. Jeff Neville. The officer survived being stabbed in the neck. 

"I'm glad he didn't have a machete on him," Neville said outside the courthouse after the sentencing. "A knife was enough to deal with."

Neville lost feeling on the right side of his face. He has retired from the airport police department because of post-traumatic stress disorder.

Thursday, Ftouhi testified he would do it again if given the chance.

Radio-Canada's Rose St-Pierre reports that Ftouhi told the judge he wished he had caused greater carnage. 

In court, Ftouhi said he had a good education and many skills, but felt discrimination in Canada because he wasn't a white Christian. He pledged allegiance to his Muslim faith and said Western countries and Arabic countries should be cursed if they "don't rule according to Allah."

Ftouhi's attorney, Joan Morgan, wanted a 25-year prison sentence in solitary confinement, arguing it would be equivalent to a life sentence because Ftouhi is 51.

Morgan also said Ftouhi's mental health had deteriorated at the time of the attack and has slipped even further during the 22 months in custody awaiting trial and sentencing.

His mental health deteriorated when he was radicalized. Radical Muslims are all mentally ill and should be segregated from society.

"People change ... He is more than what his actions were," said Morgan. 

Ftouhi was convicted in November of committing an act of terrorism transcending national boundaries.


Tuesday, March 12, 2019

French Islamic Militant Who Attacked Jewish Museum in 2014 Sentenced to Life

By Darryl Coote

Security was on alert at the Brussels Palace of Justice during the sentencing Monday of Mehdi Nemmouche, the man convicted last week of killing four people at the Jewish Museum of Belgium in 2014. Photo by Stephanie Lecocq/EPA-EFE

(UPI) -- A French man convicted of killing four people at a Jewish museum in 2014 has been sentenced to life in prison.

Mehdi Nemmouche, a 33-year-old militant who'd previously fought in Syria for the Islamic State, was found guilty last week of "terrorist murder" for the anti-Semitic massacre of four people at the Jewish Museum of Belgium on May 24, 2014. It was the first terrorist attack on European soil by an individual who had fought for the group in Syria.

He was arrested in Marseilles, France, six days after the shooting. Shortly after, he was extradited to Belgium to stand trial.

When asked for comment following his sentencing Monday, Nemmouche said, "life goes on," BBC News reported.

Accomplice Nacer Bender, 30, was sentenced to 15 years in prison for having helped plan the attack and supply Nemmouche with the weapons he used during the crime.

"I am ashamed to have crossed paths with [Nemmouche]," Bender told the court following sentencing. "He is not a man, he is a monster."

And you are a monster's assistant!

Nemmouche had claimed to be innocent, and his lawyer attempted to paint his client during the two-month trial as having been set up by foreign intelligence agencies in a conspiracy targeting Mossad, the Israeli intelligence agency.

Nemmouche also faces separate kidnapping charges in France for detaining four French journalists from June 2013 to April 2014 in Islamic State-controlled Aleppo, Syria, prosecutors said.




Monday, May 30, 2016

Chad's Ex-Ruler Sentenced to Life in Prison

Former Chad ruler Hissene Habre was sentenced to life in prison in Dakkar, Senegal, on Monday. Photo from Senegal television

By Allen Cone

DAKAR, Senegal, May 30 (UPI) -- Chad's former leader, who was accused of being responsible for the deaths of 40,000 people during his rule from 1982 to 1990, was sentenced Monday to life in prison.

Hissene Habre had fled to Senegal after being toppled in a coup in 1990 in the central African nation.

"Hissene Habre, this court finds you guilty of crimes against humanity, rape, forced slavery, and kidnapping," as well as war crimes, said Gberdao Gustave Kam, Burkinabe president of the Extraordinary African Chamber court in Senegal. "The court condemns you to life in prison."

In 2013, a court in Chad sentenced him to death in absentia for crimes against humanity.

Kam gave Habre 15 days to appeal the latest sentence.

Habre shouted "Down with France-afrique!" referring to the term used for France's continuing influence on its former colonies as he raised raised his arms into the air after the verdict.

Habre was physically dragged into the courtroom when the trial started last July.

Victims and families of those killed cheered and embraced each other after the verdict.

"The feeling is one of complete satisfaction," said Clement Abeifouta, president of a Habre survivors association.

An African Union-backed court hadn't previously tried a former ruler for human rights abuses.

After living in exile in Senegal for 22 years, Habre was detained in Dakar in July 2013.

Habre frequently disrupted proceedings, refusing to recognize its legitimacy.

He denied the mass killings.

Survivors gave gruesome details of torture by Habre's secret police. Victims suffered electric shocks, near-asphyxia, cigarette burns and gas squirted into their eyes. Some had their heads placed between sticks joined by rope, which was then twisted.

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

The Long and Perilous Journey of a North Korean Defector, Part 2

Escape from the north

A North Korean defector makes a second break for freedom.

By Susan Cheong

This is part 2 of the story of Soo-jung Ra's escape from North Korea. Read part 1 to find out what brought her to this point.



The second escape

It was a crisp, cool autumn day in late October 2005 — the leaves had changed their hues to yellow and crimson, and it was the season for harvest.

Soo-jung Ra*, by now 16, had spent the day out on the corn fields of Myongchon county in North Korea with her relatives, gathering and storing food for the winter and early spring.

As evening broke, a cousin who lived by the sea came to visit with an unfamiliar middle-aged man. He was introduced to the family as a wealthy long-distance relative who had come to share his fortunes.

But away from the prying eyes of Soo-jung's relatives, the man pulled her aside.

"He asked me quietly, 'Hey, you're Soo-jung right?' and then he said 'I know your parents. I'm here to get you out of North Korea.'"

The man claimed to be a broker who had deliberately fabricated his background and status so that he could make contact with Soo-jung without raising the suspicions of those around her.

However, with secret informants and government spies pervasive in North Korean society, Soo-jung remained skeptical.

She knew she was being monitored by the secret police. She was also aware a minor slip of the tongue on the whereabouts of her parents could land her in prison again.

Not only that, her relatives would be subject to alienation and severe discrimination, as their family records would be tainted for political disloyalty.

It was only when the broker detailed unique stories from her childhood, that she knew she could trust him.

"He knew all these personal characteristics about me and stories that happened to me when I was younger — stories that I knew only my parents would know … that's when I knew he wasn't some spy or a bad person."

Ten days later, Soo-jung slipped out of her house and traced her steps back to the north-eastern border town of Hoeryong under the guidance of two brokers.

There she was joined by a former patrol officer who knew the area well.

Like her first crossing, Soo-jung was surreptitiously led to a remote part of the Tumen River, except this time it was in the early evening. At the water's edge, they unexpectedly came across another group of escapees.

"We bumped into the former patrol officer's friend. He was also a former guard and was there leading another three defectors. It was strange and kind of funny as well."

The irony of the situation slightly helped calm Soo-jung's nerves. But as she took her first tentative steps into the icy cold water, she became overwhelmed by the possible grave consequences if she was to be caught again.

"All I could think about was: what would happen if I was to be arrested again? If I went to prison again, I would surely not be able to survive. I think that's what made it more terrifying — knowing what would happen if I got caught," she recalls.

"But I had no hope left in North Korea. I didn't go to school, I didn't live with my [direct] family, I simply had no future — so I had to leave."

Back in China

Soo-jung was back at her great-uncle's house in the city of Longjing in north-east China's Yanbian Prefecture.

It was November 2005 and it had been a week since Soo-jung crossed the Tumen River.

At her relative's house, she spent her days in hiding helping to care for his partially paralysed mother.

During this time, her parents in South Korea began concocting a plan.

With no legal passport or identification card, Soo-jung's status as an 'illegal economic migrant' in China meant she faced the perpetual threat of being arrested and deported to North Korea.

Her parents, unwilling to put their daughter through another perilous ordeal without them, came up with an idea that they believed would be marginally safer and faster than the precarious journey across the Gobi Desert.

She was to impersonate her older sister, Soo-yun*, and use her sister's South Korean passport to get past the Chinese guards outside the South Korean consulate in Beijing.

Inside, she would claim asylum as she was entitled to legal protection under South Korean law.

For the next month-and-a-half, Soo-jung's great uncle and auntie focused on nourishing her emaciated body while her parents in South Korea made preparations for their two daughters' mission.

Meanwhile, in South Korea, Soo-yun straightened her long hair to keep up with the latest trend. She drew a dark spot above her right lip to mirror Soo-jung's trademark mole.

And then, dressed in a chic South Korean outfit and sporting a shiny pair of gold glasses, Soo-yun took a photo for her new South Korean passport.

In mid-December 2005, on the night before the mission, Soo-jung spent some rare quality time with her parents and sister shopping and touring the Chinese capital.

At the city's popular night markets, Soo-jung became overwhelmed by the bustling crowd and the copious amount of food displayed along the strip of stalls.

"I was so drawn to the place. The lights were sparkling and the food, everything was sold in stacks! They had chicken hanging off hooks, chicken feet, they had everything," she says.

"It was fascinating and I remember I was so so happy, like I was totally excited."

For that one day, Soo-jung and her family managed to set aside their worries, apprehensions and fears. The family was determined to make it a night to remember, as they knew they were about to embark on an extremely risky operation.

The next morning, Soo-jung got dressed into a cream polo skivvy, a shiny chestnut-coloured vest, a pleated grey skirt, and slipped into her new sleek pair of black boots.

With her hair straightened and ears pierced, she now looked, in the eyes of her family, truly South Korean, and most importantly like her sister Soo-yun.

"My dad made sure I looked identical to my sister's passport photo. We both had the same hairstyle, wore glasses and had the same mole, so I think we did look pretty similar," she says.

"They also put in a lot of effort to make sure I didn't look North Korean. My dad hand-picked my outfit in South Korea and he made sure I looked like a fashionable South Korean teenager."

Soo-jung with her sister in China
Soo-jung with her sister in China

Her mother then exchanged the money they amassed in South Korea into US dollars, and divided their life savings between the family members. It was to be used in an emergency.

After a kimchi-inclusive breakfast to calm the soul, the family moved methodically as planned. Soo-jung and her parents started heading for the South Korean consulate in a taxi while her sister Soo-yun retreated back to the hotel.

Inside the taxi, Soo-jung put on the same gold glasses her sister wore in the passport photo. She then plugged in her earphones and turned on her sister's MP3 player.

"I was so nervous - so much that I turned up the music to full blast. It was like ringing out of my ears.

I was listening to [the South Korean artist] 'Page' because her songs are very romantic and sentimental. I needed something to help calm my nerves."

Alighting just a few metres away from the building, Soo-jung and her mother parted from her father.

He positioned himself behind another building nearby while Soo-jung and her mother began walking towards the consulate.

Two Chinese policemen stood guard at the tall steel gates. They were checking everyone's passports.

Soo-jung and her mother stood calmly in line. When it came to their turn, the guard looked through her mother's passport and then her sister's.

"He looked up at me and stared intently for a while," she says.

"He then turned around and walked away with our passports — without saying anything."

With her heart pounding in her ears, Soo-jung looked around her surroundings, averting the gaze of the second officer. She hummed to the music trying her best to stay calm.

She knew one mistake could lead to her whole family being arrested and detained under charges of fraud. With no legal protection, only Soo-jung would be repatriated to North Korea, where she would most certainly face harsh punishment at one of the notorious prison camps.

"My mother said she felt her heart crush. We had no idea why he had taken our passports. Could they have suspected something? We didn't know."

A few minutes later, she heard a faint yell.

She turned and saw her mother standing a few steps ahead of her.

"She was motioning me to hurry up. That's when I saw our passports in her hands. The officer had let us in."

As Soo-jung walked past the Chinese guards and stepped over the South Korean consulate building doorstep, she knew she had passed the test.

She was now under the protection of the South Korean authorities.

To South Korea and Australia

It was a cold, snowy day in late December 2006, a year after Soo-jung had sought refuge at the South Korean consulate in Beijing. She was inside a South Korean government van with a group of eight North Korean defectors.

She was on her way to the National Intelligence Service (NIS) in South Korea where a lengthy interrogation and screening process was awaiting her.

As she looked outside her window, 17-year-old Soo-jung caught the first glimpse of the country that she had once been taught was an "impoverished" nation.

"The skyscrapers, the cars on the road, the crowd … I remember feeling quite overwhelmed at first. It felt surreal. I was happy but I was so exhausted," she says.

"I think the anxiety and stress built up over the years since my first escape had become too much for me. I felt dazed and numb … but I knew I had finally made it."

Soo-jung was elated to have finally reached her destination under the protection of the South Korean authorities.

Her journey to freedom had taken one year and seven months.

She was no longer malnourished, stunted and weak. She had grown almost 10 centimetres, put on weight and her body had finally begun to mature as a woman.

Soo-jung's time at the consulate in Beijing had been long but one of physical recovery, as she had eaten consistently, for the first time in many years — three full meals a day.

Soo-jung Ra after defection
Soo-jung Ra after defection

Her second chance at life in South Korea marked the beginning of her adventure to self-discovery.

She began studying again, completing her high school education before gaining entrance at a prestigious university in Seoul.

With dreams of helping others in need, she chose to study police administration. The contrasting perception of a police officer between the North and South made it particularly appealing for Soo-jung.

"In North Korea, the role of a police officer is to spy on the civilians and they are people you should fear. On the other hand, in South Korea, their role is more generally to protect the public and catch criminals," she says.

"They are serving the public. That's what I wanted to do."

Despite the opportunities and being able to speak the same language, Soo-jung at times struggled to assimilate into the ultra-modern South Korean society.

Like most North Korean defectors, the 'Promised Land of South Korea' was not what she had envisioned as defectors were often shunned and discriminated against.

Divided by war, the two nations had progressed in polar opposite directions, making it difficult for most defectors to connect with their Southern counterpart.

"There's a lot of stigma of being a North Korean defector. We're generally looked down upon as second-class citizens," she says.

"I felt embarrassed to have come from a poor country ... and I tended to hang out with friends who were from the North. We are all Korean, but we grew up knowing completely different things.

"On top of that, I grew up in poverty and I spent years struggling with starvation. That made things even more difficult for us to relate."

To blend in, Soo-jung quickly picked up the South Korean accent. However, like many others, she was embarrassed of her background, and continued to hide her identity.

Her search for meaning and acceptance, as well as her desire to explore the world, led to her decision to move to a foreign country in 2012.


Soo-jung Ra at Bondi beach


Soo-jung Ra at the 12 Apostles


Soo-jung Ra in Sydney

Now 26, Soo-jung describes her experience in Australia as one of spiritual healing.

Whilst working part-time at a restaurant, she spent her early years travelling and exploring the country.

"I loved watching people go about their life. I'd see people lounging on the grass relaxing and reading a book, and not caring about what was going on around them, and I'd think 'Yeah I want to do that too.' So I did."

"I laid on the grass at Hyde Park and I remember thinking 'Wow, I'm doing what they're doing.' It wasn't much but for me it was quite exciting and it gave me a lot of joy to be able to enjoy such simple things in life."

As she made sense of the world around her, her time alone helped relieve the pressures to hide and conform.

"I'd see people from all different backgrounds - Indians, Vietnamese, Chinese, Europeans ... and I realised I am just one of them."

"I was born in North Korea but I am a South Korean citizen, and now I am living in Australia. I'm like everybody else and coming to that realisation meant a lot to me. I no longer feel as ashamed."

Her growing acceptance of her past brought more confidence in her identity as a North Korean, fostering a desire to one day return to her motherland.

Today, she is studying early childhood education. Her past experiences as an orphan refined her dream and passion to help others, and ultimately to become a teacher.

"I truly believe the North and South will reunite in my lifetime. We are one nation. And when that day comes, I want to be there," she says.

"There will be without a doubt so many orphans in North Korea and I want to set up an orphanage to care for these children. I lived in one. I know what it's like to feel alone."

And until that day comes, Soo-jung hopes to travel the world, working for schools and NGOs to teach children in other developing countries. She no longer sees her past as an obstacle but a building block to a brighter future.

"When I think of my future, I'm filled with hope. I'm so glad that I have been able to overcome obstacles that have come my way despite the fact that I was born in North Korea."

"I have come so far and I'm proud of that. I'm so happy to have found [this] dream and most importantly to have the opportunity to live it out.

"And I can't wait for the day that the North and South reunites so that the people of North Korea can learn and experience the world freely like I am today."

North Korean defector Soo-jung Ra in Australia
Soo-yung in Australia

The Long and Perilous Journey of a North Korean Defector

By Susan Cheong

It was pitch black and silent as 15-year-old Soo-jung Ra* made her way across the vast sand dunes of the Gobi Desert.

She was among a group of 11 North Korean defectors in search of liberty and freedom, en route to South Korea.

Their broker had instructed them to follow the barbed-wire fence that stretched along the border between China and Mongolia.

For a while, the only sound they could hear was the soft squeaking of their feet crunching in the sand.

But suddenly, they were struck by the blinding headlights of a vehicle.

At that moment Soo-jung believed she would be killed.

Life under 'the great leader'


As a young child in North Korea, Soo-jung describes a life of plenty.

She was born in 1989. Her tight-knit family of four lived in the mountainous region of Myongchon county in North Hamgyong province.

The 'Great Leader' and 'Eternal President' Kim Il-sung was in power and it was a time she recalls fondly.

Her father worked at a factory and her mother at a farm. She and her older sister went to school, had homework, played games and bickered as siblings do.

She lived what she called a relatively "normal family life".

But for Soo-jung, the first song she learnt to sing was not a nursery rhyme, rather the 'Song of General Kim Il-sung'.

"From the moment we start talking, we are taught the Kim Il-sung song. We had to sing it at least once a day at school. Whenever there was an event, it always began with this song. It was like our national anthem."

Every day Soo-jung bowed before the portrait of the 'Great Leader' that hung high on the walls of every household and building in the country.

At school, she was indoctrinated by propaganda that fervently glorified the communist society, the land and its leaders. The government's monopoly on information also ensured every citizen naturally believed everything they were told.

"I had no choice. I was born into this culture and environment so there was no reason for me to understand or question what I was doing or what I believed in," she says.

"It wasn't something we could accept or reject, it was a way of life."

Soo-jung never had the chance to meet the 'Great Leader', but the image that remains etched in her memory is the grand mural of Kim Il-sung at Myongchon square.

"There was a painting in my province where he had his arms wide open to embrace the children that were running towards him. As a young child, he was like this warm father or grandfather-like person who simply loved his people and children."


Kim Il-sung mural


Statue of Kim Il-sung

Kim Il-sung was perceived as not only a 'loving father' but a hero in the totalitarian nation. At school, Soo-jung was taught that he was a brave warrior who single-handedly wiped out the "American bastards" in a battle during the Korean War in 1950-1953.

She also learnt and believed the Americans had engineered the conflict and were to blame for the division of the Korean peninsula.

To maintain this sentiment, US soldiers were often depicted as barbarians with big noses, yellow hair and crazed eyes.

"At our athletics carnival, we played 'Bash the American Bastards', a popular relay between two teams where each player runs to bash a dummy of an American soldier with a wooden bat and then runs back and tips the next person in line," Soo-jung says.

"It was a form of brainwashing — to stir up hatred against the Americans. We were taught they were our sworn enemy."




The great famine

On July 8, 1994, Kim Il-sung died.

Soo-jung was only 5, yet remembers the day of the televised address.

"There was a breaking news announcement that he had passed away. Everyone around me burst into tears," she says.

In the ensuing months, the nation plunged into despair, with people wailing and fainting beneath the grand monuments of their leader across the country.

North Koreans mourn Kim Il-sung
The death of North Korea's 'Great Leader' also marked the beginning of great hardship.

Kim Jong-il had inherited the country's leadership from his father at a time when the country was in the midst of a severe agricultural decline.

The fall of its long-term ally the Soviet Union in 1991, and the country's crippled economy, were compounded by a series of natural disasters, propelling the nation into one of the most destructive famines of the 20th century.

"People were dying everywhere. There were people dying of starvation, there were people dying from diseases," she says.

"You'd wake up one morning and you'd hear a neighbour passed away, the next day, yet another person. It was a difficult time … for our family and for everyone."

Grass porridge soon became a daily sustenance. Soo-jung and her sister would pull grass out from the fields, grind it into powder and boil it with water. It was tasteless but it helped to alleviate their hunger.

Starvation became so widespread, it wasn't long until rumours of cannibalism started seeping into the communities.

"There was a rumour that a couple had boiled their newborn alive because they were so hungry … there was another rumour that someone was publicly executed because they killed someone to sell their flesh at the markets," she recalls.

"I don't know if these stories are true, but that's how bad our society got. It was really, really terrible."

By the late 1990s, the Great Famine was said to have claimed up to 1.1 million lives.

The complete collapse of the socialist food distribution system, and the priority given to feeding the military and elite in Pyongyang, had taken its toll on the lives of ordinary citizens.

Desperate to survive, Soo-jung's father left to work in Russia as a civilian merchant authorised by the government to bring back foreign currency into North Korea, while her mother went to China to work in the black market.

Unable to fend for themselves, 10-year-old Soo-jung and her sister went to live with their relatives. However, due to chronic food shortages they were soon abandoned at the district orphanage.

"My only wish was to eat a meal that made me full. When you're hungry, you don't really think about anything else except for the desire to eat. If you don't eat, you kind of walk around like a zombie staring at the ground looking for any scraps of food, or anything edible," she says.

"If you're not doing that, you're looking for food to steal."

Stealing became a daily routine. It felt morally wrong, but for Soo-jung and her friends at the orphanage, it was an act of survival.

"We'd hang around in the neighbourhood stealing other people's belongings. One would be on watch, while the other goes and steals. We'd steal corn, we'd steal people's clothes on the washing line … and if people left their shoes outside, we'd steal all their nice ones too," she says.

"We basically stole everything and anything that we thought would be of some value and then sell it at the markets in exchange for food."


The escape

In the spring of 2002, Soo-jung's mother was repatriated from China after being caught smuggling goods into North Korea.

With no home to go to following her release from prison, she spent a month living with her daughters at the district orphanage.

One early morning, as Soo-jung was preparing breakfast in the kitchen, her mother and sister left to visit their relatives who lived two hours away.

They had told her they would be back by the end of the day, but they never returned.

By that time, when Soo-jung was 13 years old, she had already become accustomed to being alone. So their unexpected departure did little to break her spirit.

"I think I would have been a little sad, but not a lot," she says.

"I had been alone for too long, I think by then it became normal for me to be alone and to be fighting for my survival."

For the next two-and-a-half years, Soo-jung continued to live alone at the district orphanage in Myongchon without knowing the whereabouts of her family.

It wasn't until October 2004 that she learnt that her parents were in fact alive and well, living in another land outside the country's borders.

"A broker came to see me at the orphanage. He said he had come to check on me on behalf of my parents. Of course I didn't believe him at first. I told him 'I don't know what you're talking about because I don't have parents and even if I did, I have no idea where they are'."

Not long after, Soo-jung moved back into the care of her relatives. With the help of several brokers, her parents had smuggled money into the country so that Soo-jung would be better looked after in a family home.

In early May 2005, a private meeting was organised between Soo-jung and her great uncle from China in the north-eastern border city of Hoeryong.

Her great uncle was ethnically Korean and had emigrated to mainland China long before the Korean War.

At this meeting, Soo-jung's great uncle surreptitiously made arrangements for her to be smuggled out of the country, contacting brokers within and outside North Korea.

Later that week, Soo-jung jumped into an open truck and made the four-hour journey back towards the border town of Hoeryong, alone.

There she was met by a broker bribed by her great uncle and the broker's friend, a high-ranking patrol guard.

This patrol officer had one responsibility — to arrest or shoot anyone who was caught crossing the Tumen River into China.

The North Korean government considered all unauthorised departures an act of treason, and individuals caught crossing or helping others to cross illegally were imprisoned, tortured or even executed.

However, after pocketing a generous sum of money, the officer agreed to lead the pair to a secluded and narrow part of the river.
Fully clothed, Soo-jung waded through the water where so many others had drowned trying to escape.

"The water was cold and was about chest high," she says.

"I held onto the broker's hand tightly and followed his lead. I was anxious to meet my parents and also scared because I had no idea what would happen to me or what lay ahead past these waters. But I trusted him."

The Chinese side of the border was deserted, with no guards out on patrol. The land was flat with a sparse covering of shrubs and trees.

Soo-jung and the broker ran through farmland until they reached an unpaved dirt road. There she was greeted by her great uncle who had been waiting in his car under the cover of darkness.

Four days later, Soo-jung's parents flew into China from South Korea to a very emotional reunion.

It was then she learnt her parents and sister had all claimed asylum in South Korea.

"I cried so much when I met them," she says.

"I remember feeling really awkward seeing my father again. I hadn't seen him for almost eight years and I hadn't seen my mother for three years.

"I had been alone for so long, their presence felt really unfamiliar and strange to me."

Their meeting was short and bittersweet. After spending a few precious days together in the border city of Longjing in north-east China's Yanbian Prefecture, Soo-jung's parents began planning the next leg of her journey.

They knew Soo-jung was considered an "illegal economic migrant" and not a "refugee" by the Chinese government. This meant if she was to be caught at any time, she would be repatriated to North Korea.

Her illegitimate status also made her vulnerable to the risk of being reported by her neighbours. Fines and jail sentences were imposed on those who sheltered North Koreans and the Chinese government allegedly rewarded people who alerted the authorities.

However, under the South Korean constitution, North Koreans were automatically entitled to a citizenship.

This left Soo-jung with one option: to embark on the nearly 3,200-kilometre journey to Mongolia's capital Ulaanbaatar, where she would be able to seek refuge at the South Korean embassy.

Less than a week later, with the help of an underground network of smugglers, Soo-jung joined a group of 10 other North Korean defectors. The team was a diverse mix, with the youngest being 8 years old and the oldest 65.

They had all been living in China for differing amounts of time, yet shared one thing in common: they were on a quest for freedom, and a life free of pain and hunger.



It was night-time and Soo-jung was in a dark green van being driven by two male brokers.

They had been driving across the vast sandy plains of the Gobi Desert near the Chinese-Mongolian border with their lights switched off for what seemed like an eternity.

When the car came to a stop, the smugglers ushered them from the vehicle and gave them specific instructions.

"They said: 'Follow this fence and when you come across another barbed wire fence, cut it open with the pliers I have given you, climb over this fence and then run until you are stopped by Mongolian officials. You will then be safe," she says.

Soo-jung and the group trudged through the sand in silence, when suddenly a blinding light exposed them.

Having not yet reached the second fence, they knew it wasn't the Mongolian authorities.

It was the Chinese border police.

"It was pandemonium. We all started screaming and running like crazy. We madly started climbing over the fence [beside us] because we were so terrified. We knew if we got caught we could die."

On the other side, with nowhere to hide or run, they desperately tried to bury themselves in the sand. As they watched the lights scan across the desert, some deliberated what they should do next, while others prayed to every god they believed in.

"The person next to me was muttering 'save me God, save me God, save me God', while another was crying and crying."

Soo-jung remembers this as the single most frightening and distressing moment of her life.

"I was petrified. I had left North Korea only 10 days ago and for the first time I actually found myself fearing for my life," she says.

"I had never felt my life was in such direct danger before. I had never asked anyone — even my parents — to save me before, and here I was begging and wishing my parents would come and save me."

As the escapees plotted their next move, the vehicles turned and began driving away in the opposite direction. The beams of their headlights disappeared.

Soo-jung and the other defectors wondered whether the Chinese police had given up trying to find them, or whether they had not seen them at all.

As their nerves began to settle and hope began to build, suddenly, the same blinding headlights flashed over them — only this time from just a few metres away.

They had been tricked.

"My heart stopped. We were caught completely off guard. We screamed and dropped our bags, everything we had, and ran for our lives," Soo-jung says.

By then, at least a dozen soldiers armed with rifles had already started charging towards them.

"The soldiers were running towards us like crazy and the headlights of their vehicles continued to sweep across the desert. I could hear the others screaming, getting arrested and pleading 'Save me, save me' … and then I stopped. I stopped running and stood there, and waited for a soldier to arrest me," she says.

"I thought, well this is it. I'm going to die. I'm going to die."

Soo-jung's memory blanks out from here. Her arrest was so traumatic, she is unable to clearly recall the events following her capture.

"I don't exactly remember what happened after they got a hold of me. I would have been put in a truck but I don't remember how I got from the desert to the [Chinese] prison," she says.

"I think I was trembling in fear. I was so scared."

Life in jail and public trial

Warning: the following section contains graphic material.

In late May 2005, Soo-jung was detained at three different prisons across China over five days, before being transferred to one of North Korea's notorious prison camps in Sinuiju.

There Soo-jung was met by ruthless interrogators and subjected to a series of humiliating physical examinations.

She was forced to strip naked and stand in a line, while the female guards viciously searched everyone's bodies.

"It didn't matter whether you had your period, it didn't matter whether you were sick, you just had to strip. We weren't human to them," she says.

"They made us do squats with our hands on our heads so they could check whether we had any money rolled up and hidden in our [vaginas]. If that didn't work, the guards stuck their hand in and searched through some of our bodies."

The guards were from the Bowibu, North Korea's most feared political police force, infamous for its brutal examinations.

Soo-jung and the others were given an identification number and divided into groups. During interrogation, the adults were savagely beaten intermittently while the children were locked up in solitary confinement.

On one occasion, Soo-jung says she could hear the blood-curdling screams of a fellow prisoner being tortured in the next room. She was a pregnant woman who had been sold as a "bride" to a Chinese farmer.

But in the reclusive nation, to be impregnated by a Chinese man was considered racially and politically "impure". As a form of ethnic cleansing, she was subjected to a brutal abortion.

"We could hear the Bowibu officer shouting and swearing at her — just really bad foul language. The adults told me they had placed a wooden plank above her swollen belly and they grabbed each side of the plank and pushed down on her stomach to abort the child," she says.

"She was screaming and crying … except she wasn't crying for help. She was pleading for forgiveness."

"To them, she was an animal. They killed her baby."

For weeks, Soo-jung and the defectors were forced to divulge their escape plans before they were compelled to single out a person from their group upon whom ultimate blame could be laid.

"There was this one middle-aged woman and she was a little clumsy from memory and I think she ended up being accused as the 'ringleader'. She had been in China the longest," she says.

"I'm sure everyone felt bad and sorry for her … but when you're in a life or death situation, especially in that kind of environment, you don't really have the headspace to think deeply about what's going to happen to the others.

"And I don't know what happened to her … she would have suffered a lot."

Soo-jung was detained at Sinuiju for a month before she was forced to face a public trial in her hometown province of Myongchon.

The trial was held at the entrance of a large market at the busiest time of day.

Handcuffed and with shackles on her feet, 15-year-old Soo-jung and about 10 other convicted criminals were led into an open space in a single file.

The charges against them were then broadcast out of loudspeakers on top of a government van to a large, silent crowd.

"There was a person who was charged for going to China, another was for fraud, and there were a few who were charged for stealing corn or some other goods … and when it came to me, the broadcaster said 'this person's name is Soo-jung Ra and she was arrested while attempting to escape to the South. Her parents and sister have been declared missing but her uncle lives at X and works as a X at X'," she says.

For more than two hours, Soo-jung was made to stand and listen quietly with her head achingly down low as the broadcaster read out everyone's crime, family background and sentence.

No one was given the opportunity to speak. No one was given the chance to defend themselves.

"I felt so embarrassed and ashamed. It was my hometown. I lived there. I knew the people there. It was humiliating, really, even now when I think about it … it's not something I like to recall," she says.

Soo-jung spent the next two-and-a-half months locked up in prison, carrying out the most menial tasks at her district police station.

By sheer luck, she avoided a lengthy prison sentence at one of the country's political prison camps.

Her young age and short malnourished stature had worked in her favour. She was 15 years old but her body hadn't reached puberty. She stood at a mere 140 centimetres.

Soo-jung was released back into the community on the eve of her 16th birthday in early autumn 2005.

"My uncle came to pick me up. I couldn't look at him properly. I felt really ashamed and apologetic as I had brought shame to his family," she says.

At home, Soo-jung was met by a barrage of questions. And to her surprise, her relatives were cautiously interested in life beyond their country's borders.

"They'd ask me: 'Do people live well in China? I heard they have lots and lots of food, like unlimited sacks full of rice. Is that true?' and 'I heard if you open a fridge in China, it's packed full of food like vegetables and meat. Is that true too?," she says.

"I nodded yes and I remember they looked at me in complete awe."

Soo-jung was immensely relieved to be back in the safety of a family home. Her arrest in China and time in prison had been excruciatingly painful, both mentally and physically.

But her brief encounter with the outside world had stirred within her an unfamiliar feeling of a desire to know more; it wasn't long until she became consumed by thoughts of a second escape.


* names have been changed to protect privacy

Part Two: Read the conclusion to Soo-jung Ra's story.

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

N. Korea Sentences Canadian Pastor to Life Behind Bars

Pastor threatened North Korea regime with 'love'!

Korean-Canadian pastor Hyeon Soo Lim. © Kyodo / Reuters
North Korea’s highest court has sentenced a South Korea-born pastor from Canada to life for his religious activities, the North's official KCNA news agency has reported.

Hyeon Soo-lim, a pastor at a Toronto church, has visited North Korea more than 100 times in the last 18 years, helping to set up an orphanage and a nursing home.

Oh, the fiend, how could he do such un-North Korean activities?

According to the court, Lim tried to topple the regime, and undermine North Korea’s social system via “religious activities,” Xinhua reported.

The court also stated that Lim had carried out propaganda against North Korea, in the framework of a “human rights racket.”

He allegedly admitted that he had assisted people in defecting through Mongolia, meeting with the US ambassador to Ulan Bator to accomplish it.

Lim has been detained since February, and appeared on state TV earlier this year, confessing to crimes against North Korea.

He said he went to the country under the pretext of social work and collected the data he used in sermons outside North Korea to bring the regime to an end “with the love of God.”

And, why is that so threatening to North Korea? Oh yes, they're communist! No place for God or love in communist paranoia.

Lim is in his early 60s, and his church said in March that he “has a very serious heart problem” and “very high blood pressure,” and his relatives are “anxious to send medicine.”

He is the only Western citizen known to be currently behind bars in North Korea.

Canada is dismayed with such a harsh sentence for Lim, particularly given “his age and fragile health,” Global Affairs Department said in a statement, Reuters reports.

The fact that the detained pastor was not allowed to meet with Canadian officials since he was arrested in February, is “a serious violation of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations”, the government spokesperson added.

At the same time the 3,000-member Light Korean Presbyterian Church in Toronto didn’t respond to Reuters’ inquiries.

North Korea has previously dealt out harsh sentences for Western nationals: US-Korean missionary Kenneth Bae was given 15 years of hard labor, but was freed in 2014 after two years in jail.