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Forbidden melodies: Two young North Korean K-pop listeners sent to prison

In early September, two 15-year-old North Korean boys were sent to a political prison camp for listening to K-pop, according to a source in Jagang province recently.

The boys, classmates and friends, were unremarkable students with no notable academic or social records. Their troubles began when they allowed a few classmates to listen to South Korean songs on their MP3 players.

Their arrest came after a classmate reported them to state security agents. Investigators discovered dozens of South Korean songs on the boys’ devices.

The punishment was particularly severe because the boys had not only listened to music from the “puppet state” – North Korea’s derogatory term for South Korea – but had also shared it with others.

Until recently, North Koreans often consumed South Korean media on cell phones. However, increased monitoring has led to a sharp decline in this practice.

As a result, MP3 players have gained popularity. These devices are easier to conceal or discard during searches, according to sources.

A week after the boys’ detention, their families vanished, casting a shadow over the community.

Daily NK understands that both sets of parents have been sent to concentration camps – effectively a life sentence – for failing to properly raise their children. Even the boys’ siblings were imprisoned under guilt by association.

The incident has shocked neighbors.

“This case has Jagang province buzzing,” a source said. “It’s unusual for young students to be sent to prison just for consuming K-pop.

“Many view sending entire families to camps over some South Korean songs as extreme. Some speculate that the regime is making an example of these families to instill fear in Jagang province, given its concentration of munitions factories and military facilities, and to shield the population from capitalist influences,” the source added.

The North Korean regime has recently enacted several laws aimed at strengthening ideological loyalty among the younger generation. These include the DPRK Law of Rejecting Reactionary Ideology and Culture in 2020, the Youth Education Guarantee Law in 2021, and the Pyongyang Cultural Language Protection Act in 2023.

The Daily NK works with a network of sources in North Korea, China, and elsewhere. For security reasons, their identities remain anonymous.

Please send any comments or questions about this article to dailynkenglish@uni-media.net.

Read in Korean

October 14, 2024 at 06:30AM

by DailyNK(North Korean Media)

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