Dozens of young coal miners at a state-run mining complex in South Pyongan province were arrested in February after a joint inspection found they had been watching and sharing South Korean videos. Public denunciation sessions held April 13 and 14 exposed the extent of the violations, which authorities framed as an existential threat to the state.
A Daily NK source in South Pyongan province said inspectors from the Ministry of Social Security and the State Information Bureau (North Korea’s domestic intelligence agency, formerly known as the Ministry of State Security, renamed at the Ninth WPK Congress) conducted the joint crackdown beginning in early February at mines under the Pukchang Youth Coal Mine General Enterprise, a major coal production complex. The inspectors confiscated smartphones and SD cards from workers without warning and discovered that miners at the Namdok, Inho, and Hoean youth coal mines had been accessing and circulating South Korean content.
The videos watched and shared included not only South Korean films, television dramas, and entertainment programs but also footage of North Korean defectors describing their lives after resettlement in South Korea, as well as South Korean travel vlogs.
Secret viewings and signs of ideological drift
To avoid detection, the miners had organized clandestine viewing sessions in basement storage areas of their dormitories. Authorities found that the gatherings had fostered what they described as a longing for freedom, and that some miners had begun imitating South Korean speech patterns, fashion, and behavior, signs officials characterized as ideological deviation.
The miners were also found to have engaged in what North Korean authorities consider capitalist superstitions and anti-socialist practices, including palmistry, fortune-telling based on birth dates, and personality type assessments modeled on the MBTI framework, a popular psychological classification tool widely used in South Korea. Workers reportedly used these methods to read each other’s fortunes and assess romantic compatibility.
At the Inho youth coal mine, one work unit went further, staging a mock blind-date game modeled on a South Korean entertainment program. Authorities condemned this as reactionary ideological and cultural behavior.
The source said dozens of young miners were arrested on charges of violating the Reactionary Ideology and Culture Rejection Law, a sweeping 2020 statute that criminalizes the consumption and distribution of foreign content and carries penalties up to death for the most serious offenders. The denunciation sessions held over two days categorized the conduct as acts threatening the existence of the state and maximizing hostility toward the system.
Punishments are to be graduated according to the severity of each miner’s involvement. Those who only watched the content or were first-time offenders face reassignment to what the source described as “death-trap mines,” facilities with significantly worse conditions and higher accident rates. Those who actively distributed the content or had prior violations face unconditional transfer to a re-education camp.
Some North Korean people who witnessed the denunciation sessions expressed sympathy for the young miners. “Wasn’t it their only pleasure,” one observer was quoted as saying, “amid the dirt of the mines where there is nothing enjoyable?”
Reporting from inside North Korea
Daily NK operates networks of sources inside North Korea who document events in real-time and transmit information through secure channels. Unlike reporting based on state media, satellite imagery, or defector accounts from years past, our journalism comes directly from people currently living under the regime. We verify reports through multiple independent sources and cross-reference details before publication.
Our sources remain anonymous because contact with foreign media is treated as a capital offense in North Korea — discovery means imprisonment or execution. This network-based approach allows Daily NK to report on developments other outlets cannot access: market trends, policy implementation, public sentiment, and daily realities that never appear in official narratives.
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April 30, 2026 at 06:44PM
by DailyNK(North Korean Media)
