Headlines
  • At least five ballistic missile launches from Iran have been detected by the Israelis since midnight.
  • Mehrabad Airport in Tehran is hit by strikes
  • The Prince Sultan Air Base was the target of a ballistic missile that Saudi Arabia's military intercepted and destroyed, according to the country's defense ministry.
  • Heavy gunfire on Friday injured three peacekeepers from the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon inside their base in southwest Lebanon.
  • To put an end to the bloodshed, UN Secretary-General António Guterres urged serious diplomatic negotiations..
  • In a social media post, President Trump said that "no deal" other than "unconditional surrender" will be with Iran.
  • Iran reportedly receives intelligence from Russia on US targets.

More Details

North Korea Stages Public Executions to Strengthen ‘Social Order’

North Korean authorities staged a public trial and shot two female fortune tellers to death last month, forcing tens of thousands of people to watch, in what appeared to be a resumption of public executions.

Monument To Party Foundation. Pyongyang, North Korea by Stephan is Licensed Under CC BY-SA 2.0

The executions of the two women took place in March in North Hamgyong’s Chongjin city, and were aimed at forcing officials to stop patronizing fortune tellers and engaging in other “superstitious” behavior, according to two sources who spoke to RFA’s Korean Service on condition of anonymity.

“Public trials and executions have resumed this year, with judicial authorities holding these trials in multiple locations for reasons of maintaining social order,” a source in North Hamgyong province, bordering China, told RFA’s Korean Service.

The public executions “shocked” city residents, RFA’s source said.

“They pronounced sentences of death and carried out public executions immediately,” the source said, adding that two of the three women put on trial were executed by shooting, with the third sentenced to life in prison.

“Tens of thousands of people from factories, colleges, and housing units from Chongjin were forced to attend the public trail in March,” added the source. 

The three had created a group called Chilsungjo (Seven Star Group) to carry out what authorities described as “superstitious activities,” the source said. 

“They had used a three-year-old and five-year-old child to carry out their activities, claiming that the children were possessed by a spirit oracle and receiving money for telling fortunes,” he said.

It is now common in North Korea for people to consult fortune tellers before planning weddings or making business deals, or considering other important decisions in their lives, the source said, adding, “Even high-ranking government officials and the families of judicial authorities often visit fortune tellers.”

Making an example

Also speaking to RFA, a second source in North Hamgyong said that government concerns over the involvement of high-ranking officials in “superstitious” activities has caused authorities to make an example of those caught telling fortunes.

“The Central Committee has emphasized the elimination of anti-socialist behavior and the preservation of social order, but it is hard to find residents who will follow these orders,” the source said. 

“People fear that they will starve to death if they live by the law, so it is no exaggeration to say that illegal activities have now become common.”

In February, authorities held an unusual open trial in Chongjin’s Pohang district for middle school students aged from 15 to 16 who had organized themselves into groups of two to three to carry out robberies at night, the source said.

“They acted violently against residents and stole anything that they thought would earn them money. The atmosphere became uneasy in the area at night, and it was hard for a time to find people walking around after dark.”

Because the accused were minors, they were spared harsh sentences, the source said.

“But the adults tried in public are being sentenced to death, or at least receive life sentences, so the residents are living in fear,” he said.

Numbers unclear

Accurate statistics on North Korea’s use of the death penalty are hard to find.

In February, RFA’s Korean Service reported that a Seoul-based North Korean defector-led NGO had detailed that the Kim Jong Un regime had purged 421 officials since 2010 to consolidate power around Kim.

The report, “Executions and Purges of North Korean Elites: An Investigation into Genocide Based on High-Ranking Officials’ Testimonies,” by the North Korean Strategy Center, collected accounts by 14 North Korean elite group defectors, six North Korean officials in China, and five other defectors who witnessed executions.

The report notes the well-known case of Kim’s uncle Jang Song Thaek, a top official who was executed in 2013, and says that “more than 15 people were killed and 400 others were purged.

At a U.N. Security Council session on North Korea’s human rights situation in December 2017, then U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley was quoted by Reuters and other news agencies as saying that “defectors have reported that all North Koreans, ages 12 and older, are required to attend public executions—a graphic reminder of consequences of disobedience of the government.” she said.

In a landmark report in 2014, the United Nations Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in North Korea found that “as a matter of state policy, the authorities carry out executions, with or without trial, publicly or secretly, in response to political and other crimes that are often not among the most serious crimes.”

“The policy of regularly carrying out public executions serves to instill fear in the general population,” said the report, based on extensive interviews with defectors from the North.

The UN report said that while public executions “were most common in the 1990s,” they continued up until the time of the landmark report’s release in 2014, and that 2013 saw a “spike in the number of politically motivated public executions.”

Reported by Jieun Kim for RFA’s Korea Service. Translated by Leejin Jun. Written in English by Richard Finney.

Copyright © 1998-2016, RFA. Used with the permission of Radio Free Asia, 2025 M St. NW, Suite 300, Washington DC 20036


Related Article

China Arrests Underground Church Founder, Pastors

The founder of one of China’s most prominent underground churches and dozens of its pastors and me ...
October 14, 2025

A Chinese International Student Activist Goes…

A Chinese international student and activist has gone missing during a trip to China to visit family ...
September 19, 2025

Chinese Rights Lawyer Lu Siwei Sentenced…

Prominent Chinese rights lawyer Lu Siwei, who was arrested and deported from Laos in 2023, was sente ...
April 19, 2025

In war and Refuge Darfuri Women…

In Sudan's embattled Darfur region, aid groups say sexual abuse is a constant threat to women, but r ...
February 7, 2025

Uyghur Historian Sentenced Again – This…

Uyghur historian Tursunjan Hezim, the founder of the Orkhun website, which archived a vast collectio ...
January 29, 2025

Rohingya Recount Horrors of Being Kidnapped,Forced…

About 740,000 Rohingya fled Rakhine and settled in Bangladesh refugee camps in the months that follo ...
November 13, 2024

Other Article

Pick of the Day

UN Permanent Representative of Iran Briefs…

Amir Saeid Iravani, Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations, ...
March 7, 2026
Bizzare News

Malaysian Man Holds Record for Having…

Malaysian Prathab Muniandy has ten more teeth than the typical human. This indicates that he has the ...
March 6, 2026
Pet Corner

Identify the Dog Breed

Identify dog and cat breeds using pictures.ideal match for you.Consider about these facts before pur ...
Prevent Cyber Crime

Fileless Malware

A type of malicious software known as "fileless malware" infects a computer by using reliable apps. ...
Pick of the Day

UN Security Council Meets on Energy,…

Chris Wright, Secretary of Energy of the United States and President of the United Nations Security ...
Bizzare News

Just Before it Collapses, New Jersey…

A horrifying collapse happened minutes after four Jersey Shore police officers were captured on came ...
March 5, 2026

Top