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re: North Korea sentences American student 15 years hard labor

Posted on 3/16/16 at 6:06 am to
Posted by shawnlsu
Member since Nov 2011
23682 posts
Posted on 3/16/16 at 6:06 am to
quote:

As long as the price is low, American diplomats should make every effort they can to get him released.


Wrong.
He knew the risk going there. His punishment for being a hardheaded dumbass is 15 years hard labor in N Korea. We will go get him after he serves his sentence.
Posted by dale10
The Red Stick
Member since May 2006
929 posts
Posted on 3/16/16 at 6:10 am to
I didn't think Americans were even allowed in N.K.

Either way, I feel no sympathy for people who refuse to see the world how it is, only how they want it to be.
Posted by Dire Wolf
bawcomville
Member since Sep 2008
36844 posts
Posted on 3/16/16 at 7:00 am to
quote:

He knew the risk going there. His punishment for being a hardheaded dumbass is 15 years hard labor in N Korea. We will go get him after he serves his sentence.


The place he is going makes Angola look like a four seasons
LINK
quote:

Former guard An Myong-chol describes the conditions in the camp as harsh and life-threatening.[23] He recalls the shock he felt upon his first arrival at the camp, where he likened the prisoners to walking skeletons, dwarfs, and cripples in rags.[12][24] An estimates that about 30% of the prisoners have deformities, such as torn off ears, smashed eyes, crooked noses, and faces covered with cuts and scars resulting from beatings and other mistreatment. Around 2,000 prisoners, he says, have missing limbs, but even prisoners who need crutches to walk must still work.[25] Prisoners get 180 g (6.3 oz) of corn per meal (two times a day), with almost no vegetables and no meat.[26] The only meat in their diets is from rats, snakes or frogs that they catch.[12][27] Ahn estimates that 1,500–2,000 people die of malnutrition there every year, mostly children.[14] Despite these deaths, the inmate population remains constant, suggesting that around 1,500–2,000 new inmates arrive each year.[28] Children get only very basic education.[29] From six years on they get work assigned, such as picking vegetables, peeling corn or drying rice, but they receive very little food, only 180 g (6.3 oz) in total per day. Therefore, many children die before the age of ten years.[30] Elderly prisoners have the same work requirements as other adults.[31] Seriously ill prisoners are quarantined, abandoned, and left to die.[32]
This post was edited on 3/16/16 at 7:20 am
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