In a country of 24 million people, up to 200,000 have reportedly "disappeared" into brutal concentration camps found throughout the country.
Former prisoners say conditions are so bad that 20 to 25 percent of the prison population dies every year. [NOTE: This is the first of multiple disturbing illustrations supposedly made by a defector who spent time in the prisons.]
The North uses "guilt by association" to lock up entire families just for knowing someone convicted of "wrong thought."
Shin Dong-hyuk was born inside one camp and lived there 23 years before he was able to escape.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdFew have ever escaped. That's because anyone who tries, plans, or has knowledge of an escape is executed, and all prisoners are required to watch.
Starvation is common, as prisoners are usually only fed gruel made of cornmeal and cabbage. "We were always hungry, and the guards always told us 'through hunger you will repent,'" Shin said. They often eat rats and insects just to stay alive.
Without protein and calcium in their diet, prisoners develop hunchbacks from bending over in the fields or lose toes and fingers due to frostbite.
Guards treat prisoners as subhuman, terrorizing and torturing their captives, sometimes just for fun, according to escapees.
The tip of one of Shin's fingers was chopped off as punishment for accidentally breaking a machine while working in a factory.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdWhen he was just 13 years old, Shin was sent to an underground torture center when his mother and older brother were accused of attempting an escape. "They hung me by the ankles and they tortured me with fire."
All of the methods of torture are appalling — but some are more disturbing than others.
And women aren't afforded any leniency.
Pregnancy is strictly forbidden, except in the case of a 'marriage' arranged by the prison guards. One testified how she "witnessed a female prisoner forced to drown her own baby in a bucket."
Prisoners are categorized as their conditions deteriorate.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdIf prisoners do make it past guards and electrified fences ...
They still need to get across the border to China, and if discovered, they face the possibility of being sent back.
Camps aren't limited to North Korean borders. The regime also exports slave labor to Siberia, according to a Vice report.
... where workers can be sent for an average of 5-10 years to do their "duty for the home country."
While North Korea denies they even exist, satellite imagery shows prison camps scattered around the country.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdAnother recent report raised fears that up to 20,000 prisoners were allowed to die of disease or starvation as some camps were shutdown and consolidated just last year.
And for North Koreans outside the camps, the fear of the gulag ensures their loyalty to the regime ...
... And Kim Jong-un's complete power over his own people.
Life sucks for normal North Koreans too