I really do not no, but I would say their might be so I am about 55% sure.
There are concentration camps today (in North Korea).
The main cause of death for N. Korea now is starvation.
North Korea is communist South Korea is capitalist
Yes! in fact many North Koreans have escaped through China and into other nations. Usually they must find a way into the South Korean or U.S. embassy in China in order to finally be free however because China has a strict anti-North Korean immigrant policy and will deport the individual back to North Korea. If the person is sent back to North Korea they will be sent into one of the many North Korean labor camps. Very few North Korean's have escaped to South Korea through the DMZ but it has happened.
North Korea attacked South Korea.
There are concentration camps today (in North Korea).
Concentration camps
Germany, North Korea, and Britain
Yes, by 1949, North Korea had established concentration camps, known as political prison camps or gulags, for the detention of perceived political enemies and dissidents. These camps were part of the broader repressive regime under Kim Il-sung, aimed at consolidating power and eliminating opposition. The conditions in these camps were often brutal, with forced labor, starvation, and severe punishment for inmates. The legacy of these camps continues to impact North Korean society today.
It is a violation of Korean laws and regulations for service members to cross from South Korea into North Korea. North Korea has had many human rights violations and concentration camps.
No their totally against each other North Korea threatens to destroy South Korea and their hard work.
The main cause of death for N. Korea now is starvation.
Uranium enrichment.
Only North Korea has child labor.
North Korea is controlled by a greedy dictator who forces them to work hard with little bits of money. Most NOrth KOreans are homeless and starving. North Korea is known to be the largest death camp in the world.
I would guess that most non-North Koreans familiar with the situation would answer "no", mainly because the press is controlled either by the state or the Workers' Party of Korea, and also because of reports that dissenters are sent to political hard labor camps and/or executed.
North Korea is communist South Korea is capitalist