A toddler was sentenced to life imprisonment in North Korea after the child’s family was found in possession of a Bible, according to a new report by the US State Department.

Although the incident took place in 2009, it has been highlighted in the department’s new report on international religious freedoms this month, citing data from Korea Future, a non-governmental organization documenting human rights abuses in North Korea.

“One case involved the 2009 arrest of a family based on their religious practices and possession of a Bible. “The entire family, including a two-year-old child, were given life sentences in political prison camps,” it said.


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There are estimated to be between 200,000 and 400,000 clandestine Christians in the North Korea, mainly in the West where many are believed to have settled after an “explosion” of interest in the religion in 1907.

Korea Future’s report was based on interviews between 2007 and 2020 with 244 victims of religious persecution, who had been subjected to arrest, detention, forced labor, torture, denial of a fair trial or right to life, and to sexual violence, for practicing shamanism, or Christian beliefs.

The findings reflect the regime’s paranoia over religious minorities and its lack of tolerance for any belief other than absolute devotion to the ruling Kim family as they seek to maintain their iron grip on power.

The North Korean regime has tried to stamp out Christianity for decades, and is said to fear the influence of the church after studying its role in the collapse of the Iron Curtain in Europe in the 1980s.

Defectors have revealed horrific details of Christians being brutally tortured, killed, and incarcerated in gulags. There are a handful of Christian churches across the country, including four in Pyongyang. But most observers say these are just “show churches”.

It is estimated that between 50,000 to 70,000 North Korean citizens are held in prison for their Christian beliefs, according to Open Doors USA, which advocates for persecuted Christians around the world. The group has stated that “life for Christians … is a constant cauldron of pressure; capture or death is only a mistake away.”

In its “World Watch List” report, released earlier this year, Open Doors said Pyongyang had intensified its hounding of Christians, hunting for underground churches.

It documented a “horrifying incident” where several dozen believers were discovered and executed, with more than 100 of their family members sent to labor camps.