Fiona
Bruce MP’s Christmas message from the House of Commons to North Koreans
Speaking in the
House of Commons yesterday Fiona Bruce said:
Fiona Bruce
(Congleton) (Con): We hear today that Sony has pulled the apparently joke
film “The Interview” about North Korea. I decry inhibiting free speech,
whatever the material, but life in North Korea is not a joke. It is not a joke
that desperate women wade across the frozen Tumen river to escape to China,
only to be caught by Chinese men, sold into sexual slavery and then, when used
up, sent back by the authorities to face torture in North Korea and the forced
abortion of their unborn children.
It is not a joke for those hundreds of thousands who live
in concentration camps reminiscent of the Nazi era, many for uttering a few
words against the North Korean regime—or, worse, under the regime’s atrocious
“guilt by association” rule, not for something they have done, but for
something their relatives have done to offend the regime. Prisoners are told
they are not humans but animals and indescribably tortured: steam-rolled to
death; killed by having hot molten metal poured over them; frozen to death;
starved to death; worked to death in factories; hung upside down to have water
poured into their nostrils, like so much beef hanging from hooks in a slaughter
house; deprived of clothing and sleep, then mercilessly pummelled with wooden
bats; kept in cells with two holes in the door for them to stick their feet out
to be horrendously tortured; and frequently forced to watch executions,
including of their blood relatives. As my co-chair of the all-party group on
North Korea, an increasingly active group, Lord Alton, said,
Life in North Korea is not a joke outside the
concentration camps either. It is not a joke for the thousands of stunted,
parentless children—the so-called wandering swallows—who eke out a living on
the streets. The problem of malnutrition in North Korea is so bad that the
minimum height for a member of their armed forces is just 4 feet 2 inches. It
is not a joke for the disabled in North Korea either. Just when we thought that
reports from North Korea could not get any worse, this week we heard at first
hand from an escapee at a meeting of the all-party group in the UK Parliament
about how disabled people, including children, were sent
“for
medical tests such as dissection of body parts, as well as tests of biological
and chemical weapons. Dwarves are castrated. Babies with mental and physical
handicaps are routinely snatched from hospitals and left to suffer
indescribable things until they die. The disabled in North Korea are simply disappeared.”
We were told that by a disabled escapee, Ji Seong-Ho,
who, at 14, lost his left hand and leg after passing out from hunger while
scavenging for coal on railway tracks and was run over by a train. He was told
by North Korean Government officials:
At Christmas time, let us remember that living in North
Korea is not a joke for the many brave Christians who every day fear
incarceration simply for owning a Bible. One lady has told the all-party group
that if soldiers suspect that someone is a believer, they will ransack their
home until they find what they are looking for. In her home, they did: they
noticed a brick slightly out of position, and behind it they found her Bible,
so she was taken to prison.
I have mentioned just two of many escapees who have
spoken to our group this year and who are now finding sanctuary in the UK and
increasingly giving testimonies of their suffering to Members of Parliament.
For the rest of my speech, however, I want to speak not to fellow Members, or
even to our constituents, but to the people of North Korea. When I first spoke
about North Korea in the House, I was amazed to receive a letter from supporters
in South Korea saying, “You are being heard” so I know that when we speak here,
many of you in North Korea hear what we say—and that is increasingly the case
with modern means of communication, such as smuggled-in USB sticks.
I want you, the people of North Korea, to know that your
suffering is being heard. Do not think that no one cares. Do not think that no
one is speaking out for you. In the UK Parliament, more and more people are
speaking out and showing that they care. We have compassion for you in your
suffering, and this Christmas remember that our compassion is as nothing
compared with that of Christ. One day, this too will end. Kingdoms rise and
fall. We are praying for you and for your freedom.
In addition to praying and speaking out, more and more
people are acting. This year, a 400-page UN report by Mr Justice Kirby
catalogued the brutal atrocities you experience. The world now knows of them
and cannot stay silent. Increasingly, people in the free world are calling for
action on your behalf. Only last week in this Parliament, the all-party group
on international freedom of religion or belief issued a report that can be
found at www.freedomdeclared.org which added to demands made last month at the
UN by no fewer than
111 countries that those responsible for human rights
violations in North Korea be brought to justice by the International Criminal
Court. We also called for all appropriate justice mechanisms to be considered
to bring the North Korean Government to account for their terrible atrocities
against their own people. Here in the UK Parliament, as MPs we continue to
press for the BBC World Service to broadcast to you, the people of North Korea,
in the Korean and English languages, and we MPs continue to press for an
increased dialogue with China to stop its policy of forced repatriation and for
humanitarian aid to the people of North Korea.
So, at Christmas time our hearts go out to you, the North
Korean people, from the UK. Know that we are with you; know that we are
supporting and working with your relatives and friends who have escaped to this
country and know that they have a voice; and know that we shall continue to
speak out for you and to press for action on your behalf until the day comes,
which it surely will, when your country is free again and your suffering is at
an end.
The Shadow Leader of the House, Thomas
Docherty responded saying:
“As ever, the hon. Member for Congleton (Fiona Bruce) made an impassioned and knowledgeable speech about the situation in North Korea. She has a tremendous track record in relation to the persecution of Christians, and—again, as ever—she made a hugely important contribution. I know that her work has the support of all Members.”