GUNNING FOR GOLD

North Korean athletes at Winter Olympics desperate to avoid ‘hellish GULAG fate’ of 1966 World Cup squad

There have been several, deeply worrying reports of underperforming athletes being punished

FOR North Korean athletes, the prospect of failure on the big stage carries a punishment far worse than a damaged ego.

Having failed to land a single medal in South Korea so far, its Winter Olympic team could suffer the same fate as previous underperforming athletes - imprisonment in one of the country's sick gulags.

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The entire 1966 North Korean World Cup squad were arrested and thrown into a concentration camp for failing to bring about national gloryCredit: Hulton Archive - Getty

The most infamous case is that of the North Korean football team which made history for reaching the second round of the 1966 World Cup.

Former leader Kim Il-Sung is widely believed to have ordered them to be arrested after they lost to 5-3 Portugal days after they were seen drinking with local women in public.

Instead of going home to a proud welcome, the are reported to have been sent to one of the reclusive nation's most notorious gulags.

North Korean defector Kang Chol-Hwan claims he met some of the team while they were being held in Yodok prison, or Camp 15, usually reserved for political prisoners.

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Inmates unfortunate enough to find themselves in these cruel camps, inspired by Joseph Stalin's Soviet gulags, suffered years of unthinkable torture.

In fact the UN claims the majority of prisoners "have no prospect of ever being released" and escape is "virtually impossible".

Defector Kim Hyeong-Soo, who fled the country in 2009, says both athletes and coaches are punishedCredit: Getty Images
Kim Il-Sung established a series of secret prison camps in the 1950s to weed out his political enemiesCredit: Getty - Contributor
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Stories from the few who have been released paint an apocalyptic picture of arbitrary punishments and summary executions, apparently conducted in front of inmates.

Former detainee Shin Dong-Hyuk's says guards chopped off his middle finger because he dropped a sewing machine in Camp 14.

While in Camp 22, a guard was "rewarded" for bludgeoning a prisoner to death with a blowtorch because "he was not working fast enough".

Macabre illustrations drawn by former inmates, and released by the United Nations, are the only real insight we have into the cruelty of these camps.

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Former gulag prisoner Kenneth Bae previously spoke out about the regime's notorious concentration campsCredit: Getty - Contributor
North Korean figure skating pair Tae Ok Ryom and Ju Sik Kim may be punished for not winning a medal at the Winter OlympicsCredit: Getty - Contributor
This satellite image shows new construction work at Camp 25 in North KoreaCredit: Getty - Contributor

One shows prisoners being subjected to gruelling stress positions for hours on end while another shows an inmate locked in tiny cage, trying to capture a rat so he could eat something.

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Prisoner Kenneth Bae was thrown into one of North Korea's gulags after being accused of plotting to "destroy the regime".

His 735 day stint saw him interrogated, starved and carrying out six to ten hours of hard labour a day.

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With the Winter Olympics finishing next weekend and the tubby tyrants' arch enemies the US and South Korea holding fifth and ninth place respectively athletes may be greeted with a similar fate.

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The importance placed on the regime's global esteem was seen last week when a Kim Jong-Un impersonator was dragged away for dancing in front of regime cheerleaders.

Just weeks ahead of the opening ceremony, the two Koreas agreed to field a combined team for the Games.


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