People in the North doesn’t have the freedom of speech, religion and liberty. They are executed publicly and tortured. In addition to unprovided human rights, the citizens of North Korea are subject to starvation and malnutrition due to the unequal distribution of food. According to the World Food Programme (WFP) in 2008, almost 30 percent of the population (6.5 million people) did not have enough food to eat. North Koreans are sent to prison camps as political prisoners if they are seen to be “criticizing” the regime. In these prison camps, North Koreans are treated like slaves and subject to torture and hard labor. There are approximately 200,000 inmates currently in these prison camps.Many North Koreans flee to China in order to escape the repressive North Korean lifestyle, only to find that life in China is not much better. North Korean refugees in China are placed in a “legal limbo” where they are not recognized as citizens and, as a result, cannot receive education or medical care.8 Women are often sold as sex slaves to Chinese men and children are left parentless. The refugees in China live in constant hiding and fear being sent back. Yeonmi park, an escaper from North Korea remembers her first time seeing an execution. She had to overcome the fear of death in order to escape. Even if the people in North does escape, they have to live in pain because they are separated from their