North Korean Defector Jung Gwang Il to Participate in Panel Session at huge Festival in Austin, Texas
It is called: “Using Technology to Help Liberate North Korea”
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST News Service, who has reported from inside North Korea
According
to a news release, Mr. Jung will join distinguished human rights
activist Thor Halvorssen, President of the Human Rights Foundation
(HRF), Peter Hirschberg, Chairman of The City Innovate Foundation, and
Ms. Yeonmi Park, North Korean defector and activist, and author of “In
Order to Live”, in this important panel session.
“We
are very excited and very honored to have Mr. Jung join this great
panel to discuss ways technology and media can help open the minds of
the North Korean people, who are living in a country that is basically a
huge political prison camp,” said Henry Song, the North America
Director for No Chain.
He added, “This will be a great way for the SXSW audience to get involved and help with the North Korean human rights issue.”
South
by Southwest (SXSW) is a world-famous annual festival showcasing film,
interactive media, music, and conferences that takes place in Austin,
Texas, United States. This year will mark the 30th year that SXSW has
been in existence. For more information, please visit www.sxsw.com.
About Mr. Jung Gwang Il.
He is a North Korean defector and former political prisoner who founded
No Chain, an organization based in South Korea that smuggles
information into North Korea.
After
serving in the military and trade sectors for most of his young life in
North Korea, Jung was arrested for espionage by the North Korean State
Security Department in 1998 and sentenced to work at the Yodok Political
Prison Camp in 2000, where he was incarcerated for three years.
Soon
after his release, Mr. Jung escaped to South Korea and worked at Free
the NK Gulag (FNKG) before establishing No Chain in 2013.
Jung
has testified about the abuses in North Korea in front of the European
Union and U.S. Congress and was a key resource for the UN Commission of
Inquiry's investigation into North Korea's human rights violations.
About North Korea:
It is the world's most isolated and closed society. Any opinion
critical of the government is banned, and dissidents are sent to
concentration camps. Immigration and emigration are forbidden; the
postal system reads and censors all mail; citizens cannot access the
Internet. However, over the past 15 years, news and culture from the
outside world have leaked into the country. Today North Koreans receive
knowledge through illegal radio broadcasts and the smuggling of flash
drives loaded with TV shows and other media. Join this conversation to
learn how technology is leading an information revolution in the
struggle for a free North Korea.
Please direct all media inquiries regarding Mr. Jung to Henry Song, North America Director, No Chain, 202-341-6767, songajee@gmail.com . Also, check out http://schedule.sxsw.com/2016/events/event_PP51246 for more information on the event. Details of No Chain can be found at https://www.facebook.com/%EB%85%B8-%EC%B2%B4%EC%9D%B8-No-Chain-for-North-Korea-343880029112037.
Photo
captions: 1) Jung Gwang Il speaking about his shocking experiences in
North Korea. 2) Kim Jong-un, the North Korean dictator, addressing the
secretive nation. 3) Dan Wooding at the DMZ in North Korea, with a
soldier and Michael Little from CBN, during the visit he and other
Christians made to North Korea after the death of North Korean founder,
Kim Jong-il.
** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
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