PYONGYANG, North Korea – The Voice of the        Martyrs (VOM), an international organization that assists persecuted        Christians around the world, today launched a worldwide campaign to free a        North Korean man awaiting public execution for the crime of simply being a        Christian.
For more than a year, Son Jong Nam, former North Korean        Army officer turned underground evangelist, has been beaten, tortured and        held in a bleak, North Korean death row basement jail in this capital        city.  He has been sentenced to public execution as an example to the        North Korean people.
       
VOM has been joined in the        initiative by U.S. Senator and presidential candidate Sam Brownback        (R-Kan.), a noted supporter of human rights for North Korean        refugees.  Brownback sent letters last week, also signed by Senators        Baucus (D-Mont.), Durbin (D-Ill.), Inhofe (R-Okla.) and Vitter (R-La.),        asking U.S. Secretary of State Dr. Condoleezza Rice and U.N. Secretary        General Ban Ki-moon to work to secure the release of the Christian        prisoner.
VOM is calling on people in the United States and around        the world to write letters and send emails on Son Jong Nam’s behalf.         They are directed to go to VOM web site www.prisoneralert.com, where they        can compose a personal letter of support and encouragement to Son.         The letter is to be mailed to the North Korean delegation to the United        Nations, along with a cover letter asking the North Korean government to        spare Son’s life, release him from prison immediately, report on his        current status and deliver the personal letter to Son.  
In        addition, people are encouraged to send emails to the U.N. High        Commissioner for Human Rights and the U.S. Department of State, asking        that they intervene on Son’s behalf.             
“We are asking for prayers for Mr. Son, but also that people        around the world take action on his behalf,” said Todd Nettleton, director        of media development for VOM.  “Jesus said ministering to a prisoner        was like ministering to Himself.  Every letter and email can make a        difference.”
In his letters to Secretary of State Rice and        Secretary General Ban, Sen. Brownback wrote:  “Future cooperation and        engagement with North Korea will be far more challenging if its leaders        continue to persecute their own people for religious views.  The        United States has made political and religious freedoms important elements        in its diplomatic relations, and we are gravely concerned about abuses of        such basic rights in North Korea.”
Some years ago Son complained to        the North Korean Central People’s Committee when his wife, while being        investigated by the secret police, was kicked in the stomach and        miscarried. He made plans to leave North Korea after being pressured to        drop the matter.
Son defected to China in 1998 with his wife, son        and brother.  His wife died after arriving there.  It was in        China that he met a South Korean missionary and became a Christian.         Mr. Son continued his religious studies and felt called to be an        evangelist in North Korea.
But before he could return home, Son was        arrested by Chinese police in 2001 and sent back to North Korea, charged        with sending missionaries into his native country.  He was imprisoned        and brutally tortured for three years.  Many of his 200 fellow        inmates were Christians, imprisoned themselves for studying theology in        China. Many died within six months.    
Son was        released on parole in May 2004 and expelled from Pyongyang to Chongjin to        work at a rocket research institute.  However, his health was so bad        when he was released that he was unable to walk.  But after receiving        medical treatment, he went back to China to meet with his        brother.
Son was arrested again when he returned to North Korea in        January 2006, and has remained in prison since. The last word of him came        in February. It is suspected that because he is being kept in the capitol        city, North Korean officials view him as a special case and perhaps are        keeping him alive, if barely, for unknown reasons.
According to        Nettleton, North Korea, a one-man dictatorship with communist influence,        is one of the most repressive and isolated regimes in the world and denies        every kind of human right to its citizens. The country’s previous leader,        Kim Il Sung, founded an ideology called “juche,” meaning “self-reliance,”        which is enforced in every aspect of the culture by the ruling        elite.  Kim Jong Il, the son of deceased leader Kim Il Sung,        currently leads the country.  In North Korea, both Kims are        considered deities.  
“All religions have been harshly        repressed in North Korea,” said Nettleton.  “Thousands of Christians        have been murdered since the Korean War. In 1953, there were an estimated        300,000 Christians; however, the number is much lower today. Christians        must practice their faith in deep secrecy and are in constant        danger.”
There are three official churches in North Korea’s        capital, Pyongyang, said Nettleton, but they are only for show.  Many        North Koreans have fled to China, some of them Christians, and have been        known to return to North Korea to share the gospel, he said.         
“Any North Korean sent back by the Chinese government faces almost        certain death if it is discovered they’ve had contact with Christians in        China,” Nettleton said.
Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW) issued        a report June 19 accusing North Korea of international crimes against        humanity, and recommended the United Nations establish a commission of        inquiry.  The report said a “prima facie” case exists that North        Korea has committed “murder, extermination, enslavement/forced        persecution, enforced disappearance of persons, other inhumane acts and        perhaps rape and sexual violence.”
VOM has been launching        helium-filled balloons, printed with either the Gospel of Mark or the text        of a tract called “How to Know God” into North Korea for years, said        Nettleton. They also smuggle in copies of an audio drama called “He Lived        Among Us” and have sent copies of The New Testament in Korean to northern        China through a VOM program called “Bibles Unbound” (www.biblesunbound.com).        
The Voice of the Martyrs (www.persecution.com), headquartered        in Bartlesville, Okla., is a non-profit, interdenominational organization        with a vision for aiding Christians around the world who are being        persecuted for their faith in Jesus Christ, fulfilling the “Great        Commission” and educating the world about the ongoing persecution of        Christians.