this post was submitted on 02 Oct 2025
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"Trafficking in Persons Report" of United States under Fire

Pyongyang, October 2 (KCNA) -- Ri Jin, researcher of the Korea Association for Human Rights Studies, Thursday issued the following article titled "'Trafficking in Persons Report' highlights only the incurable maladies of the United States":

Recently, the U.S. Department of State released again a "report" that willfully assesses and classifies the practices of "human trafficking" in the DPRK and all other countries of the world.

The "report", as in the past, repeated its slander against the sovereign states, citing the data of "human trafficking" in other countries and labeling them as "model states" or "backward states" after grading the countries in order of the governmental efforts for eradicating "human trafficking" and their results.

Last year we had already branded the annual "Trafficking in Persons Report" of the U.S. which was run through with the obsolete fabricated data as a diagnosis of mental derangement of the U.S. addicted to the politicization of human rights.

The U.S. still tries to style itself a "human rights judge" though it is breaking the world's worst human rights record every year. It is stunning the public.

It is illogical that the U.S., where horrible shooting incidents occur at schools, churches and shops almost every day and tens of thousands of people are being taken to prisons due to the policy of expelling immigrants, assesses the situation of human rights in the world.

This is not the only thing.

It is, indeed, a tragicomedy that the U.S. government made a "judgment" upon the world situation of "human trafficking" at a time when the whole world is astonished at a U.S. millionaire's hideous underage sex trafficking.

The reality clearly proves that the U.S. "Trafficking in Persons Report" is nothing but a means for veiling its records of human rights violation and politicizing human rights to justify the pressure on different countries and interference in their internal affairs, and has nothing to do with the substantial efforts to eradicate human trafficking.

It is by no means fortuitous that not only the anti-U.S. and independent countries but also the "countries sharing their mind" with the U.S. are openly criticizing the U.S for its deceitful and contradictory gibberish about "human rights".

Today when the world aspires after multi-polarization, the DPRK and many other countries are directing efforts to promoting human rights conforming to their own history, culture and socio-economic environment.

The U.S. is well advised to clearly understand the reality and realize that the old-fashioned and inefficient behavior of a "human rights judge" is no longer appropriate, and it moves to internationalize and politicize the "human rights" issues of other countries would only result in self-harming consequences of bringing its miserable human rights situation to a focus.

We will in the future, too, not lend an ear to the U.S. deceptive "human rights" rhetoric but do our best to defend the most advantageous socialist system of our own style and the genuine rights and interests of the people. -0-
www.kcna.kp (2025.10.02.)

http://kcna.kp/en/article/q/808ef0024f06d2846b521d478fa50c2c.kcmsf

https://archive.is/pm9pA (kcna)

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[–] Awoo@hexbear.net 51 points 1 month ago (4 children)

How the fuck is the DPRK worst rank in human trafficking if it's a hermit kingdom that you can't get into or out of? You can't be closed and also somehow incredible human traffickers.

[–] MasterBlaster@lemmygrad.ml 41 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Reminds me of this junk article about scary North Koreans infiltrating the remote work pipeline.

Basically, North Koreans are so poor they are stealing remote jobs from Americans. This is actually very scary, because they're spies for the North Korean government. But, also, the North Korean government is lacking behind in their cyber-capabilities. Though, they're also using cutting-edge AI tactics regular people can't detect.

The article is functionally a remote working hit piece but implies many different, conflicting things about NK.

[–] alexei_1917@hexbear.net 13 points 1 month ago

hit piece but implies many different, conflicting things about NK.

Oh, so a regular old slow news day in the West, then. That tracks.

[–] Carl@hexbear.net 24 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Maybe they're counting every instance of a North Korean worker going to Russia/China as an instance of human trafficking, or considering every single DPRK citizen as having been "kidnapped" from South Korea.

[–] EnsignRedshirt@hexbear.net 15 points 1 month ago

Why not both? Every DPRK citizen was kidnapped, and also anyone who leaves or enters the country is considered trafficked. If a DPRK citizen goes to another country and comes home, that counts as three separate instances of human trafficking.

[–] Awoo@hexbear.net 9 points 1 month ago

Oooooooooo that would totally make sense actually, any workers the DPRK sends abroad to work on projects in other countries would be counted as human trafficking those poor slaves of the state.

[–] dead@hexbear.net 19 points 1 month ago (1 children)

As the KCNA article says, the report is a way for the US to slander their enemies. The example given in the state department report is "forced labor". The US State Department report is alleging that DPRK traffics people internally.

The report also says that DPRK has up to "200,000 persons in political prison camps". Our "prisons" vs their "political prison camps". Through coded language, the US is accusing DPRK of things that the US does.

https://archive.ph/zkrDA

https://web.archive.org/web/20251001113243/https://www.state.gov/reports/2025-trafficking-in-persons-report/north-korea/

[–] Awoo@hexbear.net 15 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Oh ok so every single prisoner currently doing any kind of work in american for profit prisons is human trafficking too then, making the US the #1 human trafficker in the world by far.

[–] WildWeezing420@hexbear.net 7 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Probably if I had to guess (not reading that US State Dept dreck lmao) they are likely claiming that any DPRK citizens who go abroad for seasonal work are being coerced (much like they claim with Cuban doctors). They probably also claim that internal movements of workforces for planned projects is also "human trafficking".

Basically, the normal operations of any state involve massive amounts of human movement. If you don't like a state and think they're illegitimate, you can make all kinds of spurious claims about "forced" "trafficking". Kind of similar to how you can declare a state you don't like a "terrorist" nation and all the actions of their military are "terrorism", but they're not functionally different than the normal violent functions of a typical military. They do this with the IRGC.