

An edition of Coronavirus and North Korean Human Rights (2025)
Regime Responses and Future Instability Scenarios
By Robert Collins
Publish Date
06/2025
Publisher
Committee for Human Rights in North Korea
Language
eng
Pages
107
Description:
In *Coronavirus and North Korean Human Rights: Regime Responses and Future Instability Scenarios*, Robert Collins provides a comprehensive analysis of how the COVID-19 pandemic exposed and intensified systemic vulnerabilities within North Korea’s authoritarian regime. Drawing from extensive open-source material and expert interviews, Collins examines the regime’s prioritization of elite survival and military readiness over public welfare, revealing severe consequences for the human security of ordinary citizens. The report explores the regime’s draconian pandemic response—including strict border closures, surveillance, and shoot-on-sight orders—as a means to tighten ideological control rather than address the public health crisis, deepening food shortages, healthcare collapse, and economic decline. / The study also dissects the disproportionate effects of the pandemic on the Korean People’s Army, North Korea’s failing economy, and the regime’s loyalty-based elite structure, underscoring the fragility of its power apparatus. Through seven thematic sections, Collins presents five plausible regime collapse scenarios rooted in pandemic-induced instability, economic mismanagement, and internal political fractures. Ultimately, the report argues that while the Kim regime has sustained its rule through repression, its rigid command structure and neglect of basic human needs could lead to profound instability in future crises.
subjects: DPRK response to Covid-19, Human rights abuses, North Korea, Kim Jong-un, propaganda, pandemic, healthcare, welfare, Korean People's Army, DPRK crisis management, DPRK economy, brutality
People: Kim Jong-un
Places: NORTH KOREA
Times: 2020-2022