<p> <br /><b>NORTH KOREA: ACCESS TO EVIL PART 3 OF 3</b> <br /><br />Dong Shik Kim and two other people were part of a team sent to a prison in Pyongsong, a camp that held both high level political and military prisoners. He described that he first traveled to the capital of North Korea, where he was met by a military officer who accompanied him to the site of this camp. <br /><br />He described a building that housed four glass-enclosed chambers, and his team supervised the gassing of two political prisoners, each in one of those glass-enclosed cells. <br /><br /><b>Each victim was placed in one of the chambers and was closely monitored for reactions to the gas.</b> “Each enclosure,” he emphasized, “also had a two-way audio hookup, so that the victim, and the reaction of the victim, and the screams of the victim could be readily heard by the scientists,” said Cooper, “and he casually mentioned that the first political prisoner died after 2 1/2 hours & the 2nd expired only after 3 1/2 hours.” <br /><br />Kim explained it was considered to be a privilege to witness successful experiments. He noted that as a result of the successful conclusion of these experiments he received a medal, and a commendation, and his career was put on a fast track. “Twenty-five years later he showed absolutely no regrets or remorse, only saying that, ‘these were political prisoners who were considered criminals, and who were going to die anyway’,“ according to Cooper. <br /><br />He said he found Dr. Lee to be a very credible, if frightening, witness, who reminded him of a former guard that worked in the Unit 731 camp in China, in which Imperial Japanese forces, under General Ishi, did <b>the most horrific experiments on a par with Mengele in Auschwitz.</b> <br /></p><p></p>