Mapping the Brutality of North Korea, and Where the Bodies Are Buried<br />, and their victims and their approximate numbers." "We don’t know when there will be a trial or other steps to hold perpetrators of the human rights abuses accountable, but<br />that time will come, and we want to be as ready as possible," said Dan Bielefeld, a web developer and human rights activist from Milwaukee. that a sense of the scale of the human rights violations, their locations<br />Encouraged by the 2014 United Nations report, Mr. Lee began putting together the international team to use satellite imagery<br />and open-source mapping technology to record North Korean human rights violations, just as security analysts use such technology to monitor the North’s military and nuclear sites.<br />United said that Our location-based map of suspected sites is a start down that road.<br />North said that They hanged people in crowded places like markets and left the bodies there for hours to instill fear among the people,