Christianlouboutin night and flash a light to see *#tlzzy102

a prisoner for about a month. They questioned me because they thought I must know something about my son's escape. State Security people went to the house and packed up. Christianlouboutin The kids were at home. We were allowed to take one trunk and two sacks. I was released in time to catch the train." What was the charge?"There was no charge." I heard Kim Jong-il had come up with a new directive: "Make no inter- nal enemies."Yes, in the early 1990s there was a new law--no reprisals against the families of defectors. In reality it didn't help anyone." But you were Louboutins On Sale banished, not sent to a political prison camp."That's true. "When the three of us went to Sangnam-ri we were sent to a coop- erative farm but weren't allowed to work for fifteen days. So they didn't give us food or a house. We did have twenty kilograms of rice with us and one set of clothing. We had to carry in the trunk our portraits of Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il. We moved in for one month with a family of four in a single room. Then we moved to the storage space of the same house. The roofleaked-we could see the sky. There were mice every- where, even under the blankets when we slept. In August that year, we moved to a better storage room. "We were there two years and five months, constantly being watched secretly. They'd come at Christianlouboutin night and flash a light to see if we were sleeping. We had to be careful what we said. The only freedom we had was walking within the village. We couldn't go even one step outside. Sangnam-ri traditionally has been a place of banishment. This is where families of political criminals were sent. There were a few normal people but not that many. "We didn't see any rice. We only had corn, potatoes and beans. Peo- ple Christianlouboutin living there originally, those not banished, had their own plots pro- viding such things as vegetables, but people like us didn't have land to grow them so we had to buy them. [Gets emotional.] When we lived there, because it's a farm, we only got rations once a year at harvest share-out time in October or November. We had only brought 20 kilos of rice. Because we were watched, we couldn't use money to buy food or the seller would get in trouble. There were times we had no food even though I'd brought money. Sometimes people would secretly throw corn cakes into our house because they knew we were starving. "Sometimes late at night I'd take the train to the county seat or to my mother's home in Hamhung. When they realized I was missing they thought I would escape to China. They would call my mother's house while I was on the train. She said no, I wasn't there. I'd get found and taken back.
Par airmaxshoes2011 le vendredi 12 août 2011

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