Google – AFP, Nina Larson (AFP), 21 March 2013
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North
Korea's propaganda village of Gijeongdong is seen from a South Korean
observatory
post on March 21, 2013 (AFP, Jung Yeon-Je)
|
GENEVA —
The United Nations on Thursday said it will for the first time establish a
commission of inquiry into grave human rights violations in North Korea that
may amount to crimes against humanity.
The UN's
Human Rights Council passed a resolution to establish a commission to probe
"the systematic, widespread and grave violations of human rights in the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea... with a view to ensuring full
accountability, in particular where these violations may amount to crimes
against humanity".
Japan and
the European Union, with the backing of other Western countries including the
United States, had presented the resolution, which passed with full consensus
in the 47-member council.
"For
too long, the population of the country has been subjected to wide and
systematic human rights violations and abuses," lamented Irish ambassador
Gerard Corr, speaking on behalf of the EU.
North
Korea's ambassador to the UN in Geneva, Pyong Se So, swiftly rejected the
resolution, insisting to the council that it was "full of
fabrications" and merely a "political ploy" to "disgrace
the image of the Democratic Republic of Korea".
His country
had "one of the best systems in the world for the protection of human
rights", he added.
Activists
meanwhile hailed the resolution as a "landmark step".
"This
long awaited inquiry will help expose decades of abuse by the North Korean
government," said Julie de Rivero of Human Rights Watch, insisting in a
statement that the UN probe would be "a crucial first step toward ensuring
accountability for crimes against humanity and other human rights violations in
North Korea".
The UN's
special rapporteur on North Korea, Marzuki Darusman, presented a report to the
council earlier this month in which he accused Pyongyang of a string of
violations that could constitute crimes against humanity, including depriving
the population of food, torture and arbitrary detention.
He also
highlighted concerns about a network of political prison camps believed to hold
some 200,000 people, including detainees who were born in captivity because
entire families are thought to have been sent there.
And he
condemned Pyongyang's kidnapping of foreigners, which the country has partially
acknowledged.
Abductees,
notably from Japan, are thought to have been used to train North Korean agents
about foreign culture, and Pyongyang's failure to come clean has remained a
thorn in relations with Tokyo.
Thursday's
resolution condemned a long line of abuses, "in particular the use of
torture and labour camps against political prisoners and repatriated
citizens".
It urged
Pyongyang to "immediately end those practices and to release all political
prisoners unconditionally and without delay".
The
resolution also extended Darusman's mandate and said he should be one of three
members on the new commission of inquiry.
It called
on Pyongyang "to cooperate fully with the special rapporteur" and the
investigation.
Like
previous UN rights monitors, Darusman has so far not been granted access to
North Korea and for his analysis he relied largely on testimony from North
Koreans who have fled the country.
North
Korea, run by a Stalinist regime since the end of World War II, is one of the
most isolated nations on the planet.
In recent
years, it has locked horns with the international community over its nuclear
programme, and military tensions on the Korean peninsula have escalated
dramatically since the North conducted its third nuclear test last month.
But while
devoting spending to its nuclear activities, the North has simultaneously
tapped foreign aid after suffering intermittent famines.
Thursday's
resolution also expressed alarm at "the precarious humanitarian situation
in (North Korea), exacerbated by its national policy priorities", urging
Pyongyang to "ensure full, rapid and unimpeded access of humanitarian assistance
that is delivered on the basis of need".

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