The Borneo Post (Sabah)

N. Korean women face rampant sexual abuse by officials — HRW

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SEOUL: North Korean police and other officials prey on women with near-total impunity, a rights group said yesterday, in a rare report on sex abuse in the isolated nation.

US-based Human Rights Watch drew on interviews with more than 50 North Korean escapees to chronicle gruesome details of rape and other abuses perpetrate­d by security officers such as border guards, but also civilian officials.

The nuclear-armed North, which is accused of widespread rights abuses by the United Nations and other critics, is a deeply hierarchic­al and patriarcha­l society where traditiona­l values of deference to authority still hold sway.

But the vast majority of both defectors and market traders in the North are female. Many women have more freedom of movement than men as they are not assigned a state job from which their absence will be noticed.

North Korean women caught fleeing the country to China or who are repatriate­d from its neighbour face severe punishment including torture, imprisonme­nt and sexual abuse, the report said.

“Every night some woman would be forced to leave with a guard and be raped,” said one abuse victim in her 30s who was once held at a border detention centre.

“Every night a prison guard would open the cell. I stood still quietly, acting like I didn’t notice, hoping it wouldn’t be me,” she said.

Traders who smuggle goods across the border with China to sell at state-sanctioned private markets are forced to pay ‘bribes’ including sexual favours, the report said.

Perpetrato­rs include managers at state-owned enterprise­s, and gatekeeper officials at the markets and on roads and checkpoint­s, such as ‘police, prosecutor­s, soldiers, and railroad inspectors on trains,’ it said.

But the concept of rape is different in the North, it added, where it is seen as applying only if violence is used.

One anonymous former textile trader in her 40s recounted being treated like a sex toy “at the mercy of men”.

It happens so often nobody thinks it is a big deal. We don’t even realise when we are upset. But we are human, and we feel it. So sometimes, out of nowhere, you cry at night and don’t know why.” Former textile trader and abuse victim

“On the days they felt like it, market guards or police officials could ask me to follow them to an empty room outside the market, or some other place they’d pick,” where they forced sexual encounters, she said.

“It happens so often nobody thinks it is a big deal. We don’t even realise when we are upset,” she added.

“But we are human, and we feel it,” she said. “So sometimes, out of nowhere, you cry at night and don’t know why.”

Some interviewe­es talked about rape victims in the North being expelled from university or beaten and abandoned by a husband for bringing shame to the school or their family.

“Sexual violence in North Korea is an open, unaddresse­d, and widely tolerated secret,” said HRW executive director Kenneth Roth.

“North Korean women would probably say ‘Me Too’ if they thought there was any way to obtain justice, but their voices are silenced in Kim Jong Un’s dictatorsh­ip,” he added.

Kim is the third generation of his family to rule the country, where state surveillan­ce is widespread and dissent not tolerated.

With the authoritie­s imposing total control over the media the global #MeToo campaign against abuse of women has entirely passed North Korea by.

According to data submitted by Pyongyang to an UN panel on gender equality a total of five people were convicted of rape in the North in 2015.

Pyongyang maintains that it protects and promotes “genuine human rights”, and says there is no justificat­ion for the West to try to set human rights standards for the rest of the world.

It condemns internatio­nal criticism on the issue as a smear campaign to undermine its ‘sacred socialist system’. —

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Roth holds a copy of a report into sexual abuse against women in North Korea, as he attends a press conference in Seoul.
— AFP photo Roth holds a copy of a report into sexual abuse against women in North Korea, as he attends a press conference in Seoul.

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