The Borneo Post

Paralympic­s shines light on North Korea’s disabled

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This I believe is a good sign of how North Korea wants to support the participat­ion of persons with disabiliti­es. Catalina Devandas-Aguilar, United Nations special rapporteur

PYEONGCHAN­G, South Korea: Despite sending only two novice athletes, and during a major charm offensive with the outside world, there is hope that North Korea’s Winter Paralympic­s debut might signal progress for the country’s often harshly treated disabled.

Wheelchair- bound Kim Jong Hyon and Ma Yu Chol only started sit- skiing three months ago, so it was little surprise when they finished at or near the back of the field in their two races in Pyeongchan­g.

However, they were cheered enthusiast­ic ally by South Koreans, who have witnessed the North’s rapid warming of ties with Seoul and Washington during the Winter Olympics and Paralympic­s in Pyeongchan­g. North Korea is notorious for its record on human rights, and accounts from the country suggest a dismal fate for its disabled citizens.

But the United Nations special rapporteur on disabled people’s rights, who visited North Korea last year, also told AFP that the isolated country was “very proud” of its support for para sports.

“This I believe is a good sign of how North Korea wants to support the participat­ion of persons with disabiliti­es,” Catalina Devandas-Aguilar said. “The government is very proud of its support for the participat­ion of people with disabiliti­es in sports.”

North Korea is one of the world’s most repressive regimes, and over the years dark tales have emerged about its treatment of people with disabiliti­es.

Reports have described disabled people being taken away from the showcase capital Pyongyang, and being placed in camps where they live in poor conditions.

A 2006 UN report said that people suffering from dwarfism were rounded up and interned at special sites, while there have also been claims that medical experiment­s are performed on the disabled.

Whi le it has di f f icult to independen­t ly veri fy such al legations, disabled people who have fled North Korea give harrowing accounts of their treatment.

Choi Kwang-hyouk, a defector playing for the South’s Paralympic­s ice hockey team in Pyeongchan­g, said he faced harsh discrimina­tion after losing his left leg in a train accident in the North.

“Life is really difficult for people with disabiliti­es in North Korea,” Choi said.

However, Kim and Ma’s appearance in Pyeongchan­g - - about 30 miles ( 50 kilometres) from the heavily fortified Korean border -- follows a few more positive developmen­ts. The North ratified a key UN convention aimed at protecting the rights of the disabled in 2016, and Devandas-Aguilar was allowed to visit last year, the first time a top UN rights expert had been granted access to the country.

After previously ignoring the Summer Paralympic­s, swimmer Rim Ju Song became North Korea’s first Paralympia­n at London in 2012, followed by two more athletes at Rio 2016.

However, some believe political motives rather than genuine concern for disabled people are behind the North’s debut at the Winter Paralympic­s.

Robert King, a former US special envoy for North Korean human rights, said the nucleararm­ed state was more focused on improving ties with the South and the United States as sanctions over its weapons programme start to bite.

“The Nor th Koreans a re interested because of the political benefits that they get out of it in terms of their relationsh­ip with the South, and an effort to improve relations with the United States,” said King .

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 ??  ?? North Korea’s Kim Jong Hyon competes in the cross-country skiing sitting men’s 1.1km sprint at the Alpensia Biathlon Centre.
North Korea’s Kim Jong Hyon competes in the cross-country skiing sitting men’s 1.1km sprint at the Alpensia Biathlon Centre.

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