The Philippine Star

NoKor slams US censure on human rights

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SEOUL (AFP) — North Korea condemned the United States’ criticism of its human rights record as “ridiculous” days before leader Kim Jongun’s summit with South Korea and ahead of a meeting with US President Donald Trump.

The isolated North has been accused of a litany of state-sanctioned rights abuses including extrajudic­ial killing, torture, brutal crackdowns on dissent and even kidnapping foreign citizens.

The US State Department’s rights report on the North, released last week, described “egregious human rights violations” in the authoritar­ian state from public executions to widespread surveillan­ce of citizens.

Pyongyang angrily slammed the report for “viciously slandering” the nation, accusing the US of being a “hotbed” of rights abuses itself, beset by “cancer-like” gun violence and “all sorts of injustice, deprivatio­n of rights.”

Washington was appointing itself as a “human rights judge,” the official

KCNA news agency said in a commentary late Tuesday.

“This is really ridiculous and reminds one of a thief crying to stop the thief,” it said.

“Its true aim is to disintegra­te those countries which are disobedien­t to it and to create a pretext for political, military and economic aggression and pressure.”

KCNA also described the North as the “cradle of genuine life of working people.”

The remarks came days before Kim holds a historic summit with South Korean President Moon Jae-in – Kim’s second meeting with a foreign leader – ahead of a highly-anticipate­d encounter with Trump.

Friday’s talks – the third-ever inter-Korea summit after meetings in 2000 and 2007 – will focus on persuading Kim to give up his widely condemned nuclear weapons and easing military tension between the two Koreas.

They could also discuss a path toward a peace treaty to formally end the 1950-53 Korean War, which stopped with a ceasefire, and reunions of families left divided by the conflict.

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