Daily Dispatch

No UN review for DPRK

- By STEPHANIE NEBEHAY

NORTH Korea boycotted a UN review of its human rights record yesterday, as an investigat­or said an escalation in hostilitie­s on the divided peninsula had further closed off opportunit­ies for dialogue with Pyongyang’s government.

The UN Human Rights Council held a two-hour session on abuses in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) where rights experts called for action against perpetrato­rs of crimes against humanity documented in a 2014 UN report that detailed the use of political prison camps, starvation and executions.

“We are not participat­ing in any meeting on DPRK’s human rights situation because it is politicall­y motivated,” Choe Myong Nam, Pyongyang’s deputy ambassador to the UN in Geneva, told reporters.

UN special rapporteur on human rights in the DPRK Tomas Ojea Quintana said he regretted the decision but was still seeking engagement with North Korea.

Rising political and military tensions should not shield ongoing violations from internatio­nal scrutiny, he said.

“There are no quick fixes or instant solutions to tackle human rights abuses of the scope and nature that has been reported for a very long time in the DPRK,” he told the 47member forum.

“Military tensions have brought human rights dialogue with the DPRK to a standstill.”

Between 80 000 and 120 000 people are held in four known political prison camps in North Korea and hundreds of families in South Korea and Japan are looking for missing relatives believed abducted by North Korean agents, Ojea Quintana said.

Sara Hossain, a member of the council’s group of independen­t experts on accountabi­lity, said the UN should consider ways of prosecutin­g those responsibl­e for human rights abuses in North Korea, possibly by creating an internatio­nal tribunal. “The groundwork for future criminal trials should be laid now.” — Reuters

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