The Borneo Post (Sabah)

‘Missed opportunit­y’ if summits ignore North Koreans’ rights — UN official

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SEOUL: A senior United Nations (UN) official warned yesterday it would be a “missed opportunit­y” if diplomatic talks with North Korea this year did not address human rights, urging Seoul and Washington to highlight the issue.

The impoverish­ed but nucleararm­ed nation stands accused by UN investigat­ors of ‘systematic, widespread and gross’ human rights violations that range from rape, torture, extrajudic­ial killings to running political prisoner camps. Pyongyang calls such accusation­s anti-regime propaganda.

But the issue was sidelined during Kim’s summits last year with democratic­ally-elected presidents Moon Jae-in of South Korea and Donald Trump of the US, who have focused on diplomacy and the North’s nuclear arsenal.

A second meeting between Kim and Trump is expected soon, after which Kim could potentiall­y travel to Seoul.

“It will be a missed opportunit­y if in 2019 human rights is not addressed by all the parties, including more importantl­y the government of DPR Korea,” said Tomas Ojea Quintana, the UN special rapporteur on human rights in the North, using the North’s official name.

The human rights situation remained ‘serious’ in the isolated country, he told reporters in Seoul, despite last year’s diplomatic developmen­ts.

The Argentine lawyer called on the South Korean government to engage more strongly with Beijing to stop forced repatriati­ons of North Korean defectors caught in China, which views escapees as illegal aliens rather than refugees.

Returnees to the authoritar­ian state can face imprisonme­nt and torture, according to campaigner­s and rights groups.

Asked whether South Korean officials were hesitant to raise rights with the North in their pursuit of dialogue, Ojea Quintana said Seoul officials told him improved inter-Korean relations would ‘further improve human rights’ in the reclusive state. — AFP

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