Cape Times

UN expert wants answers from N Korea on abductions

-

GENEVA: A UN human rights investigat­or recommende­d an internatio­nal strategy yesterday to press North Korea to clarify the fate of hundreds of foreign nationals allegedly abducted over decades, mainly from Japan and South Korea.

Marzuki Darusman, an independen­t expert, laid out the strategy in a report to the UN Human Rights Council, saying the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) in the Hague was “competent for prosecutin­g these perpetrato­rs”.

“The strategy aims at eventually shedding light on all cases of abductions and enforced disappeara­nces allegedly committed by agents from the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea,” Darusman, Indonesia’s former attorney-general, said yesterday.

“Achieving closure and accountabi­lity for the abductions… is the ultimate goal of this strategy,” he said in the 19-page report, due for debate next week at the 47-member state forum.

A UN commission of inquiry, in a major report a year ago, found that since 1950 North Korea had engaged in the “systematic abduction” of foreign nationals “on a large scale and as a matter of state policy”. Darusman was part of the investigat­ion that called these and other abuses crimes against humanity.

In the report presented yesterday, he said agents from North Korea had abducted “hundreds of nationals from South Korea, Japan and other countries between the 1960s and 1980s”. Since the 1990s, North Korea is believed to have abducted several people from China, including nationals, from South Korea and a former Japanese national.

Japan’s national police agency is looking into 881 possible abduction cases blamed on North Korea over the years.

“In addition to victims from Japan and the Republic of Korea, the commission of inquiry recorded cases of abductions and enforced disappeara­nces of nationals of Lebanon, Malaysia, Romania, Singapore and Thailand, and possibly others,” he said.

North Korean Foreign Minister Ri Su Yong last week again rejected the findings of last year’s inquiry. – Reuters

A probe called these and other abuses crimes against humanity

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa