Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




NUKEWARS
North Korea atrocities exposed, but what next?
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Feb 18, 2014


China rejects complicity in N. Korea rights violations
Beijing (AFP) Feb 18, 2014 - Beijing on Tuesday dismissed a UN report's warning that its officials could be complicit in alleged human rights violations by Pyongyang by forcibly repatriating North Koreans from China.

A 400-page United Nations report issued Monday detailed human rights violations including "extermination, murder, enslavement, torture, imprisonment, rape, forced abortions and other sexual violence".

The report by the Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea also included "concerns relating to China's policy and practice of forced repatriation" of North Korean citizens.

The commission said it "expressed particular concern about Chinese officials providing specific information on such persons" to North Korean authorities.

It called on Beijing to "caution relevant officials that such conduct could amount to the aiding and abetting of crimes against humanity" in North Korea.

Foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying roundly rejected any Chinese complicity in human rights violations in the North.

"We totally don't accept this accusation," she said at a regular briefing.

"On the North Korean defector issue, our position is very clear," she said. "We properly deal with that in accordance with international law and humanitarian principles."

The report quoted a written reply by China as saying that North Korean "citizens who have entered China illegally do it for economic reasons" and are not refugees, a view reiterated by Hua.

China is the North's key ally and protector, providing badly needed trade and aid for fear that a collapse of the regime could unleash chaos across the border and allow the United States to bolster its presence in Asia.

Pyongyang, however, routinely defies Beijing's calls for calm, restraint and denuclearisation, pushing ahead with nuclear weapons tests and issuing apocalyptic threats against the United States and South Korea.

Defectors and activists welcomed Tuesday a UN-mandated inquiry's searing indictment of gross human rights abuses in North Korea, but analysts questioned the international community's ability to act on its recommendations.

Pyongyang's grim rights record has already been well documented by specialist monitors. But the size, breadth and detail of the report compiled by the Commission of Inquiry (COI) on North Korea -- and the UN imprimatur it carries -- set it apart.

Kim Young-Soon, one of the many defectors who provided harrowing testimony to the COI, said she was grateful to it for recording the "nightmares we went through" for posterity.

"North Korea has not and will never admit the existence of prison camps and this report won't change anything overnight," Kim told AFP.

"But that does not mean sitting back and doing nothing. We need to keep collecting testimony so that someday it can be used as undisputed evidence to punish those behind the atrocities," she added.

Now 77, Kim was a well-connected member of the North Korean elite in 1970, when she was suddenly dragged off to a labour camp as part of a purge of people who knew about the then-future leader Kim Jong-Il's affair with a married actress.

So began a nine-year ordeal in what Kim described to the COI as "the most hellish place in the world" where inmates worked from dawn to dusk, supplementing starvation rations with anything they could catch, including snakes, salamanders and rats.

- 'My heart still aches' -

Family contacts managed to get Kim released in 1979. In 2001, she bribed her way across the border with China and eventually made it to Seoul in 2003, where she works as a dance teacher and lectures on life in North Korea.

"My heart still aches and I still wake up at night sweating just thinking about the prison camp I was in and family members I lost," she said Tuesday.

The COI report detailed murder, enslavement, torture, imprisonment, rape, forced abortions and other sexual violence in North Korea, which chairman Michael Kirby said carried echoes of the Nazi Holocaust.

A key conclusion was that many of the violations "constitute crimes against humanity".

Hong Soon-Kyung, a defector who now heads the Seoul-based Committee for the Democratization of North Korea, told AFP that no report could truly reflect the brutality of the regime in the North.

Although the COI's findings were nothing new to those working on North Korean rights issues, Hong said their publication was a "very meaningful step" with a UN mandate that would help pressure Pyongyang and its few backers.

North Korea refused to cooperate with the commission, claiming its evidence was "fabricated" by "hostile" forces.

The COI panel said its leaders should be brought before an international court for a litany of crimes against humanity -- a recommendation that many observers suggested was wishful thinking.

Any substantive action on the part of the world community would require the participation of the North's key ally China, which has made clear it opposes any move to refer the Pyongyang leadership to the International Criminal Court (ICC).

"Referring the issue to the ICC will not help improve the human rights situation of a country," China's foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said Tuesday.

- Perpetual emergency -

Noted North Korea watcher Leonid Petrov said there was no simple solution in the current context of a diplomatically isolated, totalitarian state whose leadership is intent on survival at all costs.

The issue of rights abuses "cannot be resolved unilaterally, nor swiftly, without transforming the political climate of the whole region", said Petrov, a researcher at Australia National University.

This would require, he argued, formally ending the Korean War -- which concluded in 1953 with a ceasefire rather than a peace treaty -- as well as diplomatic recognition of North Korea and the lifting of sanctions imposed for its nuclear programme.

Otherwise the North would remain in a "perpetual and assiduously cultivated state of emergency" in which human rights were sacrificed on the altar of regime survival.

"Without the goodwill of regional policymakers to address the problem of the Korean War especially, the issue of human rights in Korea is unlikely to be resolved," Petrov added.

Bill Richardson, a former US ambassador to the UN and a regular visitor to North Korea, said China would probably veto any attempt by the UN Security Council to give the "devastating" COI report any binding legal weight.

But he questioned the notion that North Korea is impervious to such criticism.

"It's an isolated, unpredictable country," Richardson told the BBC, but the shockwaves from the report "could be a source of pressure for moderates in Pyongyang who realise that there have to be some changes".

.


Related Links
Learn about nuclear weapons doctrine and defense at SpaceWar.com
Learn about missile defense at SpaceWar.com
All about missiles at SpaceWar.com
Learn about the Superpowers of the 21st Century at SpaceWar.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








NUKEWARS
China sends top envoy to N.Korea after purge: official
Beijing, China (AFP) Feb 17, 2014
China's vice foreign minister is visiting North Korea, the ministry said Monday, making him Beijing's most senior envoy known to go to Pyongyang since its young leader executed his uncle, a key China interlocutor. The late Jang Song-Thaek was North Korea's second most powerful figure, and provided a valuable link between the two countries before being purged in December following a sidelinin ... read more


NUKEWARS
UK failing to harness its bioenergy potential

Sustainable use of energy wood resources shows potential in North-West Russia

Italian farmers hail coming of biomethane production incentives

Plastic shopping bags make a fine diesel fuel

NUKEWARS
Making nanoelectronics last longer for medical devices, 'cyborgs'

Robotic fish aids understanding of how animals move

Busy Week of Imaging and Robotic Arm Studies

What to expect from Dyson's new robotics lab

NUKEWARS
New research blows away claims that aging wind farms are a bad investment

Oil-rich Brazil aims high with wind-power targets

Britain wind farm proposal scaled back in face of opposition

Climate risk from wind farms is minimal: study

NUKEWARS
Hard-hit Peugeot wins new lease on life in Dongfeng tie-up

Will Plug-in Cars Crash the Electric Grid?

Long road to Europe for Dongfeng despite Peugeot deal: analysts

World's largest EV fast charger network in China

NUKEWARS
Study on Methane Emissions from Natural Gas Systems Indicates New Priorities

Iraq oil exports down in January: ministry

India moves ahead in forming coal regulator

Wildlife group says China can still prosper with reduced coal use

NUKEWARS
Georgia nuclear plant gets federal loan guarantees

Iran seeks new Russia reactor in exchange for oil

Fukushima should eye 'controlled discharges' in sea: IAEA

Japan to abandon troubled fast breeder reactor: report

NUKEWARS
US Supreme Court to weigh emissions rule

French 'red caps' clash with police in protest over eco-tax

Obama calls for new truck fuel standards

Amidst bitter cold and rising energy costs, new concerns about energy insecurity

NUKEWARS
Google-backed database steps up fight on deforestation

How global forest-destroyers are turning over a new leaf

Biodiversity in production forests can be improved without large costs

Controversial Malaysian state boss to resign




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement All images and articles appearing on Space Media Network have been edited or digitally altered in some way. Any requests to remove copyright material will be acted upon in a timely and appropriate manner. Any attempt to extort money from Space Media Network will be ignored and reported to Australian Law Enforcement Agencies as a potential case of financial fraud involving the use of a telephonic carriage device or postal service.