Anjali Sharma
GG News Bureau
UNITED NATIONS, 18th Aug. UN human rights chief Volker Türk on Thursday said that ongoing severe, widespread and long-standing” violations against citizens of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea by their own Government must not be viewed in isolation from wider peace and security issues on the Peninsula.
Volker Türk briefed the Council members in New York cited a long list of rights abuses, said that many “stem directly from, or support, the increasing militarisation of the DPRK.”
UN independent human rights expert Elizabeth Salmón told the members that leaders of the DPRK have repeatedly demanded citizens “tighten their belts” to the point of starvation in some cases, “so that the available resources could be used to fund the nuclear and missile programmes.”
Türk noted how the widespread use of forced labour, including in political prison camps, by children forced to collect harvests and the confiscation of overseas workers’ wages, all support Pyongyang’s imperative to “build weapons.”
UNSC met to discuss the “alarming and unsustainable” situation across the Peninsula, which is impacting countries such as Japan after what was DPRK’s fourth intercontinental ballistic missile launch of the year.
He noted dire state of human rights there, which underpin not only security but humanitarian action and development.
North Korea has been “painfully closed” to the outside world than it is today, triggered by border closures due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
OHCHR gathered information “including through interviews and from public information issued by the Government itself, indicates increasing repression of the rights to freedom of expression, privacy and movement; the persistence of widespread forced labour practices; and a worsening situation for economic and social rights due to the closure of markets and other forms of income generation.”
Turk said that “only a handful” have managed to leave the North, since the pandemic shutdown.’
DPRK has said it is open to international cooperation to help end a food supply and nutrition crisis, offers of humanitarian support “have been largely rebuffed” said Mr. Türk.
UN Country Team remains barred after the border closures, along with all other foreign nationals.
He said the return of the Country Team and new partnership framework, “would be crucial to advancing coordinated work to address the suffering of the people”.
Turk called for accountability for victims of rights abuses, both via the International Criminal Court and via “truth-telling, the recovery of remains and reparations programmes.
He noted thousands of North Koreans remain at risk of being repatriated involuntarily, he said, where they may face torture and arbitrary detention.
He urged all States not to send citizens home, “and to provide them with the required protections and humanitarian support.”
“Sustainable peace can only be built by advancing human rights, and its corollaries: reconciliation, inclusion and justice”, he concluded.
UN Special Rapporteur on human rights in DPRK, Ms. Salmón, highlighted the precarious situation of women and girls there, beginning with vulnerability to starvation, disease, and lack of available healthcare.
“Women are detained in inhuman conditions and are subjected to torture and ill-treatment, forced labour and gender-based violence by State officials”, she told the Council.
She said they needed to consider peacemaking “beyond the absence of violence or fear of violence.”
“The preparation for any possible peacemaking process needs to include women as decisionmakers and this process needs to start now.”
She said “clear benchmarks” on human rights were an essential element of any negotiations.
Ms. Salmón added “I call upon the Security Council to place the protection of human rights at the centre of a reinvigorated peace and security agenda.”
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