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Date : May 4, 2017
Justice Needed for North Koreas Countless Victims
   https://www.hrw.org/news/2017/05/01/justice-needed-north-koreas-countl [1103]

by Param-Preet Singh

Associate Director, International Justice Program


On Friday, United States Secretary of State Rex Tillerson convened a high-level debate on North Koreas nuclear program at the United Nations Security Council, as tensions rise on the Korean Peninsula.

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres and foreign affairs ministers took to the floor in turn expressing their growing concern about North Koreas nuclear ambitions.

But a number of the speakers went further. Several states, including the United Kingdom, France, Japan, Sweden, and Italy, noted the link between the nuclear program pursued by the regimes leaders and the gross deprivations faced by North Koreas people. Tillerson warned that North Korea feeds billions of dollars into a nuclear problem it does not need while its own people starve.

Last month, the US ambassador to the UN, Nikki Haley, made the case that, systematic human rights violations help underwrite the countrys nuclear and ballistic missile programs as the government forces many of its citizens, including political prisoners, to work in life-threatening conditions in coal mines and other dangerous industries to finance the regimes military.

The Security Council is increasingly recognizing that Pyongyangs nuclear aspirations are inextricably linked to its cruel treatment of its citizens – which a UN-mandated commission of inquiry found amounted to crimes against humanity. This offers a glimmer of hope to North Koreas countless victims that their plight will not be forgotten in the pursuit of security.

What was left largely unsaid, however, was the importance of holding people responsible for abuses – abuses that had no parallel in terms of their gravity, scale, and nature, according to the UN commission of inquiry. Asking North Korea to do so is a non-starter, since the state is responsible for the policies that led to gross violations.


In todays briefing, Tillerson asked the community of nations to help us preserve security and protect human dignity of the people of North Korea. A critical part of that effort should include bringing those responsible for crimes of humanity to justice.






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