(CNN) -- A stunning catalog of torture and the widespread abuse of even the weakest of North Koreans reveal a portrait of a brutal state "that does not have any parallel in the contemporary world," a United Nations panel reported Monday.
North Korean leaders
employ murder, torture, slavery, sexual violence, mass starvation and
other abuses as tools to prop up the state and terrorize "the population
into submission," the United Nations Commission of Inquiry on Human
Rights (COI) in North Korea said in its report
The commission said it
would refer its findings to the International Criminal Court (ICC) for
possible prosecution. It also sent a letter warning North Korean leader
Kim Jong Un that he could face prosecution for crimes against humanity,
and said other options include establishing of an ad hoc tribunal by the
United Nations.
Even before the report's
release, China, a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council and
staunch ally of North Korea, has said it would not to allow human rights
charges to proceed to the ICC.
The almost yearlong
investigation traced the abuses directly to the highest levels of the
North Korean government while simultaneously blaming world leaders for
sitting on their hands amid untold agony.
The U.N. panel released
its 400-page report after hearing from more than 320 witnesses in public
hearings and private interviews.
North Korea is a state,
it concluded, "that does not content itself with ensuring the
authoritarian rule of a small group of people, but seeks to dominate
every aspect of its citizens' lives and terrorizes them from within."
"The suffering and tears of the people of North Korea demand action," commission Chairman Michael Kirby told reporters.
The government of North
Korea -- also known as the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, or
DPRK -- rejected the report as a ginned-up effort to undermine its
government.
"It is nothing more than
an instrument of political plot aimed at sabotaging the socialist
system by defaming the dignified images of the DPRK and creating an
atmosphere of international pressure under the pretext of 'human rights
protection,'" the government said in a prepared statement.
North Korea did not
respond to requests for access to the country and information about its
human rights practices, according to the commission.
China had previously
stated it would not approve human rights charges on North Korea to go to
the International Criminal Court. On Monday, prior to the report's
release, a Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokeswoman Hua Chunying
said, "Submitting human rights issues to the International Court of
Justice won't help improve a country's human rights condition."
She maintained that China advocates "constructive dialogue and cooperation to resolve differences on human rights issues."
The commission of
inquiry sought access to parts of China that border North Korea during
the 11-month investigation, but was denied.
The commission also
requested a visit to Beijing to meet relevant officials and experts on
North Korea issues -- a request that was also denied by China with the
reasoning that based on its "position on country-specific mandates,
especially on the Korean peninsula, it would not be possible to extend
an invitation to the Commission," according to the report.
In the report, the
commission recommended that China abstain from forcibly repatriating
North Koreans who've escaped their country, due to the punishment they
face once they are returned.
Meanwhile, the U.S.
State Department expressed support for the UN report and urged North
Korea "to take concrete steps -- as recommended by the [Commission of
Inquiry] -- to improve the human rights situation for the North Korean
people."
"We look forward to
thoroughly reviewing the report and discussing its recommendations with
our partners, who share our deep concern about the human rights
situation in North Korea."
The group Human Rights Watch released a statement saying that "the devastating findings of this inquiry should not be ignored."
"Since the crimes were
perpetrated by state actors, only an international tribunal can properly
carry out criminal investigations aimed at holding perpetrators
accountable," said Kenneth Roth, executive director at Human Rights
Watch.
During the compilation
of the report one witness, a survivor of a North Korean prison camp,
told the commission of seeing a guard beat a nearly starving woman who
had recently given birth, then force the woman to drown her baby.
Others told of being
imprisoned for watching soap operas, trying to find food for their
families, traveling without permission or having family members
considered suspect by the government.
posted by Emanto Ngaloru Feb 18, 2014.
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