DPRK Opens DisarmamentPlenary:Canada Boycotts,Groups Protest
August 4, 2011
North Korea opens disarmament plenary as Canada boycotts & 28 groups protest
GENEVA - North Korea today began chairing the summer plenary of the UN-backed Conference on Disarmament, eliciting a boycott by the Canadian government and a sharp protest by 28 non-governmental organizations. Menawhile, Burma, Iran, Nigeria and Norway offered varying degress of congratulations to the North Korean chair. For more on today's plenary, click here.
• See below for this
week's joint appeal by 28 human rights
NGOs
• Remarks by N. Korean defector Kim
Joo-il at UN press conference: Transcript Audio
• NGO protest
in front of CD headquarters in Geneva: Photos
YouTube Video
• Photos of today's CD plenary chaired by
North Korea
"Allowing an international outlaw to oversee international arms control efforts is just plain wrong," advocacy group U.N. Watch's director Hillel Neuer said today. "North Korea is a ruthless regime that menaces its neighbors and starves its own people, and should not be granted the propaganda coup of heading a world body dedicated to peace."
Canada is boycotting the conference until North Korea's presidency expires in September.
Former North Korean army captain Kim Joo-il, a defector now living in Britain, told a Geneva press conference organized by UN Watch this week that the regime is using its presidency "as propaganda for manipulating its residents," to "perpetuate idolatry" of dictator Kim Jong-il and the "slavery" of North Koreans.
"Even if the
presidency of North Korea of the Conference on Disarmament
remains only for one hour -- not even a week or a month --
it is symbolic. The support of the international community
is going to push North Korean residents even more into the
hell that they are already living in right now," he
said.
______________________
Joint
Statement of NGOs Against North Korea’s
Presidency of
the Conference on Disarmament
The undersigned coalition of human rights and non-governmental organizations strongly protest North Korea’s presidency of the Conference on Disarmament (CD), for the reasons described below. We call on all CD Member States to register their protest, as Canada has already done. We also call on North Korea to hand over its presidency to a more suitable country.
1. North Korea is a Gross Violator of Disarmament Principles and Flouts UN Security Council Decisions
The North Korean regime has no credibility on disarmament. Few if any countries pose a greater nuclear threat to the world than North Korea. The rogue regime, led by the unstable dictator Kim Jong-il, possesses an estimated dozen nuclear weapons combined with a record of hostile actions and threats to its neighbors and the world at large. Moreover, as reported by a UN panel last year, North Korea has defied UN sanctions and used front companies to export nuclear and missile technology to the repressive regimes in Iran, Syria and Burma.
Just last week, the IAEA found that North Korea’s nuclear program remains a matter of “serious concern,” noting reports about the construction of a new uranium enrichment facility and a light water reactor.
Even for a short period, the symbolism of an international outlaw heading “the undisputed home of international arms control efforts”—as the CD was recently described by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon—is terribly wrong.
We further note:
• On July 15, 2006, ten days after North
Korea test launched a series of missiles, the UN Security
Council adopted Resolution 1695 requiring all UN member
states to “prevent the transfer of missile and
missile-related items, materials, goods and technology to
the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea’s missile or
weapons of mass destruction programs, as well as procurement
of such items and technology from that country.” The
resolution further cited North Korea for having
“endangered civil aviation and shipping through its
failure to provide adequate advance notice.”
• On
October 7, 2006, three years after it withdrew from the
Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, North
Korea conducted its first nuclear test. In response, the UN
Security Council adopted Resolution 1718, finding North
Korea’s actions to constitute “a clear threat to
international peace and security,” barring a range of
military goods from entering or leaving North Korea, and
imposing an asset freeze and travel ban on persons related
to the nuclear-weapon program.
• In April 2009, North
Korea violated this resolution with another rocket launch.
The President of the Security Council issued a statement
condemning North Korea, and demanded that it cease
conducting further launches.
• In May 2009, North
Korea conducted another nuclear test, detonating a bomb
comparable to those that obliterated Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
The UN Security Council adopted Resolution 1874, finding
that North Korea’s clear threat to international peace and
security “continues to exist,” and sharpening the
import-export ban of weapons to North Korea by calling on
all states to inspect, seize and dispose of military items
and deny fuel or supplies to vessels carrying them.
• Two months ago, U.S. Navy warships intercepted a
North Korean vessel carrying missiles to Burma and turned it
around.
North Korea has allowed millions of its own people to literally starve to death in order to pursue its illicit nuclear-weapons arsenal. North Korea is currently facing another famine. Yet history shows that aid may not even help. An estimated two million people were killed by famine in the 1990s, while Kim Jong-il and his regime kept foreign aid for themselves.
2. North Korea is a Gross
Violator of Human Rights
As one of the
world’s worst violators of human rights, North Korea
should not be granted the symbolic legitimacy of chairing a
world body dedicated to peace.
The United Nations General Assembly and Human Rights Council have repeatedly condemned North Korea for its massive violations of human rights. Resolution 65/225 (2010), the UNGA’s most recent condemnation of North Korea, found, inter alia, the following gross violations:
• Systematic, widespread
and grave violations of civil, political, economic, social
and cultural rights;
• Torture and other cruel,
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, including
inhuman conditions of detention, public executions,
extrajudicial and arbitrary detention;
• The absence
of due process and the rule of law, including fair trial
guarantees and an independent judiciary;
• The
imposition of the death penalty for political and religious
reasons;
• Collective punishments;
• The
existence of a large number of prison camps and the
extensive use of forced labour;
• All-pervasive and
severe restrictions on the freedoms of thought, conscience,
religion, opinion and expression, peaceful assembly and
association, the right to privacy and equal access to
information, by such means as the persecution of individuals
exercising their freedom of opinion and expression, and
their families, and on the right of everyone to take part in
the conduct of public affairs, directly or through freely
chosen representatives, of his or her country;
• The
violations of economic, social and cultural rights, which
have led to severe malnutrition, widespread health problems
and other hardship for the population in North Korea, in
particular for persons in exposed groups such as women,
children and the elderly;
• Violations of the human
rights and fundamental freedoms of women, in particular the
trafficking of women for the purpose of prostitution or
forced marriage and the subjection of women to human
smuggling, forced abortions, gender-based discrimination,
including in the economic sphere, and gender-based violence;
and
• Violations of the human rights and fundamental
freedoms of children, in particular the continued lack of
access to basic economic, social and cultural rights for
many children.
Hillel Neuer
UN
Watch
Tae-Jin Kim
Free the North Korean
Gulag
Kim Joo-il
North Korean Residents
Society
Yang Jianli, Initiatives for China - Former prisoner of conscience and survivor of Tiananmen Square massacre
Yang Kuanxing, Yibao - Chinese writer, original signatory to Charter 08, the manifesto calling for political reform in ChinaYang
Dr. Ahmed Subhy Mansour
International Quranic Center
Jeff
King
International Christian Concern,
USA
Abdurashid Abdulle Abikar
Center for Youth
and Democracy, Somalia
Amina Bouayach
Moroccan
Organisation For Human Rights (OMDH)
Atle
Sommerfeldt
Norwegian Church Aid
Ulrich
Delius
Asia Desk, Society for Threatened Peoples,
Germany
Ali Abdullahi Egal (Ali Bashi)
Fanole
Human Rights & Development Organization, Kenya &
Somalia
Harris Schoenberg
UN Reform
Advocates
Dr. Francois Ullmann
Ingenieurs du
Monde
Dr. Vanee Meisinger
Pan Pacific and
Southeast Asia Women's Association of Thailand
Dr S.M.
Thadhani
Mulchand & Parpati Thadhani
Foundation
Dickson M. David Ntwiga
Solidarity
House International, Kenya
A. P. Gautam
Nepal
International Consumers Union
Bhawani Shanker
Kusum
Gram Bharati Samiti (GBS), Jaipur,
India
Seng Xiong
International Fund for Hmong
Development
Ali AlAhmed
The Gulf
Institute
Ann Buwalda, Esq.
Jubilee Campaign
USA
Gary Bailey
International Federation of
Social Workers
Christina Fu
New Hope
Foundation
Daniel Feng
Foundation for China in
the 21st Century
Gibreil I. M.
Hamid, President
Darfur Peace and Development Centre,
Switzerland
Emina Burak
Children of the
Earth
Dr. Yael Danieli
International Society for
Traumatic Stress
Studies
UN Watch is a Geneva-based human rights organization founded in 1993 to monitor UN compliance with the principles of its Charter. It is accredited as a Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) in Special Consultative Status to the UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) and as an Associate NGO to the UN Department of Public Information (DPI).
www.unwatch.org