Posted on 02/17/2014 11:32:06 AM PST by Kaslin
The late journalist Christopher Hitchens once suggested that it was as if Kim Il Sung -- the founder and Eternal President of the Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea (DPRK) -- had read George Orwells famous dystopian novel 1984, and then tried to bring it to life. That was one of his first thoughts, he said, after visiting the country.
North Korea, as most people know, is probably the most impoverished and terrorized police state on the face of the earth. Unspeakable atrocities happen there every single day. And now, in a new report, the UN is using its perch to say its leaders must be held accountable, and brought to justice:
A United Nations report being released in Geneva today has, for the first time, condemned North Korea for systematic rights violations amounting to crimes against humanity, according to leaked information by the Associated Press. Rights activists welcomed the commission's findings but acknowledge prosecution of North Korean leaders is not likely any time soon.
A U.N. Commission of Inquiry said rights abuses in North Korea are widespread, systematic, and designed to maintain political power.
It declared the leadership in North Korea guilty of Crimes Against Humanity and urges prosecution at the International Criminal Court.
Even before details were released Monday on the three-man panel's historic one-year investigation, leaks to the media showed it found gross violations.
The revelations in this report are hair-raising but not all that surprising. The Kim familys crimes (most recently, perhaps, the murder of Kim Jong Uns own uncle) are widely reported in the media and documented by escapees and survivors alike. But the UNs decision to shine a brighter light on the regimes evil crimes is not insignificant; if anything, this report will only raise more questions about Kim & Co.'s ruthlessness, and their wanton disregard for human rights:
They include summary executions, rape, torture, forced abortions and enslavement.
The U.N. report said religious minorities and political dissidents suffer the most, with up to 120,000 living in town-sized prison camps.
Lee Jung-hoon, South Korea's Ambassador for Human Rights, said the U.N. report is the first reliable and legal evidence of atrocities in North Korea. He said the report also specifies that North Koreas crimes can be labeled as genocide, which means the crime can be applied to the leadership of North Korea, including Kim Jong Un. There are no exemptions to this crime, Lee said. So, even if the two Koreas are reunified within 5, 10 or 50 years, the leaders of North Korea can still be punished.
The U.N. commission's findings were based on satellite imagery and interviews with more than 80 witnesses. Many of them were defectors who survived prison camps and escaped across the border and through China.
But thats unlikely to happen:
Despite the call for prosecution, there is little chance North Korean leaders will face justice.
A U.N. Security Council decision would be needed to send the case to the International Criminal Court, and North Korea's main backer, China, has veto power.
During the investigation, Beijing ignored the U.N. panel's request to visit its border area with North Korea.
Regime change is another option, of course, but I suspect the public wouldn't entertain that course of action. So while this report is certainly a positive step forward, what -- if any -- meaningful changes will come of it remain to be seen.
* I am sure a strongly worded letter will fix everything. *
The UN says, “STOP!”...or I shall say, “Stop” again.
Red China feeds and arms North Korea; they are the dagger Red China can use for leverage.
Yes they sure did. I misunderstood you and thought you meant they should have prosecuted them, but then to the left liberating a country from a ruthless dictator and evil regime is a crime
Pretty lame and expensive dagger if you ask me.
“Pretty lame and expensive dagger if you ask me.”
It is used (successfully) to wring concessions from the West for Red China (the good cop, bad cop game). It isn’t lame to South Korea or Japan.
Go after him for “Global Warming” crimes. The UN is an expert in this arena.
A United Nations report being released in Geneva today has, for the first time, condemned North Korea for systematic rights violations amounting to crimes against humanity, according to leaked information by the Associated Press. Rights activists welcomed the commission's findings but acknowledge prosecution of North Korean leaders is not likely any time soon.Issue a warrant, and demand that he turn himself in. Yeah, that'll work. Thanks Kaslin.
They are still trying to get Blair into that court...
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