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N Korea refuses to cooperate with probe

Published: 06 Jul 2013 - 04:38 am | Last Updated: 31 Jan 2022 - 01:18 pm

GENEVA: UN experts tasked with probing human rights violations in North Korea said yesterday Pyongyang has refused to cooperate with the investigation, but that they still hoped to travel to the country next month.

“A letter was sent under my hand ... seeking to reach out to the DPRK, North Korea, in order that we would have cooperation, contact and dialogue,” said former Australian judge Michael Kirby, who heads the newly formed UN commission of inquiry on the secretive country.

That letter, sent ahead of the initial meeting of the three commission members in Geneva this week, received “a polite but negative response,” he told reporters in the Swiss city.

The commission, which includes Serbian human rights campaigner Sonja Biserko and former Indonesian attorney general Marzuki Darusman, who since 2010 has been monitoring North Korea for the UN Human Rights Council, nonetheless hopes it will be allowed into the country, he said. He said the commission hoped to visit North Korea between August 11-17.

North Korea is one of the most isolated nations on the planet and has refused to let UN rights monitors, including Darusman, visit, forcing them to rely largely on testimony from North Koreans who have fled. Kirby said yesterday his commission also planned to visit a number of other countries as part of its investigation, and would interview some of the around 40,000 North Koreans believed to be living abroad.

The UN Human Rights Council set up the commission in May after Darusman presented a report accusing North Korea of a string of violations including torture, arbitrary detention and depriving the population of food.

AFP