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China-Japan-Koreas
UN rights chief: 'Essential' to refer North Korea to ICC
2015-12-13
The U.N. human rights chief has told the Security Council it is "essential" that the council refer North Korea's bleak human rights situation to the International Criminal Court, a proposition that the reclusive country views with alarm.

Zeid Raad al-Hussein spoke Thursday after China tried to keep the meeting from happening. China, North Korea's neighbor and a traditional ally, demanded a rare vote on whether to discuss the issue, saying the council is not the place to discuss human rights.
You can see why discussing human rights would make China nervous...
Russia, Venezuela and Angola backed China,
...thus demonstrating their nervousness as well...
but the United States and eight other countries voted to go forward. Nigeria and Chad abstained.

U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power, the current council president, replied to the objections with an incredulous "Really?"
She then giggled like a schoolgirl...
And without mentioning China by name, she called for an end to the practice of sending North Korean refugees back to their country, where they can face imprisonment and torture.

The council put North Korea's rights situation on its agenda a year ago, and this was its second meeting on the issue. The council took up the issue after a U.N. report, based on interviews with scores of defectors, detailed widespread government abuses such as mass starvation.

The U.N. report also recommended a referral to the ICC, an idea that 112 countries supported last month in a vote in the U.N. General Assembly's human rights committee. The assembly itself is expected to vote on the non-binding resolution next week.

North Korea rejects criticism of its human rights record, but in September its foreign minister extended an unprecedented invitation to Zeid to visit the country. Zeid told reporters after Thursday's meeting that he hopes to go to North Korea "in the near future" and that discussions on the details continue.
Whereupon an accident will happen and Zeid will never be seen again...
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said last month that he will try to visit North Korea "at the earliest possible date" in an effort to promote peace on the Korean peninsula. Zeid said Thursday that "mine is a separate invitation."
Josh Stanton at One Free Korea has an interesting analysis of these events and actually praises Samantha Powers.
Posted by:Steve White

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