North Korea: Kim Jong-il's death could be opportunity for human rights
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Posted: 19 December 2011 The death of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il and assumption of power by his son, Kim Jong-un, present an important opportunity for improving the country’s catastrophic human rights record, Amnesty International said today. Sam Zarifi, Amnesty International’s Asia-Pacific Programme Director, said: “Kim Jong-il, like his father before him, left millions of North Koreans mired in poverty, without access to adequate food and healthcare, and with hundreds of thousands of people detained in brutal prison camps. “With this transition, we hope that the new government will step away from the horrific, failed policies of the past.” However, recent reports received by Amnesty International suggest that the North Korean government has purged possibly hundreds of officials deemed to be a threat to Kim Jong-un’s succession, by having them executed or sent to political prison camps. Sam Zarifi, said: “Our information over the last year indicates that Kim Jong-un and his supporters will try to consolidate his new rule by intensifying repression and crushing any possibility of dissent.” In the months immediately following Kim Jong-il’s own succession to the North Korean leadership, after the 1994 death of his father Kim Il-Sung, tens of thousands of perceived or potential political opponents and their family members were sent to political prison camps. Political opponents were also executed either in secret or publicly following grossly unfair trials, or no trial at all. Amnesty International has documented North Korea’s abysmal human rights record for years. Freedom of expression and association are almost non-existent. Hundreds of thousands of people deemed to oppose the state are held in detention camps such as the notorious Yodok facility, which detain family members up to three generations. Inmates are forced into hard labour for up to 12 hours a day. Meanwhile, more than a third of the population is suffering food shortages and the healthcare system is in critical decline. Amnesty International has received reports of people surviving on eating bark and grass, the use of unsterilised needles, and major surgeries undertaken without anaesthesia. Sam Zarifi, said: "Authorities speak of North Korea as becoming a 'strong and prosperous nation'. To ensure this, the new leadership should adopt a human rights agenda and stop the repression that characterised the Kim Jong-il era. “The people of North Korea should not have to suffer even more deprivation now because of political uncertainty,” Amnesty International is repeating its call on the North Korean government, as well as international donors, to ensure that food is adequately distributed to the neediest people in North Korea. Nearly a million people have died in North Korea because of acute food shortages since the mid-1990s. Millions more, especially children and the elderly, continue to suffer from chronic malnutrition. This is in large part due to failed or counterproductive government policies implemented under the leadership of Kim Il-Sung and then under Kim Jong-il. The North Korean authorities and the new leader of North Korea must make immediate improvements in human rights, including:
"Nothing short of hellish": North Korea's prison campsThe political prison camps in North Korea represent the systematic nature of serious human rights violations committed by the country. North Korea's authorities deny their citizens the right to freedom of opinion, association and belief; there are no independent opposition groups. Those who are allegedly critical of the leadership or reveal any sign of political opposition are sent to the kwanliso or political prison camps - often with their family members. The North Korean government is practicing a guilt-by-association system, a form of collective punishment as a means to curb any form of civil or political dissent.
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