UN rights expert urges NKorea prisoner amnesty

AFP  |  Geneva 

A top UN rights expert called today for to begin freeing prisoners under a "general amnesty" ahead of next week's historic nuclear summit.

He hailed North Korea's recent release of three US prisoners, and urged the country to broaden its "amnesty" to anyone being arbitrarily detained there, which he said was basically all prisoners.

"There is no rule of in the country... no due process of law," he told reporters in

He said he understood prisoner releases would be part of a possibly drawn-out process and that would not throw open all its prisons doors immediately.

But he said he thought "a good signal of the government would be to start releasing prisoners".

His comments came less than a week before unprecedented talks between North Korean leader and US are due to take place in

The summit is scheduled for June 12 following a rapid detente between and - as well as - in a turn-around from a dramatic escalation of tensions last year, when the North ratcheted up its nuclear weapons programme.

Ojea Quintana told reporters he was hosting the press conference "because unfortunately nobody invited me to Singapore".

But he said he still hoped a discussion of human rights would figure on the summit agenda and during subsequent negotiations.

"I believe that... human rights should not (be lost from) sight in the context of the negotiations on the denuclearisation of the and beyond," he said, using the official acronym for the country.

"It is very important that human rights are raised because otherwise it will be... a problem in terms of building a sustainable agreement with in regard to the denuclearisation," he said.

The isolated North has been accused of a litany of state-sanctioned rights abuses including extrajudicial killing, torture, brutal crackdowns on dissent and even kidnapping foreign citizens.

is estimated to have up to 120,000 political prisoners in its sprawling gulag system.

A UN commission published a searing report in 2014 which concluded was committing human rights violations "without parallel in the contemporary world".

And the US State Department's latest rights report on the North, released earlier this year, describes "egregious human rights violations" in the authoritarian state, from public executions to widespread surveillance of citizens.

But Trump acknowledged earlier this month that he has not raised the issue of human rights during the preparation stage for the summit.

Ojea Quintana said he did not believe that raising the rights issue would "undermine the opening and the talks on denuclearisation at all".

The rapporteur also made several other pre-summit recommendations, including a review of the impact harsh sanctions are having on the rights of the North Korean people, including the right to

The UN estimates that some 10 million people in the country are in need of humanitarian aid, while UN aid efforts in the country are dramatically underfunded, Ojea Quintana said.

"The situation is quite critical," he said.

Ojea Quintana also urged North Korea to change its attitude towards him and his UN mandate.

To date, Pyongyang has refused to engage with him at all or to allow him into the country.

An about-face on that stance, he said, would lend "credibility to their intentions to engage with different stakeholders and their intentions to denuclearise".

"It will play in their favour, definitely, because it will show that they want to become a normal state," he said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, June 07 2018. 18:50 IST