Current:Home > reviewsUN Security Council to hold first open meeting on North Korea human rights situation since 2017 -GrowthSphere Strategies
UN Security Council to hold first open meeting on North Korea human rights situation since 2017
View
Date:2025-04-20 00:59:13
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The U.N. Security Council will hold its first open meeting on North Korea’s dire human rights situation since 2017 next week, the United States announced Thursday.
U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield told reporters that U.N. human rights chief Volker Türk and Elizabeth Salmon, the U.N. independent investigator on human rights in the reclusive northeast Asia country, will brief council members at the Aug. 17 meeting.
“We know the government’s human rights abuses and violations facilitate the advancement of its unlawful weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missiles program,” Thomas-Greenfield said, adding that the Security Council “must address the horrors, the abuses and crimes being perpetrated” by North Korean leader Kim Jong Il’s regime against its own people as well as the people of Japan and South Korea.
Thomas-Greenfield, who is chairing the council during this month’s U.S. presidency, stood with the ambassadors from Albania, Japan and South Korea when making the announcement.
Russia and China, which have close ties to North Korea, have blocked any Security Council action since vetoing a U.S.-sponsored resolution in May 2022 that would have imposed new sanctions over a spate of its intercontinental ballistic missile launches. So the council is not expected to take any action at next week’s meeting.
China and Russia could protest holding the open meeting, which requires support from at least nine of the 15 council members.
The Security Council imposed sanctions after North Korea’s first nuclear test explosion in 2006 and tightened them over the years in a total of 10 resolutions seeking — so far unsuccessfully — to cut funds and curb the country’s nuclear and ballistic missile programs.
At a council meeting last month on Pyongyang’s test-flight of its developmental Hwasong-18 missile, North Korea’s U.N. Ambassador Kim Song made his first appearance before members since 2017.
He told the council the test flight was a legitimate exercise of the North’s right to self-defense. He also accused the United States of driving the situation in northeast Asia “to the brink of nuclear war,” pointing to its nuclear threats and its deployment of a nuclear-powered submarine to South Korea for the first time in 14 years.
Whether ambassador Kim attends next week’s meeting on the country’s human rights remains to be seen.
In March, during an informal Security Council meeting on human rights in North Korea — which China blocked from being broadcast globally on the internet — U.N. special rapporteur Salmon said peace and denuclearization can’t be addressed without considering the country’s human rights situation.
She said the limited information available shows the suffering of the North Korean people has increased and their already limited liberties have declined.
Access to food, medicine and health care remains a priority concern, Salmon said. “People have frozen to death during the cold spells in January,” and some didn’t have money to heat their homes while others were forced to live on the streets because they sold their homes as a last resort.
veryGood! (62865)
Related
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- The show is over for Munch's Make Believe band at all Chuck E. Cheese locations but one
- RHOSLC's Monica Garcia Fiercely Confronts Mom Linda For Kidnapping Her Car
- Why villagers haven't left a mudslide prone mountain — and how a novel plan might help
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- New 'NCIS: Sydney' takes classic show down under: Creator teases release date, cast, more
- This trio hopes 'Won't Give Up' will become an anthem for the climate movement
- Plane skids off runway, crashes into moving car during emergency landing in Texas: Watch
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Jill Biden tells National Student Poets that poetry feeds a hungry human spirit
Ranking
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- 2 men charged in October shooting that killed 12-year-old boy, wounded second youth in South Bend
- Man arrested on suspicion of manslaughter after on-ice death of hockey player Adam Johnson
- Giancarlo Stanton's agent warns free agents about joining New York Yankees
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Starbucks Workers United calls for walkouts, strike at hundreds of stores on Red Cup Day
- Schools in a Massachusetts town remain closed for a fourth day as teachers strike
- 3 crucial questions to ask yourself before taking Social Security in 2024
Recommendation
'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
Inflation likely eased last month thanks to cheaper gas but underlying price pressures may stay high
House blocks Alejandro Mayorkas impeachment resolution
U.S. airstrikes on Iran-backed targets in Syria kill at least 8 fighters, war monitor says
Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
Officials exhume the body of a Mississippi man buried without his family’s knowledge
Pumpkin pie or apple? A state-by-state guide to people's favorite Thanksgiving pies
Retired NASCAR driver Kevin Harvick buys 'Talladega Nights' mansion, better than Ricky Bobby