DC: Tuesday March 30 – China Embassy Protest to Save North Korean Refugees

North Korea Freedom Coalition reports:
Tuesday,
March 30, 10 am – 12 noon there will be a Protest at the Chinese Embassy to Save North Korean Refugees (3505 International Place, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20008.)  The Pyongyang Musical Group is leading this event and the North Korea Freedom Coalition is joining them to protest against China’s violent treatment of North Korean refugees.  The Pyongyang Musical Group is a visiting group of North Korean defectors who have been performing in the USA at churches to raise awareness of the North Korean human rights issues.  Most of them escaped to freedom through China and they want to continue to raise awareness of the suffering that refugees undergo especially female refugees.  This is a tremendous opportunity to meet some very courageous and brave North Korean women who are also talented musicians, as well as fellow human rights activists.  If you can join us for the protest, please email me at skswm@aol.com
Additional Upcoming Events for North Korean Human Rights please share this information with others who may be able to participate:
Brussels, Belgium  — April 14
Human Rights Without Frontiers has organized a special screening on Kimjongilia at the European Parliament — Brussels: April 14, 18:30: European Parliament: special screening of Kimjongilia followed by panel discussion with the director, N.C. Heikin, and Pierre Rigoulot, the author of The Aquariums of Pyongyang.
hosted by Human Rights Without Frontiers
location: Yehudi Menuhin Space, European Parliament
for more information, contact: Scott Hudson of One World Film Festival at scott.hudson@peopleinneed.cz
Seoul, South Korea —April 25-May 1, North Korea Freedom Week
hosted by North Korean Defector and South Korean Human Rights NGOs, North Korea Freedom Coalition
for more information, visit www.nkfreedom.org
Toronto Canada —May 28-30
International Conference on “Human Security and North Korea
hosted by Council for Human Rights in North Korea
location: The Garden Church/The Yorkland Hotel, Toronto, Canada
for further information, contact Mr. K. B. Lee at kbl928@yahoo.com

Communist North Korea: Human rights situation in DPR Korea is bleak, independent UN expert says

Communist North Korea: Human rights situation in DPR Korea is bleak, independent UN expert says
— UN: “The many instances of harrowing and horrific human rights violations in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) will continue unless certain measures at the national and international levels are taken, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on human rights in the country said today.
— “‘From witnessing the human rights situation in the country for the past six years, one finding is glaring: the abuses against the general population, for which authorities should be responsible, are both egregious and endemic,’ said Special Rapporteur Vitit Muntarbhorn, introducing his final report today to the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva. Mr. Muntarbhorn’s maximum term of six years expires this year.”

Communist Totalitarian North Korea to Release Robert Park – Report

AP news reports on Korean Central News Agency report that the Communist North Korean government has decided to release Christian and human rights activist Robert Park.  The KCNA has stated that the Communist totalitarian North Korean government  “decided to leniently forgive and release him, taking his admission and sincere repentance of his wrong doings into consideration.”

See also:

North Korea Detains American Activist Robert Park Who Calls for Human Rights; NKFC Calls for Humanitarian Consideration

North Korea Communists Fear Balloons with Human Rights Leaflets; Threaten Retaliation

American Robert Park Detained in North Korea (/Lee Jae-Won/Reuters)
American Robert Park Detained in North Korea (/Lee Jae-Won/Reuters)

North Korea Communists Fear Balloons with Human Rights Leaflets; Threaten Retaliation

North Korea under human rights pressure
— UPI:
“North Korea’s military warned on Wednesday that South Korea would face retaliation if it didn’t stop activists from sending propaganda leaflets critical of human rights conditions in the communist country.”
— “The North’s People’s Armed Forces ‘will never tolerate even the slightest act’ of undermining ‘our leadership’s absolute authority,’ the military said in a statement.”
— “It also demanded that South Korea immediately punish the activists engaged in sending leaflets across the border and disband their organizations. ‘The separatists at home and abroad will never be able to flee from a stern punishment by the nation for challenging history,’ said the statement carried by the North’s state-run Korean Central News Agency.”
— “A group of South Korean activists floated balloons toward North Korea containing some 8,000 leaflets denouncing human rights abuses in the Stalinist country and calling for the release of a U.S. Christian missionary who crossed into the North as a protest against its human rights abuses.”
— ” ‘We urge an immediate release of all inmates in concentration camps in the North,” said the leaflets scattered by huge helium balloons. The North is believed to hold 150,000 to 200,000 people in political prison camps.”
— “Robert Park, a 28-year-old Korean-American from Arizona, slipped into the North in late December to call on the regime to release political prisoners, shut concentration camps and improve human rights conditions, according to his colleagues. The North has said it has detained an American for illegal entry, an apparent reference to Park.”
— “The United States is seeking information about Park through the Swedish Embassy in Pyongyang, which represents Washington’s interests. But the North has rejected requests for access to him.”

Canadian Press: NKorea’s military warns SKorea to stop sending leaflets across divided border
— Canadian Press also reports
: “A separate group of South Korean activists unsuccessfully tried Tuesday to send thousands of leaflets by balloon to the North to let residents know about a U.S. Christian missionary believed detained in the communist country. The balloons, however, burst before crossing the border amid strong winds blowing from North Korea.”

NDTV: Anti-North Korea Balloon Campaign

AFP: N.Korea warns S.Korea over cross-border leaflets

South Korea: Human Rights Activists Launch Thousands of Balloons with Leaflets Promoting Freedom and Criticizing North Korea's Communist Regime (Photo: NDTV Video Report)
South Korea: Human Rights Activists Launch Thousands of Balloons with Leaflets Promoting Freedom and Criticizing North Korea's Communist Regime (Photo: NDTV Video Report)

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Communist North Korea: S. Korean college lecturer faces imprisonment for espionage

North Korea: S. Korean college lecturer faces imprisonment for espionage
— Yonhap News reports:
“A South Korean court on Wednesday sentenced a college lecturer to 10 years in prison for spying for North Korea over the last 17 years.”
— “Prosecutors indicted the man, identified only by his last name Lee, last October on charges of providing information on South Korean military operations and key facilities to the communist North on five occasions after receiving $30,000 from a North Korean agent based in India.”

North Korea Detains American Activist Robert Park Who Calls for Human Rights; NKFC Calls for Humanitarian Consideration

North Korea confirms detention of US citizen
— London Times reports:

— “A brief report by the Korean Central News Agency yesterday noted the arrest of an unnamed US citizen, thought to be Robert Park, a 28-year-old of Korean descent, who walked across the frozen Tumen River that divides China from North Korea.”
— “He carried with him letters addressed to Mr Kim, asking him to step down as leader, release political prisoners and open the isolated country to foreigners.”
— ” ‘I am going in for the sake of the lives of the North Korean people,’ he told Reuters news agency before traveling to China from the South Korean capital, Seoul, last week.”
— ” ‘If Mr Kim kills me, in a sense, I realise this is better. Then the governments of the world will become more . . . embarrassed and more forced to make a statement. Until the concentration camps are liberated, I do not want to come out. If I have to die with them I will. These innocent men, women and children … as Christians, we need to take the cross for them.’ ”
— “Supporters and relatives of Mr Park, whose border crossing was filmed by Christian activists, expressed relief that he was alive, despite a discrepancy in the date in the state media report.”

North Korea Detains U.S. Activist

North Korea holding American
— Washington Times:
“The report did not identify the American, but activists believe he is 28-year-old Christian missionary Robert Park, who they say slipped across the frozen Tumen River into North Korea from China on Christmas bearing letters calling for a change in North Korea’s leadership and an end to political prison camps.”

American Robert Park Detained in North Korea (/Lee Jae-Won/Reuters)
American Robert Park Detained in North Korea (/Lee Jae-Won/Reuters)

North Korea Freedom Coalition Appeals for Humanitarian Consideration for American Robert Park

Washington, DC (December 30, 2009)  The North Korea Freedom Coalition has sent urgent appeals today for humanitarian consideration for American Robert Park, a devout Christian, who crossed into North Korea on Christmas Day in his words “to proclaim Christ’s love and forgiveness” and to call upon North Korea to open its borders so food and medicine can be delivered and to close down its political prison camps.  NKFC sent appeals to Dr. Jakob Kellenberger, President of the International Committee of the Red Cross; Sweden’s Ambassador to North Korea Mats Foyer (the protecting power for United States in the DPRK); and Ambassador Sin Son Ho, North Korea’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations.

Citing Robert Park’s motivation for entering North Korea as an expression of his great love and compassion for the North Korean people, NKFC specifically requested Dr. Kellenberger and Ambassador Foyer’s help to ensure that Park is treated humanely.  In their letters to Kellenberger and Foyer, they noted that international attention to the detainment of American activists Euna Lee and Laura Ling was critical and led to their eventual return home, while permanent American resident Reverend Kim Dong Shik starved to death while detained in North Korea.

In their letter to North Korean Ambassador Sin appealing for Park to be given humanitarian consideration, the non-denominational NKFC, which has Christian, Jewish, Buddhist, and Muslim members, wrote, “We know that Robert Park entered North Korea illegally, but we know him to be a man of great love and compassion for humanity and especially for the people of North Korea…We appeal to the authorities in North Korea to consider that this man’s actions were totally motivated by his love for them and that his behavior is modeled on the teachings of Jesus Christ, who Christians believe laid down his life for mankind.  Certainly, this was what motivated Robert to cross the border on the day that Jesus’ birth is celebrated around the world.”

Park has been spearheading efforts in South Korea including prayer vigils and mass demonstrations to call attention to the suffering of the North Korean people and has led the worldwide campaign Freedom and Life for all North Koreans.  He has not been heard from since he crossed the border on Christmas Day, but North Korean authorities have confirmed that he is in their custody.

“He knew fully the risks of going to North Korea,” said NKFC Chairman Suzanne Scholte, “but was willing to lay down his life for the North Korean people who are the most persecuted people in the world today.  We need to honor his commitment by redoubling our efforts to promote freedom and human rights for North Koreans. “

The NKFC released a report this month entitled “The Universal Declaration of Human Rights and North Korea” that examines the thirty articles of this document to conclude that North Koreans are denied every single one of these universally accepted human rights standards.  The document is available at nkfreedom.org.

For further information, visit nkfreedom.org or call  703-534-4313  703-534-4313 .

North Korea Freedom Coalition Releases Report on North Korea and the Universal Declaration for Human Rights

PRESS RELEASE                                                                             For Immediate Release

North Korea Freedom Coalition Releases Report on North Korea and the Universal Declaration for Human Rights; Calls for North Koreans to Have Copies of Universal Declaration of Human Rights

Washington, DC (December 8, 2009)…On the eve of the 61st anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), the North Korea Freedom Coalition (NKFC) is releasing a report entitled “The Universal Declaration of Human Rights and North Korea” and is calling for copies of the Declaration to be made available to the North Korean people.

“When the General Assembly of the United Nation’s adopted this Declaration on December 10, 1948, it cited in the preamble that ‘disregard and contempt for human rights have resulted in barbarous acts which have outraged the conscience of mankind,’ explained NKFC Chairman, Suzanne Scholte.  “This statement is certainly descriptive of what is happening in North Korea every day, and we hope by releasing this report on how North Korea fares under the 30 Articles of this Universal Declaration that it will outrage the conscience of mankind to press for human rights for the citizens of North Korea.”

Rabbi Abraham Cooper of the Simon Wiesenthal Center added, “The Nazi Holocaust and other horrors of World War II were the historic motivation behind the crafting of this declaration in 1948, which was meant to ensure that future generations would never again have to suffer from atrocities that are being committed against the North Korean people.”

The year of 1948 when the Declaration was adopted is especially significant to Korea for that was the year that two separate governments were established for the people of the North and for the people of the South.

Because North Korea is among the most isolated countries in the world and its citizens have no understanding of the concept of ‘human rights’, NKFC is calling for five specific actions to be taken:

1) For UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon and other diplomats to make a special effort to make this document known to the people of North Korea as was called for in the Preamble of the Declaration when it was adopted in 1948;
2) For those broadcasting into North Korea to highlight this document and report about its contents;
3) For those launching balloons into North Korea to include this document in future launches;
4) To make copies of the Declaration available at the North Korean defector resettlement facility of Hanawon; and
5)  For all people who enjoy these rights to use them to help the North Korean people gain theirs.

Already, Seoul-based Free North Korea Radio has pledged to begin a special program based on the Declaration and include findings from the NKFC report.  Fighters for a Free North Korea have pledged to include the Declaration in future balloon launches, while the NKFC is reaching out to the Unification Ministry of South Korea to ensure that the document is available at Hanawon.

Attached is the NKFC’s letter to UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon and the NKFC report which cites each of the 30 Articles of the Declaration and how the citizens of North Korea fare in regards to these universally accepted human rights. An excerpt of the report follows below.

For further information, contact the North Korea Freedom Coalition at nkfreedom.org or call 202-341-6767.

Excerpts from the report entitled (full report attached):
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights and North Korea

Article 1.All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.
But in North Korea…
“One’s Songbun (class background) is either good or bad, and detailed records are kept by party cadre and security officials of the degree of goodness or badness of everyone’s songbun.  There is really no way to escape one’s songbun.”   The favored group constitutes  about 25 to 30 percent of the population.   “Ranked below them in descending order are forty-seven distinct groups in what must be the most class-differentiated society in the world today….North Korea’s population can be broken down into three main groups, roughly equal in size.  The preferred class…is given every advantage; with hard work, individuals in this group can easily rise to the top.  The middle 40 percent of the population-the ordinary people-hope for a lucky break…There is no hope, however, of a college education or a profession career.  The bottom 30 percent of the population –the ‘undesirables’ are treated like a pariah class; all doors to advancement, the army, the higher schools of education are closed to them.”
-Kim Il Sung’s North Korea by Helen Louise Hunter

North Korea prioritizes the masses before the individual.  North Korea also discriminates against people based on their genealogical background…those of the ‘hostile class’ face direct discrimination.”
-Survey of North Korean Human Rights Conditions 2008
_________________________________________________________________

Article 4.  No one shall be held in slavery or servitude; slavery and the slave trade shall be prohibited in all their forms.

BUT IN NORTH KOREA…

“There have been widespread reports of trafficking in North Korean women and young girls into China. Some are sold by their families or by kidnappers as wives or concubines to men in China; others flee to escape starvation and deprivation in North Korea. Many such women, unable to speak Chinese, are held as virtual prisoners and some are forced to work as prostitutes…”

– Cammarota, P., Crace, J., Worly, K., & Zaltzman, H. (2007). Legal Strategies for Protecting Human Rights in North Korea. Washington, DC: U.S. Committee for Human Rights in North Korea
____________________________________________________________________

Article 15.  (1) Everyone has the right to a nationality.  (2) No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his nationality nor denied the right to change his nationality.

BUT IN NORTH KOREA…

“North Korea handed down a death sentence by firing squad for a woman who expressed the desire to go to South Korea and live in freedom…”

– North Korea Today:  Research Institute for North Korean Society, January 2008

SEE FULL REPORT ATTACHED OR VISIT NKFREEDOM.ORG

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