General type | Publications |
---|---|
Items listed | Fact-finding reports |
Topic | Human rights |
Period | 1977-present |
Geographical focus | North Korea (DPRK) |
Inclusion criteria | Fact-focused reports published by notable institutions in the inquiry and deliberations on the situation of H.R. in the DPRK |
Sorting criteria | Reports are generally first grouped by publishing entity type and entity, then by thematic type, then listed chronologically |
Part of a series on |
Human rights in North Korea |
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Publications reporting the factual situation of human rights in North Korea (DPRK) are the basis upon which policies are shaped and society mobilized. This article includes those fact-finding publications issued by the United Nations, governments, and non-governmental organizations (NGOs)/ civil society entities. [1] [2]
This article focuses on listing fact-finding reports, which distinguish themselves from other publications such as pamphlets, news articles, books, or journal articles, in that they are meant to aggregate information from multiple sources and provide a balanced, overall view of the topic covered for the non-commercial purpose of informing the general public and policy makers. These reports tend to rely more on the credibility of their publishing institutions than on their individual authors. Fact-finding reports are also distinct from policy briefs as the latter ground their analysis and recommendations on the facts laid out in the former. The inclusion is based on the notability (and not the concurrence to any particular view) of the publishing institutions to the inquiry and deliberations on the situation in North Korea.
This list lays out the evolution of the reporting efforts, with a first wave of reports by human rights NGOs just describing the general characteristics of the regime, followed by another wave of civil society and governmental reports with some more details, then prompting the United Nations to also exercise greater scrutiny and pursue its own investigations. [3]
The vast majority of reports (except those published by the DPRK itself, also included in this article) point to a very grave situation, with human rights systematically violated by the North Korean government.
Efforts to continue to investigate and document the situation of human rights in the DPRK are on-going, given that there are no indications of substantial improvements in the regime's policies, and despite the continued isolation of the regime that limits outside investigators' access to the country and to its general population. [4]
Korea had for centuries been a high-ranking tributary state within the Imperial Chinese tributary system, [lower-roman 1] until in the late 19th century Japan began to assert greater control over the Korean peninsula, culminating in its annexation in 1910. It remained a colony of Japan, until Japan lost World War II in 1945. [lower-roman 2] [lower-roman 3] [lower-roman 4] [lower-roman 5]
At the end of WWII, with Japan stripped of its colonial territories, the Korean peninsula became a United Nations trusteeship, with the northern half administered by the Soviet Union, and the southern half administered by the United States. [lower-roman 6] [lower-roman 7] [lower-roman 8] The ultimate stated plan was to allow Korea as a whole to become again a united and independent country. [lower-roman 9] [lower-roman 10] Disagreements among the parties on how and when to implement the united self-rule led to the two territories establishing their own separate and rival governments. [lower-roman 11] [lower-roman 12] [lower-roman 13] [lower-roman 14] The Korean War (1950-1953) was the last attempt to reunify the peninsula by force, but it ended in stalemate and it entrenched two very different regimes. [lower-roman 15] [lower-roman 16] [lower-roman 17]
Within the Soviet and American spheres respectively, the North became a Stalinist totalitarian regime uninterruptedly led by the Kim family, [lower-roman 18] and the South became a capitalist society that until 1987 included short periods of unstable democracy as well as longer periods of authoritarian rule, including over 25 years of right-wing military rule. [lower-roman 19]
Propped by their allies, North and South experienced rapid economic growth after the Korean War, but in the 1970s the North's growth faltered [lower-roman 20] while the South's accelerated. [lower-roman 21]
While South Korea had a period of military autocracy, mass mobilizations of its citizens forced its end in 1987. This led to the modern South Korea being a young, more stable democracy with a prosperous free market economy. [lower-roman 21] [lower-roman 19] Meanwhile, North Korea's totalitarian regime kept a stronger grip on its society, which was never able to mobilize to demand reforms. Its command economy stagnated in the 1970s, and after the disintegration of the Soviet Union it spiralled into crisis in the 1990s, leading to a massive famine. North Korea remains to this day as one of the most isolated countries in the world, with a struggling economy, within an isolationist, militaristic, and totalitarian regime. [lower-roman 19]
The reporting of human rights in the DPRK follows the progression of the modern movement of human rights, which from the 1970s civil society and governmental efforts made violations more visible to the general public and in international politics. [5] [6] [7]
Given the opacity of the DPRK's regime, especially before the 1990s, little was known about the situation of human rights. [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] The few reports that were issued at that time made note of the lack of concrete information, mostly only being able to describe the general characteristics of the country's political system. [11] [8] [15] Amnesty International, founded in 1961, [16] began to issue some basic reports on the DPRK in 1977. [17] [9] In 1979 the US's Department of State also began to cover the DPRK in its Country Reports on Human Rights Practices . [18]
With the dissolution of the Soviet Union, and the subsequent North Korean famine of the 1990s, a higher number of individuals began to flee the country, and more first-person accounts began to be collected by human rights organizations. [3] That was also followed in the early 2000s by greater availability of satellite imagery. [10] South Korea, having itself transitioned from a military dictatorship to a democracy in the late 1980s, began to publish reports in 1996 through its governmental think tank Korea Institute for National Unification. [19] [20] In the late 1990s and 2000s several NGOs specialized on North Korea emerged and began to publish their own research: Citizens' Alliance for North Korean Human Rights (1996), [2] [21] Committee for Human Rights in North Korea (2001), [22] [23] [24] [3] Database Center for North Korean Human Rights (2003), [25] [26] [27] People for Successful Corean Reunification (2006). [28] [29] [30] [31] Around the same time some other world-wide human rights organizations such as Human Rights Watch and Christian Solidarity Worldwide also began to publish reports on the DPRK.
As reports from NGOs and governments began to reveal more details on the human rights situation in the DPRK during the 1990s and 2000s, these concerns were elevated to the United Nations, where various UN bodies and parties also began to express a growing concern on the situation and opacity of the regime. [32] [33] [34] [35] [3] The mounting evidence being collected and published by governments and civil society led in 2004 to the establishment of the mandate for the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the DPRK, issuing reports annually. [36]
The growing amount of information, and the grave situation it increasingly revealed, led the United Nations General Assembly [37] and the UN Human Rights Council (HRC) [38] [39] [40] to repeatedly pass resolutions officially expressing their concerns and urging the DPRK's government to change its ways. [33] [34] [35] [41]
Ten years later, further joint efforts by the UN Special Rapporteur, governments, and NGOs [2] led to the establishment of a special one-time investigation unprecedented in depth and breadth [42] commissioned by the Human Rights Council, with a landmark report published in 2014. [43] [44] [33] [45] [3] It was deemed the most authoritative report up to that point. [46] [44] [47] The report unequivocally concluded that the DPRK regime committed gross and systematic violations of human rights including freedom of thought, expression and religion; freedom from discrimination; freedom of movement and residence; and the right to food, [45] as well as crimes against humanity entailing "extermination, murder, enslavement, torture, imprisonment, rape, forced abortions and other sexual violence, persecution on political, religious, racial and gender grounds, the forcible transfer of populations, the enforced disappearance of persons and the inhumane act of knowingly causing prolonged starvation". [33] [48] [49]
The UN's fact-finding process continues to yield periodical reports, which greatly rely on and are underpinned by the also on-going research and publishing conducted by NGOs and governmental agencies. [35] [50] [51] [2] [42] [4] [7]
Increased awareness of human rights abuses has led to efforts in shaping policy and pressuring the North Korean regime. [1] However the pursuit for the improvement of human rights in the DPRK has had to contend with the efforts of preventing a nuclear weapons escalation. [1] [42] Further, the isolationist and totalitarian nature of the regime has also meant that information and freedom of movement of its population as well as that of foreigners is still tightly controlled, making extremely challenging to document abuses on the ground, [4] including having access to imagery (other than satellite imagery) that could inspire greater action. [42]
The United Nations has issued four main kinds of reports on the human rights of North Korea.
The first are a series of documents intended to be recommendations from Treaty-based bodies, which are issued by those bodies to each country that is party to it (in contrast to charter-based bodies, which all UN members are part of). These treaty-based bodies that North Korea has decided to be a party to include the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, Committee on the Rights of the Child, and International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. The first document of this kind was issued in 1998 (Convention on the Rights of the Child); the second was in 2001 (International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights), after a 17-year delay in North Korea submitting the required information to the committee. [52] [53]
Prompted by growing evidence provided by human rights NGOs, during the 1990s and 2000s various UN bodies and parties expressed greater concern on the situation of human rights in North Korea and the opacity of the country's government. [32] [33] [34] [35] [7] That led to another series of reports that were started by the UN Commission on Human Rights (the predecessor of the UN Human Rights Council), which established the mandate for the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the DPRK in 2004, issuing reports annually. [54] [55] They are issued in detail to the Human Rights Council, and in a more condensed form to the General Assembly.
The United Nations also conducts a Universal Periodic Review (every 3 or 4 years, in which all UN members are subject to a review on their human rights practices), with the first report on North Korea issued in 2010. [56] [57] [58] [59]
Finally, the most notable one was the 2014 Report of the Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in the DPRK, considered a landmark document resulting from a special in-depth, one-time investigation commissioned by the Human Rights Council, [43] [44] [33] [45] [2] It was deemed the most authoritative report up to that point. [46] [44] [47]
Special Rapporteur annual reports to the Human Rights Council
North Korea published a report on its own human rights situation, as a rebuttal to the 2014 United Nations report. [44] [62] [63] [64] [65] [66] [67] [68] [47] [60] It has also submitted reports to the United Nations.
The Korea Institute for National Unification (KINU; formerly the Research Institute for National Unification) opened the Center for North Korean Human Rights in 1994 to collect and manage systematically all source materials and objective data concerning North Korean human rights; and from 1996, KINU has been publishing every year the ‘White Paper on Human Rights in North Korea’ in Korean and in English. [19] [69] [70] [71] Other reports, including reports by the U.S. government, use South Korea KINU's reports as part of their sources. Another South Korean governmental institution publishing research on human rights in the DPRK is the National Human Rights Commission of Korea (NHRCK). [72]
The United States government, through its Department of State's (DOS) Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor has published annually Country Reports on Human Rights Practices, that beginning in 1979 included North Korea. [18] Also, two different bodies within the U.S. government have published reports on religious freedom: the Department of State (since 2001), [73] and U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCRIF; since 2003). Finally, the DOS' Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons also publishes Trafficking in Persons Reports (TIP) that include some coverage of North Korea. The TIP reports series began in 2001, following the passing of the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000, with North Korea beginning to be briefly covered starting in the 2003 report, [74] [75] and more fully covered beginning in 2005. [76]
The Country Reports on Human Rights Practices issued by the DOS noted every year the difficulty of having detailed an up-to-date information, and instead relying on sparse information collected over several years. This was especially the case in the during the 1970s and 80s, and began to change in the 1990s with more witness accounts, while continuing to note a lack of more detailed and more timely information. [12] As more reports became available, the DOS and USCRIF reports have frequently cited reports from the United Nations, South Korea's Korea Institute for National Unification (starting in 1996), nonprofits (especially the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea and Data Center for North Korean Human Rights, since their establishment in the 2000s), and from the press. [50]
Annual general reports 2000–present
The Citizens' Alliance for North Korean Human Rights (NKHR; South Korea-based nonprofit founded in 1996) works in researching and disseminating information about the human rights violations in North Korea. It also runs assistance programs for North Korean defectors. [2] [77] [21]
The Database Center for North Korean Human Rights (NKDB; South Korea-based nonprofit founded in 2003) [25] [26] [27] specializes in collecting and analyzing and maintaining a database of human rights abuses, which as of 2017 included the accounts of over 40,000 individuals and 60,000 cases of human rights violations. [78]
The Committee for Human Rights in North Korea (HRNK; U.S.-based non-profit established in 2001) is known for its original research based on its adept [22] [23] [24] [1] use of satellite imagery, defector accounts, [3] and even information coming directly from inside the country. [35] [22] Its published research has been relied upon as sources in reports issued by the United Nations and governments. [35] [50] [51] [3] HRNK has issued three types of reports: reports analyzing the situation on prison camps, [1] reports on other human rights issues in the country, and reports on North Korea's leadership and institutions, as well as policy briefings addressed at the international community. The first two types of reports are listed here.
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: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)(, part 2, appendices)Amnesty International (AI; based in the United Kingdom, established in 1961) annual report The state of the world's human rights [17] [42] initially included a brief mention of most countries, growing in later years to devoting 1-2 pages to the analysis of the situation of human rights in each country, including North Korea in 1977. [17] [9] [1] Through the 1970s, 1980s the organization noted that its ability to report on human rights in the country was severely hampered by the opacity of the regime, and only being able to recount some scant reports. [9] [8] This began to change in the 1990s when some more information became available. Also since that point AI has also issued other stand-alone reports specific to human rights issues in North Korea.
Annual general reports 2000–present
Human Rights Watch publishes annually a World Report. Below are listed the sections of those annual reports that focus on the situation in North Korea. HRW has produced world reports since 1989 covering a limited number of countries, and it began to devote a section to the DPRK in 2004. [79] [80] [1] [42]
An estimated 84,532 South Koreans were taken to North Korea during the Korean War. In addition, South Korean statistics claim that, since the Korean Armistice Agreement in 1953, about 3,800 people have been abducted by North Korea, 489 of whom were still being held in 2006.
The United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) is a United Nations body whose mission is to promote and protect human rights around the world. The Council has 47 members elected for staggered three-year terms on a regional group basis. The headquarters of the Council are at the United Nations Office at Geneva in Switzerland.
The human rights record of North Korea has been condemned, with the United Nations and groups such as Human Rights Watch all critical of it. Amnesty International considers North Korea to have no contemporary parallel with respect to violations of liberty.
Human rights in South Korea are codified in the Constitution of the Republic of Korea, which compiles the legal rights of its citizens. These rights are protected by the Constitution and include amendments and national referendum. These rights have evolved significantly from the days of military dictatorship to the current state as a constitutional democracy with free and fair elections for the presidency and the members of the National Assembly.
The Human Rights Foundation (HRF) is a non-profit organization that focuses on promoting and protecting human rights globally, with an emphasis on closed societies. HRF organizes the Oslo Freedom Forum. The Human Rights Foundation was founded in 2005 by Thor Halvorssen Mendoza, a Venezuelan film producer and human rights advocate. The current chairman is Russian chess grandmaster Garry Kasparov, and Javier El-Hage is the current chief legal officer. The foundation's head office is in the Empire State Building in New York City.
The condition of human rights in Moldova has come under scrutiny since 2002, and human rights organizations within Moldova and around the world have spoken out against what they feel to be unfair suppression of the independent media, as well as other abuses.
Freedom of religion in North Korea (DPRK) is officially a right in North Korea.
Prostitution in North Korea is illegal and is not visible to visitors. Accounts given by some North Korean defectors say that a collection of women called the kippumjo provided sexual entertainment to high-ranking officials until 2011. Meanwhile, some North Korean women who migrate to China become involved in prostitution.
Capital punishment is a legal penalty in North Korea. It is used for many offences such as grand theft, murder, rape, drug smuggling, treason, espionage, political dissidence, defection, piracy, consumption of media not approved by the government and proselytizing religious beliefs that contradict practiced Juche ideology. Owing to the secrecy of the North Korean government, working knowledge of the topic depends heavily on anonymous sources, accounts of defectors and reports by Radio Free Asia, a United States government-funded news service that operates in East Asia. The country allegedly carries out public executions, which, if true, makes North Korea one of the last four countries to still perform public executions, the other three being Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Somalia, but this has been disputed by some defector accounts.
In 2022, Freedom House rated Burundi's human rights at 14 out 100.
Prisons in North Korea have conditions that are unsanitary, life-threatening and are comparable to historical concentration camps. A significant number of inmates have died each year, since they are subject to torture and inhumane treatment. Public and secret executions of inmates, even children, especially in cases of attempted escape, are commonplace. Infanticides also often occur. The mortality rate is exceptionally high, because many prisoners die of starvation, illnesses, work accidents, or torture.
Kwalliso (Korean: 관리소) or kwan-li-so is the term for political penal labor and rehabilitation colonies in North Korea. They constitute one of three forms of political imprisonment in the country, the other two being what Washington DC based NGO Committee for Human Rights in North Korea described as "short-term detention/forced-labor centers" and "long-term prison labor camps", for misdemeanor and felony offenses respectively.
The International Coalition to Stop Crimes Against Humanity in North Korea (ICNK) was formed on September 8, 2011. It comprises Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and the International Federation for Human Rights and has support from over 40 organizations worldwide. North Korean human rights issues with which the ICNK deals include North Korea’s political prison camp system and the repatriation and punishment of North Korean refugees.
Human rights in Guinea, a nation of approximately 10,069,000 people in West Africa, are a contentious issue. In its 2012 Freedom in the World report, Freedom House named Guinea "partly free" for the second year in a row, an improvement over its former status as one of the least free countries in Africa.
The Republic of Uruguay is located in South America, between Argentina, Brazil and the South Atlantic Ocean, with a population of 3,332,972. Uruguay gained independence and sovereignty from Spain in 1828 and has full control over its internal and external affairs. From 1973 to 1985 Uruguay was governed by a civil-military dictatorship which committed numerous human rights abuses.
The Red Cross Society of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea is the national Red Cross Society of North Korea. It was founded as the Red Cross Society of North Korea on 18 October 1946 by the Soviet-backed occupational government.
The Report of the Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea is the landmark document resulting from the investigations on human rights in North Korea commissioned by the United Nations Human Rights Council in 2013 and concluded in 2014.
Reliable information about disability in North Korea, like other information about social conditions in the country, is difficult to find. As of 2016, North Korea is a signatory to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.
The Database Center for North Korean Human Rights is a nonprofit, non-governmental organization, headquartered in Seoul, South Korea, that conducts data collection, analysis, and monitoring of human rights violations experienced in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. NKDB not only offers resettlement support, psychological counseling, and educational opportunities, but also advocates for human rights advancement and transitional justice of past human rights violations in the DPRK.
International human rights networks have publicized the exigencies of human rights violations in North Korea and have mobilized international and domestic laws as part of their respective movements to pressure North Korea on human rights
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: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of January 2024 (link)Over the past decade, as tens of thousands of North Koreans have fled the oppressive and famine-stricken country, information about North Korea and its prison camps has begun to reach the outside world. A growing number of reports have been published on conditions inside North Korea, many of them issued by the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea (HRNK)=
The human rights situation in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea has been subject to close international scrutiny for several years. Although restrictions on access for independent human rights monitors have made it challenging to collect up-to-date information, patterns of serious violations continue to be documented by various external sources.
Amnesty International's work on the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), North Korea, was seriously hampered by the fact that the authorities rarely divulge any information about arrests, trials or death sentences.
Amnesty International has carefully monitored all available information from North Korea and can only report that it contains no detailed evidence whatsoever regarding arrests, trials and imprisonment in that country. Furthermore, there appears to be a complete censorship of news relating to human rights violations. Despite its efforts Amnesty International has not been able to trace any information, even positive, on the subject of such rights in North Korea.
This certainly contrasts with the past when the world was largely in the dark about human rights conditions in North Korea. It was not until 40 years after Kim Il-sung assumed power — in the late 1970s and 80s — that international NGOs first began to report on the human rights situation. More recently with the escape of some 25,000 North Koreans to the South, information has become more plentiful about all aspects of human rights in North Korea. Hundreds of former prisoners and former prison guards are among the defectors and have been providing testimony about their prison experiences. And since 2003, satellite photos of the camps have helped verify the information provided by the former prisoners and guards. North Koreans hiding in China have also been providing information.
There was little new information in 1980 on human rights practices in North Korea. Few, if any, significant changes are known to have taken place. Much of this report necessarily is based therefore on information obtained over a period of time. While limited in scope and detail, the information is generally indicative of the human rights situation in North Korea.
The united States has no diplomatic relations with the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK). North Korea forbids representatives of governments that do have relations with it, as well as journalists and other invited visitors, the freedom of movement that would enable them to assess effectively human rights conditions there. Most of this report, therefore, is a repeat of previous human rights reports based on information obtained over a period of time extending from well before 1988. While limited in scope and detail, the information is indicative of the human rights situation in North Korea today.
[in 1971] News from North Korea continued to be confined to reports of delegations from abroad and meetings of citizens registering praise of Kim Il-song. (...) Comments on the whole Korean situation and on world affairs supported supported reports from visitors to North Korea that the personality of cult had reached a pitch of hysteria
The difficulty in interpreting the situation on the Korean peninsula stememed, as in previous years, from the almost total absence of reliable information from North Korea.
The world's most closed society and the most orthodox present-day practitioner of Stalinism, North Korea had also become an economic failure. Only 30 years earlier it had been richer than then south. (...) Politically the country appeared as ossified as ever. Kim Il Sung, the world's longest-ruling dictator and hailed as the Great Leader, continued to preside over the country, as he had since 1946.
The Citizens' Alliance for North Korean Human Rights (NKHR), the first South Korean NGO to form solely on the issue of North Korean human rights, rejected any ideological labels, striving to influence policy debate in a positive and neutral manner. (...) Reverend Benjamin Yoon, along with a number of other human rights activists, intellectuals, and North Korean defectors, founded the Citizens' Alliance for North Korean Human Rights in May 1996. (...) NKHR positions itself as a "nonprofit, nongovernmental, nonreligious human rights organization." 57 Yoon, himself the former director of the national Korean Section of Amnesty International (1972–1985), envisioned that this North Korean human rights NGO would adopt a similar style of advocacy to that of Amnesty International (AI).
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