March 22, 2013 - The United Nations' top human rights body unanimously approved on
Thursday a formal probe into North Korea for possible crimes against humanity. The
47-nation U.N. Human Rights Council signed off on the resolution backed by the U.S.,
Japan and the European Union that authorizes an investigation into what U.N. officials
describe as suspected widespread and systematic violations of human rights in North
Korea. Japan's ambassador, Takashi Okada, denounced the abduction of foreign nationals
and other disappearances in North Korea, and said the aim of the investigation is
to ``guide the international community in addressing this situation from an independent
and impartial stand point.'' The vote follows the recommendations of U.N. special
rapporteur Marzuki Darusman, who told the Geneva-based council in a report last month
that the secretive Asian nation displays nine patterns of human rights violations.
Darusman said the ``grave, widespread and systematic violations of human rights''
include having prison camps, the enforced disappearances of citizens and using food
to control people. It paves the way for the creation of a ``Commission of Inquiry''
for one year with three members and calls on Pyongyang to cooperate with that team
of independent experts, which will include Darusman. However, North Korea's U.N.
Ambassador in Geneva, So Se Pyong, fiercely denounced the move, calling the resolution
``no more than an instrument that serves the political purposes of the hostile forces
in their attempt to discredit the image of the DPRK and to change the socialist system
chosen and developed by our people.'' (Source: AP)