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[Global NK Interview] North Korea's Human Rights Situation After the COVID Pandemic

Category
Multimedia
Published
February 27, 2023
Related Projects
North Korea Comprehensive Strategy
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YouTube Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=69UKvtjr9GA

Robert King, former U.S. Special Envoy for the DPRK Human Rights Issues, assesses the living conditions in North Korea and explains the situation where humanitarian aid cannot reach the struggling North Korean residents. Special Envoy King emphasizes that although the COVID pandemic and border closures have made it difficult to ascertain the human rights situation in North Korea, satellite imagery provides crucial data for understanding the reality in the DPRK. He also discusses how international sanctions against the Kim Jong Un regime's nuclear weapons development affect the human rights of North Korean residents, and evaluates that despite continuous U.S. efforts, North Korea's refusal to engage in dialogue makes it difficult to undertake substantial efforts to improve human rights.


I. Current Human Rights Situation in the DPRK Since COVID

ㆍCOVID pandemic has induced further restrictions of access to information, freedom to travel, and food imports into North Korea. So while not much new information is available, the DPRK’s human rights situation "is serious” and "does not look encouraging.”

ㆍGiven all these limits, satellite imagery "has been very helpful” for the United States to identify the current living conditions in the DPRK. As a former Special Envoy for the DPRK Human Rights Issues, Ambassador King has used this imagery to "show publicly to indicate what the North Koreans were doing.”

II. Sanctions against the DPRK and Humanitarian Assistance

ㆍThe international community, including the United States, has sanctioned "the kind of goods that will contribute to the nuclear program but no sanction humanitarian products that North Korea would like to import.” Yet the North Korean regime "is willing to take the humanitarian food supplies and sell them rather than provide them to their people so they can have additional resources to use for their missile and nuclear programs. This makes providing humanitarian aid to the DPRK extremely difficult.

ㆍWith regards to engaging the DPRK, U.S. has "had continuous efforts on human rights even though [the U.S.] has not had a special envoy for the last several years.” However, North Korea’s preoccupation with regime stability and its unwillingness to come out to the negotiating table is what complicates these efforts. ■


Robert King_served as special envoy for North Korea human rights issues at the U.S. Department of State. He was nominated by President Barack Obama, confirmed by the U.S. Senate, and served in that position from November 2009 to January 2017. Ambassador King led U.S. efforts to press North Korea for progress on its human rights, U.S. humanitarian work in North Korea, and the treatment of U.S. citizens being held in the North. He represented the United States in international organizations dealing with these issues. Earlier, Dr. King was staff director of the House Foreign Affairs Committee under Chairmen Tom Lantos and Howard Berman and prior to that was a senior professional staff member of the committee (1993–2009). He was concurrently chief of staff to Representative Tom Lantos (1983–2009). In the 1970s, as a White House fellow, he was a member of the National Security Council staff working with Dr. Zbigniew Brzezinski in the Jimmy Carter administration. He was also assistant director of research and senior analyst at Radio Free Europe in Munich Germany (1970–1977). Dr. King holds a Ph.D. in international relations from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy and a B.A. in political science from Brigham Young University. An adjunct professor, he has taught courses in international relations and U.S. foreign policy in a number of graduate and undergraduate programs. He was awarded the Knight’s Cross Order of Merit by the president of the Republic of Hungary.


■ Editor: Jisu Park, Research Assistant

    Inquiries: 02 2277 1683 (ext. 208) | jspark@eai.or.kr

Video Transcript

and on one occasion I was shown a satellite photograph of a public execution being carried out it was at the military school just uh outside in Pyongyang and the satellite imagery showed six individuals who were tied to polls who were shot it was quite by accident that they happened to have the satellites focused at that point at that time took me two or three months to get it done to get that information unclassified so that it could be shown publicly to indicate what the North Koreans so the satellite imagery has

been very helpful in terms of helping in the human rights area so there's some some good news in terms of being able to increase what we're able to see

Attachments

  • [GlobalNK]Interivew2(RobertKing).pdf

*This text is an AI translation of an original written in Korean. Some translations or nuances may be inaccurate.

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