North Korean Delegate Says More Human Rights Violations Took Place in US Than in Communist Regime While Disrupting UN Event Showcasing Testimonies of Defectors

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The United Nations (Photo: Reuters/Carlo Allegri)

The United Nations headquarters building is pictured though a window with the UN logo in the foreground in Manhattan.

NEW YORK — A representative of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea disrupted the United Nations’ “Human Rights in the DPRK” event with an anti-U.S. rant in an attempt to discredit the North Korean defectors’ testimonies on Thursday, April 30.

Organized by the United States and South Korea, the special event at the United Nations headquarters in New York City was moderated by award-winning author Barbara Demick and featured the testimonies of three North Korean defectors who shed light on the atrocities they endured before gaining asylum in various other countries. Following Joseph Kim’s opening description of early life in North Korea, including losing his father to starvation and his own narrow escape from the same fate, a diplomat from North Korea’s U.N. mission interjected with a tirade directed at both the defectors and the U.S.

The Christian Post attended the event which took place at 10:30 a.m. on April 30, 2015 in Conference Room 3 of the U.N. and witnessed the interruption first hand.

Speaking mostly in Korean, Jay Jo, the delegate from the Kim Jong Un-led nation attempted to speak over the panel of defectors, denouncing their accounts of human rights abuses in the DPRK. At one point, the DPRK delegate suggested that more human rights violations took place in the U.S. rather than in North Korea. Minutes into the interruption, the diplomat was silenced with threats of forced removal by U.N. security.

Shortly after resuming the event with the testimony of a second defector, the DPRK delegate and his companion stormed out of the conference room. U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Samantha Power later apologized for the North Korean’s interruption, deeming his statements “totally self-discrediting.”

Power also closed the “Human Rights in the DPRK” event with three themes from the defectors’ stories; starvation, torture, and forced repatriation.

“These are just a few stories of millions,” Power noted before urging the public to view the situation in North Korea as a not only a human rights issue, but also an issue of international peace and security.

“We must ensure that their voices, and the voices of other defectors, are amplified, here at the U.N., at the Security Council and well beyond,” the U.S. ambassador to the U.N. added. “We must not be satisfied with telling the stories, but we have to collectively continue to ramp up the pressure on this regime so that this system, the system built to strip people of their most basic rights and dignity, comes to an end, and the perpetrators behind the kind of terror and forced starvation that we’ve heard about, are brought finally to account.”

For more from the U.N.’s “Human Rights in the DPRK” event, stay tuned to The Christian Post.

Source : Christian Post