当前位置:首页 > 行业动态 > US says full normalization of ties with North Korea requires improving human rights 正文
US says full normalization of ties with North Korea requires improving human rights
时间:2024-09-23 11:24:39 来源:泸州新闻网
North Korean youth and students march from the Pyongyang Youth Park Open-air Theatre to Kim Il Sung Square during a protest demonstration to denounce South Korean authorities' policy against North Korea and defectors from the north, in Pyongyang, North Korea Monday, June 8, 2020. The signs read "Give us an order (to punish South Korea)." AP |
The United States has made clear to North Korea that an improvement in human rights conditions, including religious freedom, will be required for a full normalization of bilateral ties, a State Department report said Wednesday.
According to the annual International Religious Freedom Report, the North Korean government continued to deny its people the right to religious freedom and committed violations that constituted crimes against humanity.
The report covered the period between Jan. 1 and Dec. 31, 2019, and mostly summarized observations made by nongovernmental organizations and news media.
"There were reports the government continued to deal severely with those who engaged in almost any religious practices through executions, torture, beatings, and arrests," it said. "The country's inaccessibility and lack of timely information continued to make arrests and punishments difficult to verify."
But in meetings with North Korean officials, the report said, the United States pressed the regime to improve its human rights record.
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, left, and his sister Kim Yo-jong. Korea Times file |
"The U.S. government does not have diplomatic relations with the DPRK and has no official presence in the country," it said, referring to North Korea by its official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
"In February (U.S. President Donald Trump) and Chairman Kim (Jong-un) held a second summit in Vietnam, and they held another meeting in the Korean Demilitarized Zone in June. In engagements with DPRK officials, the U.S. government consistently made clear full normalization of relations will require addressing human rights, including religious freedom," it said.
The report also referred to U.S. Vice President Mike Pence's comment during the Ministerial to Advance Religious Freedom held in Washington in July.
Pence said: "(T)he United States will continue to stand for the freedom of religion of all people of all faiths on the Korean Peninsula."
The U.S. has consistently raised concerns about religious freedom in North Korea, including at multilateral fora and in bilateral talks with other governments, particularly those with diplomatic relations with Pyongyang, the report said.
"This included an October meeting in Brussels of like-minded countries to coordinate actions and discuss the DPRK's human rights record," the department said. "The United States made clear that addressing human rights, including religious freedom, would significantly improve prospects for closer ties between the two countries."
In this Feb. 28 file photo, U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un take a walk after their first meeting at the Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi hotel in Vietnam. AP-Yonhap |
Since 2001, the U.S. has designated North Korea as a Country of Particular Concern for particularly severe violations of religious freedom.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo renewed the designation and accompanying sanction in December.
North Korea's intolerance for religious freedom has been attributed to the cult of personality around previous and current leaders of the regime.
The report noted that refusal to accept the leader as the supreme authority was regarded as opposition to the national interest.
"We would ask North Korea act like a normal nation and allow people to freely practice their faith, whatever faith that would be," Sam Brownback, ambassador at large for international religious freedom, told reporters during a virtual press conference, urging the North to also allow people to freely gather and speak freely without fear of persecution or reprisal for their faith.
"These are just basic fundamentals of religious freedom, and North Korea has a long ways to go," Brownback continued. "It's my hope they would start down this path, but to date we've not seen any indication that they're willing to embrace even the most modest of religious freedom stances and nature." (Yonhap)
上一篇:SCOTUS: The courts implementing Project 2025, without Trump.
下一篇:PCB official under probe for conflict of interest
下一篇:PCB official under probe for conflict of interest
相关内容
- ·抖音超600万次传播量!广东省农事运动会乡村直播大赛火出圈
- ·科技赋能红色文化 拓宽传承创新路径
- ·为民办实事 居民送锦旗
- ·代缴电费帮扔垃圾,收费人员亲情服务感动九旬老兵
- ·PS5 Pro: There are new whispers that the release date is fast approaching
- ·一条代表建议 架起“连心桥”
- ·我市出台促进文化旅游发展激励政策
- ·Baby将在台北生产? 黄晓明悄悄派人 查探台北医院
- ·护航孩子成长 解决职工后顾之忧
- ·黄岛土山屯发掘大量古墓 出土器物述汉代故事
- ·登《中国银行保险报》!平安人寿“有温度的服务”获权威媒体认可
- ·代缴电费帮扔垃圾,收费人员亲情服务感动九旬老兵
- ·10 Places to Get to Know Paul Bunyan
- ·郭德纲坐飞机偶遇张艺谋 网友:你俩还真上天了!
- ·郭德纲坐飞机偶遇张艺谋 网友:你俩还真上天了!
- ·陈乔恩发长文悼念乔任梁:心疼你受的那些苦
最新内容
- ·Ruling bloc divided on foreign nannies' pay
- ·交通银行独家主承全国首批“乡村振兴票据”
- ·百万作品2万拍出为公益 索隆慈善拍卖圆满落幕
- ·ACAC新年射箭赛本周末在青举行 运动魔方式体育悄然兴起
- ·If aliens harnessed solar power, could we detect them? NASA investigated.
- ·庾澄庆幸福牵新婚妻子回爱巢 二人暂无生子计划
- ·推近一海里 服务到船边 青岛港引航站:船舶随到随靠
- ·口碑爱情话剧本周登陆青岛 火爆堪比开心麻花
- ·Microwave technique recovers 87% of batteries' lithium in 15 minutes
- ·我市召开市乡镇行政区划和村级建制调整改革“后半篇”文章专项工作领导小组会议
推荐内容