AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY ANU PUBLIC LECTURE TUESDAY, 19 AUGUST 2014 HUMAN RIGHTS IN NORTH KOREA WILL ANYTHING CHANGE?

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2728A AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY ANU PUBLIC LECTURE TUESDAY, 19 AUGUST 2014 HUMAN RIGHTS IN NORTH KOREA WILL ANYTHING CHANGE? The Hon. Michael Kirby AC CMG

AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY ANU PUBLIC LECTURE TUESDAY, 19 AUGUST 2014 HUMAN RIGHTS IN NORTH KOREA: WILL ANYTHING CHANGE? The Hon. Michael Kirby AC CMG * Following years of adverse reports and recent unsatisfactory experience during Universal Periodic Review the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva in May 2013, established a Commission of Inquiry (COI) on alleged human rights abuses in the Democratic People s Republic of Korea (DPRK) (North Korea). I was appointed Chair of the COI. Other members were Marzuki Darusman (Indonesia) and Sonja Biserko (Serbia). The COI was created without a call for a vote. It reported within time, unanimously and in a document made vivid and readable by its inclusion of extracts from testimony of victims collected during public hearings. The COI refrained from concluding that genocide had been proved; but only because of the narrow meaning attributed to that crime by current general accepted international law. Nevertheless, the COI reported that many crimes against humanity were established to the standard of reasonable grounds, justifying consideration by an international prosecutor of bringing a prosecution against those responsible. The COI * The Hon. Michael Kirby (Australia) is a past Justice of the High Court of Australia (1996-2009); and was Chair UN Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in DPRK (2013-14). 1

gave notice to the Supreme Leader of North Korea that he might himself be found to be personally accountable for such crimes, including on the footing that he had the power to prevent or sanction them but had failed to do so. Throughout its inquiry, the COI was given no cooperation by North Korea. Its members and investigators were refused access. North Korea is a highly secretive state observing what the COI concluded was a totalitarian form of government. The report of the COI was well received by the organs of the United Nations. It was praised by most of the members of the UN Human Rights Council (HRC). Only 6 nations (China, Cuba, Pakistan, Russian Federation, Venezuela and Vietnam) voted against adoption of the HRC resolution. They did not seek to defend North Korea s record. They simply declared themselves opposed to country specific inquiries. North Korea condemned the report as the hostile act of its political enemies. Exceptionally, 3 members of the Security Council (France, United States of America and Australia) convened an Arria meeting on 17 April 2014 in New York. Despite pressures applied to discourage their participation, 13 members of the Council attended this briefing. Of them, 10 spoke, all affirmatively on the COI report. Specifically, 8 in differing ways expressed themselves in favour of the recommendation by the COI that the case of DPRK should be referred by the Security Council to the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague. Under the Rome Statute, where a country concerned is not a party to the treaty, exceptionally, the Security Council may confer jurisdiction on the ICC. It has done this twice in the cases of Darfur and Libya. 2

At the Arria briefing, 2 seats were empty. They were those of China and the Russian Federation: permanent members of the Security Council whose affirmative vote is required to produce a valid substantive resolution of the Council, in accordance with art 27.3 of the UN Charter. An important question is therefore presented in crude terms. What can now happen if the 2 permanent members withhold their concurring votes in any resolution that is presented to the Security Council, whether along the lines recommended by the COI or otherwise. In recent years, the United Nations has given much emphasis to the central importance of universal human rights as one of the core principles of the organisation, expressed in the Preamble to the Charter. It has moved towards a rights up front approach in the conduct of its secretariat and of its constituent organs. It has laid emphasis upon accountability for international crimes including genocide and crimes against humanity. Moreover, the 2005 World Summit of the UN General Assembly, the organisation unanimously adopted a commitment to the responsibility to protect (R2P). As Australia s former Foreign Minister, Gareth Evans, explained in his book The Responsibility to Protect Ending Mass Atrocity Crimes Once and For All (Brookings, Washington, 2008), many misunderstandings persist about the scope and limits of R2P. Much remains to be done to solidify political support and build up institutional capacity. However, where seriously arguable cases of grave crimes against humanity exist and where the due organs of the United Nations have formally reported on them and recommended a course of action to respond, a serious moment of truth is reached in the international political and institutional machinery. Is the talk about R2P merely rhetoric? Is it premature to consider that the world has at last put in place the machinery 3

to respond to risks of further holocausts? Are we finally capable, as a global community, to deliver effective remedies against crimes that shock the conscious of humanity? The vivid symbols of the 2 empty seats at the Arria meeting of members of the Security Council is cited by some commentators as proof positive that recommendations for action by the COI on North Korea will not be achieved. However, we should not assume that this is the case: Within the Security Council there is no need for new stand-alone resolution. The Council, with the participation of the permanent 5 members, has already adopted a resolution on North Korea relating to the serious dangers presented by its nuclear weapons program outside the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. This provides for sanctions against supply of arms and luxury goods. So all that would be required of the Council would be an amendment, and elaboration, of the present solutions to embrace the issues of human rights and humanitarian needs referred to in the COI report; The Charter itself insists upon the inter-related character of international peace and security and defence of universal human rights. The sudden arrest, trial and execution of Jang Song-Thaek, uncle of the Supreme Leader of North Korea in December 2013, demonstrated the violence and instability of a country which could dispose of such a powerful leader so rapidly and in such a manner. The Russian Federation has, it is true, historical, political and sentimental links to DPRK, dating back to the Soviet Union under Stalin. But economic and political links today are greatly diminished and Russia has many other geographical high priorities on its plate. 4

China whilst having important economic and other links to DPRK must itself be deeply concerned about the instability created by the current regime fuelled by human rights violations and aggravated by ongoing grave food shortages. These continue to produce very high levels of stunting in 27% of neonates: a high global figure. China must be concerned about a humanitarian crisis which the human rights abuses could trigger, threatening its own borders and resources. The comparative speed and unanimity with which, in July 2014, the Security Council reached consensus on a resolution rising out of the downing of Malaysian Airways flight MH17, suggests that, where there is a will, even acute geopolitical interests can give way to agreement and international action. Especially so where international media and broad unanimity in the United Nations demand such action. A resolution of the Security Council, even one submitting DPRK to the ICC is not a full response to the R2P. But it would surely be a big step in the right direction. The case of North Korea is starkly painted in the report of the COI. Many of the witnesses around whom the case is constructed gave their testimony in public and it is available online. This COI was transparent in its procedures. Its recommendations (including invocation of the ICC) constitutes an implementation of the R2P. Put shortly, if the case of DPRK is not suitable for reference to the exceptional jurisdiction of the ICC, it is hard to imagine a case that would be. In October, November and December 2014, we can expect issues of North Korea to be debated in the General Assembly and, hopefully, the 5

Security Council. Those who would impede the near unanimous demand for action to uphold universal human rights will themselves be accountable before global public opinion. The world will be watching closely the response of the UN. This is one occasion where the UN machinery has acted swiftly, efficiently, and with a compelling report. Now it is for politicians and diplomats to convert that report into action. History will judge severely (as will the watching people of the world) the actions of those who would frustrate an effective response. The building blocks of R2P are there. But will the players grasp them and ensure that human rights come at last to the people of DPRK? 6