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News Articles

N.Korean defector says disabled newborns are killed
by Jack Kim
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[March 22, 2006]
SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea has no people with physical
disabilities because they are killed almost as soon as they are
born, a physician who defected from the communist state said on
Wednesday.
Ri Kwang-chol, who fled to the South last year, told a forum of
rights activists that the practice of killing newborns was
widespread but denied he himself took part in it.
"There are no people with physical defects in North Korea," Ri
told members of the New Right Union, which groups local
activists and North Korean refugees.
He said babies born with physical disabilities were killed in
infancy in hospitals or in homes and were quickly buried.
The practice is encouraged by the state, Ri said, as a way of
purifying the masses and eliminating people who might be
considered "different."
The group urged the South Korean government to change course
away from "silent diplomacy" and immediately begin taking action
to pressure the North to improve its human rights record.
The South Korean government has refused to join international
condemnation of human rights abuses in the North out of concern
that such a move could rattle ties with Pyongyang, which
considers any criticism of its human rights as deeply offensive.
"The government should stop trying to avoid upsetting Kim
Jong-il," said another defector, Kim Young-sun, 67, referring to
the North Korean leader. "It should try to upset Kim Jong-il,"
she said, adding it would be the best way to change the North.
Kim Young-sun is a survivor of the North's Yodok prison camp,
notorious for its forced labor and life-sentences for people
charged with conspiring against the Kim Jong-il leadership.
Mun Hyon-ok said women from her hometown in the northern region
of North Korea bordering China were taken by a ring of human
traffickers and probably ended up in China.
"And there are women who are selling themselves for a handful of
rice," she told the forum.
North Korea has called itself a people's paradise and said
criticism of its human rights was motivated by a goal of
toppling the leadership of Kim Jong-il.
South Korea has come under fire from human rights groups and
some countries for abstaining in votes on U.N. measures to
condemn the North's human rights record.
Seoul has also avoided the subject in bilateral talks with the
North. South Korean officials have said the best way to improve
the situation is through quiet diplomacy and encouraging the
North to improve its food situation and open up to the
international community.
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