More than 40 nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) are calling for United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres and member states, including the United States, Canada, UK, and E.U., to boycott sessions of the U.N. Conference on Disarmament after North Korea took over as chair of the forum on Monday.
On Monday, North Korea assumed the presidency of the Conference and will serve a four-week stint in the role until June 24, despite a string of ballistic missile launches by Pyongyang in recent months, sparking outrage from NGOs
“North Korea is a country that threatens to attack other U.N. member states with missiles, and that commits atrocities against its own people,” the letter, led by the executive director of U.N. Watch, Hillel Neuer, reads. “Torture and starvation are routine in North Korean political prison camps where an estimated 100,000 people are held in what is one of the world’s most dire human-rights situations.”
“North Korea holding the president’s gavel is liable to seriously undermine the image and credibility of the United Nations, and will send absolutely the worst message. At a time when China, Cuba, Eritrea, Libya, Kazakhstan, and Venezuela are sitting on the U.N.’s human rights council, this will only further erode the standing of the United Nations.”
The letter also noted that the North Korean regime is the “world’s foremost weapons proliferator” and continues to bolster its nuclear weapons in contravention of its treaty commitments.
“Pyongyang sells missile and atomic know-how to other rogue regimes in blatant violation of U.N. sanctions,” the letter states.
North Korea has launched 17 missile tests this year alone, with the latest launch taking place on May 25, according to South Korea’s military. One of them was suspected to be an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM).
South Korea’s National Security Office claims that the North has also been testing a “nuclear detonation device” for “weeks.”
The tests were reportedly being conducted away from the North’s key nuclear testing site, which was being closely monitored by Seoul, Kim added.
“The North Korean authorities are imminently near the final preparation stage for a nuclear test of a scale and quality they want,” he continued. “The possibility of an imminent nuclear test in the next day or two is low, but after that, there is certainly a possibility,” he added.
The North Korean ambassador said that Cuba had “worked tirelessly and effectively” during its presidency and had done “everything in its power to advance the work of the Conference.”