North Korea protested on Dec. 13 against a U.N. report on alleged abductions of foreign nationals by Pyongyang and the many Korean families forcibly separated across the divided peninsula since the 1950s war.
So Se Pyong, the North Korean Ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva, said he would lodge the complaint to U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Raโad al-Hussein. Zeidโs spokesman confirmed that the meeting was scheduled but would not comment further.
โItโs really nonsense. We didnโt make that kind of abductions,โ So told Reuters at the Geneva mission of the Democratic Peopleโs Republic of Korea (DPRK).
โThis is not fair and also not impartial, it is just against the [U.N.] officeโs mission in principle,โ he said.
The report, issued last week by Zeidโs office, referred to international abductions as a โwell-documented practiceโ by the North, targeting nationals of South Korea and Japan.
It said that since the Korean war ended in 1953, an estimated 129,616 people had registered for reunion with their families in North Korea, but that more than half have now died without being reunited.
Tensions between North and South Korea have been particularly high since the Northโs fourth nuclear test in January.
For the latest reunion after more than six decades of separation, nearly 400 South Koreans crossed the heavily armed border into North Korea in October 2015.
The reunions remain suspended due to joint military exercises conducted by South Korea and the United States, So said.
โIf the situation is okay, and itโs peaceful and all the tension is calmed down, it will happen, this reunion. Because we are always open for those reunions of the separated families.โ
So called on the United Nations to help secure the return of 13 young North Korean restaurant workers whom his government says were abducted in China last year by South Korean agents.