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Faith groups concerned about North Korean leadership of UN group

Geneva, August 3 (ENInews)--Christian advocacy groups are among a
28-strong international coalition calling for North Korea, criticized by many for
its human rights abuses and nuclear threats, to step down from the
presidency of the United Nations Conference on Disarmament (UNCD).

For North Korea--"the undisputed home of international arms control"
according to UN chief Ban Ki-Moon--to lead the group is terribly wrong, said the
Christian groups in a statement.

Faith groups backing the initiative include Norwegian Church Aid;
International Christian Concern (ICC), a Washington D.C.-based human rights
watchdog; and Jubilee Campaign USA, which advocates for Christians worldwide. A
number of these groups are concerned about the treatment of Christians in
North Korea. On its website, ICC claims they "face regular harassment by
authorities and can be arrested or imprisoned for even owning a bible." 

The Christian groups hope to convince the 65 member states in the UNCD to
register their protest against the rotating North Korean presidency, based
on the country's restrictions on freedom of religion, opinion, expression,
and peaceful assembly. The groups also condemn North Korea's use of the
death penalty for political and religious reasons, as well as the use of
torture and inhuman prison conditions.

Another concern is that, as North Korea faces another famine, the
government might impede aid efforts. An estimated two million people were killed by
famine by the 1990s, while Kim Jong-Il and his regime kept foreign aid for
themselves.

Frances Kennedy, a spokeswoman for the World Food Program, said the
agency's operations in North Korea are designed to reach 3.5 million people, of
which over 80% are women and children. She said the county "is highly
vulnerable to a food crisis."

John Zarocostas

John Zarocostas writes for Ecumenical News International.

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