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KBA, White Paper on Human Rights in North Korea (2006), p. 294.

1398  TLC040.

1399  Seoul Public Hearing, 23 August 2013, afternoon (01:04:00).

1400  See also “Vietnam War Soldier is POW, Not Defector to Pyongyang”, The Korea Times, 30 September 2009. Available from http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2009/09/113_52798.html.

1401  Seoul Public Hearing, 23 August 2013, afternoon (01:25:00).

1402  Choi Eun-hee and Shin Sang-ok, Jogukeun Jeohaneul Jeommeolli (Kidnapped to the Kingdom of Kim Jong- Il), vol. 1, p. 24, as cited in The Committee for Human Rights in North Korea, Taken!: North Korea’s Abduction of Citizens of Other Countries (2011), pp. 14 and 50.

1403  Ibid.

1404  TBG031.

1405  Choi Eun-hee and Shin Sang-ok, Jogukeun Jeohaneul Jeommeolli (Kidnapped to the Kingdom of Kim Jong- Il), vol. 1.

1406  TLC022, TBG025, TLC040.

1407  KBA, White Paper on Human Rights in North Korea (2006), p. 296.

1408  The Committee for Human Rights in North Korea, Taken!: North Korea’s Abduction of Citizens of Other Countries (2011), p. 33.

1409  A/67/370 [31-38].

1410  The Committee for Human Rights in North Korea, Taken!: North Korea’s Abduction of Citizens of Other Countries (2011), p. 43.

1411  Seoul Public Hearing, 23 August 2013, morning (00:13:00).

1412  TSH024.

1413  Mr Jung Hyun-soo, Seoul Public Hearing, 23 August 2013, morning (03:55:00); TSH024, TSH026 and TSH027.

1414  Mr Jung Hyun-soo, Seoul Public Hearing, 23 August 2013, morning (03:55:00).

1415  Mr Choi Sung-yong, Seoul Public Hearing, 23 August 2013, morning (00:53:00).

1416  Seoul Public Hearing, 23 August 2013, afternoon (01:27:00).

1417  KINU, White Paper on Human Rights in North Korea (2013), p. 513.

1418  TSH021.

1419  ROK, Law on Compensation and Support of the Abductees after the Military Armistice Agreement (27 April 2007).

1420  ROK, Law on Korean War Abduction Truth Ascertainment and Regaining Honour of Abductees, Law no. 11690, (26 March 2010), article 3.

1421  Mr Choi Sung-yong, Seoul Public Hearing, 23 August 2013, morning (00:07:15).

1422  Mr Yamada Fumiaki, Tokyo Public Hearing, 30 August 2013, morning.

1423  Kikuchi Yoshiaki, Kitachousen kikoku jigyou ‘soudaina rachi’ ka ‘tsuihou’ ka (The North Korean Return Home Movement: A Grand Abduction or Exile?) (Chuokoron-shinsha, Tokyo, 2009).

1424  Tokyo Public Hearing, 30 August 2013, afternoon.

1425  Exhibit 8A-T and 8B-T, provided by Mr Yamada Fumiaki at the Tokyo Public Hearing, 30 August 2013, morning (00:29:30).

1426  TSH012.

1427  Mr Yamada Fumiaki, Tokyo Public Hearing, 30 August 2013, morning (00:32:00); TSH008, TSH009, TSH005, TSH010, TSH011.

1428  TSH003.

1429  Mr Kato Hiroshi, Tokyo Public Hearing, 30 August 2013, afternoon.

1430  Mr Shibata Hiroyuki, Tokyo Public Hearing, 30 August 2013, afternoon (00:51:45).

1431  Amnesty International, “North Korea: Concern about the fate of Shibata Kozo and his family”, September 1994 (ASA 24/007/1994). Available from https://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/ASA24/007/1994/fr/34cd971d-ebf0-11dd-9b3b-8bf635492364/asa240071994en.pdf.

1432  Seoul Public Hearing, 24 August 2013, afternoon.

1433  Japan, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, “Opening Statement by Prime Minister Koizumi Junichiro at the Press Conference on the Outcome of his Visit to North Korea”, Press statement, 17 September 2002. Available from http://www.mofa.go.jp/region/asia-paci/n_korea/pmv0209/press.html.

1434  Japan, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, “Japan-DPRK Pyongyang Declaration”, 17 September 2002. Available from http://www.mofa.go.jp/region/asia-paci/n_korea/pmv0209/pyongyang.html.

1435  TLC040.

1436  Mr Lee Jae-geun, Seoul Public Hearing 23 August 2013, morning; TLC022.

1437  TLC022.

1438  TLC040.

1439  TLC022.

1440  TLC040.

1441  See section (g) below.

1442  Japan, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, “Opening Statement by Prime Minister Koizumi Junichiro at the Press Conference on the Outcome of his Visit to North Korea”. Available at http://www.mofa.go.jp/region/asia-paci/n_korea/pmv0209/press.html

1443  Submission to the Commission: The Government of Japan. This number fluctuates as cases are opened and closed. The current number can be found at Japanese National Police Agency Webpage. Available from http://www.npa.go.jp/keibi/gaiji1/abduct/index.html.

1444  Submission to the Commission: ICNK Japan Team.

1445  Three of these cases are contained below under “abductions from abroad”. 

1446  DNA tests have established the child to be that of Ms Yokota Megumi and Mr Kim Young-nam. Samples for the tests were provided by the respective grandparents.

1447  Tokyo Public Hearing, 29 August 2013, morning (01:25:00).

1448  Submission to the Commission: Masumoto Teruaki.

1449  A fifth defector Mr Joseph T White is believed to have crossed into the DPRK in 1982, however Mr Jenkins does not appear to have met him. A sixth American serviceperson, Mr Roy Chung, is reported to have defected to the DPRK from the US Army whilst on service in West Germany in 1979.

1450  Charles Robert Jenkins with Jim Frederick, The Reluctant Communist: My Desertion, Court-Martial and Forty-Year Imprisonment in North Korea (Berkeley, University of California Press, 2008), p. 171.

1451  TSH037.

1452  Tokyo Public Hearing, 29 August 2013, morning (00:19:25).

1453  The fourth case, that of Mr Tanaka Minoru, is contained below, under “abductions from abroad”. 

1454  Ishidaka Kenji, Koredemo shira wo kiru noka kitachousen: nijonjin rachi zokuzoku todoku ‘shozai no akashi’ (North Korea, do you still deny?: The Abduction of Japanese Continues), 2nd ed. (Tokyo, Kobunsha, 2003).

1455  Tottori Prefecture website, “Rachi higaisha Matsumoto Kyoko san” (abduction victim Kyoko Matsumoto). Available from http://www.pref.tottori.lg.jp/93163.htm.

1456  The Committee for Human Rights in North Korea, Taken!: North Korea’s Abduction of Citizens of Other Countries (2011), p. 35.

1457 Japan’s National Police Agency Report, Focus: The Growing Severity of the International Terror Situation: Movements of the Japanese Red Army and the “Yodo-go” Group, vol. 271, as cited in The Committee for Human Rights in North Korea, Taken!: North Korea’s Abduction of Citizens of Other Countries (2011), p. 35.

1458  Former DPRK agent TSH059.

1459  TSH055.

1460  Former DPRK agent TSH059.

1461  Former DPRK agent TSH059.

1462  TSH055.

1463  TSH033, TSH034.

1464  Tokyo Public Hearing, 29 August 2013, morning.

1465  TLC040.

1466  TSH055.

1467  TLC022.

1468  Tokyo Public Hearing, 29 August 2013, afternoon, and exhibit T3.

1469  TSH055.

1470  TLC040.

1471  Charles Robert Jenkins with Jim Frederick, The Reluctant Communist: My Desertion Court-Martial and Forty-Year Imprisonment in North Korea, pp. 60-63, 72.

1472  Ishidaka Kenji, Koredemo shirawo kiruno ka kitachousen: nijonjin rachi zokuzoku todoku ‘shozono akashi’ (North Korea, do you still deny?: The Abduction of Japanese Continues’), 2nd ed. (Tokyo, Kobunsha, 2003).

1473  Charles Robert Jenkins with Jim Frederick, The Reluctant Communist: My Desertion Court-Martial and Forty-Year Imprisonment in North Korea, p. 72.

1474  Macao Daily News, 5 July 1978.

1475  National Association for the Rescue of Japanese Kidnapped by North Korea (NARKN). Available from http://www.sukuukai.jp/narkn/updates.html.

1476  Macao Daily News, 5 July 1978.

1477  The Star, 15 December 2005. Available from http://www.thestar.com.my/story.aspx?file= per cent2f2005 per cent2f12 per cent2f15 per cent2fnation per cent2f12876706&sec=nation.

1478  The Straits Times, 17 December 2005.

1479  TJH040.

1480  Letter dated 19 December 2013 to the Commission of Inquiry on the DPRK from the Permanent Mission of Romania.

1481  Information provided by the National Association for the Rescue of Japanese Kidnapped by North Korea (NARKN).

1482  TSH054.

1483  NARKN.

1484  See HRNK, Taken! report, p. 33 (citing statements made by the victims in 1979 to a Lebanese newspaper).

1485  Seoul Public Hearing, 24 August 2013, afternoon (00:20:00).

1486  Seoul Central District Court, 21 April 2005 (Case: 2005Gohap43).

1487  The judgment indicates that is based on closed proceedings, because the court considered that it involved state secrets. The Commission obtained a copy of the judgment from a reliable source.

1488  TBG031 and TLC026.

1489  Testimony of Jeong Gwang-il at the Seoul Public Hearings, 21 August 2013, morning, with additional details on the injuries sustained by Reverend Kim provided in a confidential interview with Jeong Gwang-il. Relevant evidence was also received from witness EJH003.

1490  KINU, White Paper on Human Rights in North Korea (2006), p. 252; Christian Solidarity Worldwide, “North Korea: A Case To Answer – A Call To Act”, p. 57, tendered to the Commission by Reverend Stuart Windsor at the fifth session of the London Public Hearing (exhibit L4).

1491  Seoul Central District Court, 21 April 2005 (Case: 2005Gohap43).

1492  These cases were found to have occurred according to the Seoul Central District Court, 21 April 2005 (Case: 2005Gohap43), and second judgment referred to above, issued in 2006 by the Intermediate People’s Court of Yanbian Korean Autonomous Prefecture, Jilin Province, China.

1493  TBG012.

1494  TLC026 and a written submission from a reliable confidential source. The case is also reflected in the HRNK, Taken! report, p. 30.

1495  See Christian Solidarity Worldwide, “North Korea: A Case To Answer – A Call To Act”, p. 57, (exhibit L4).

1496  North Korea Freedom Coalition, “The List’ of North Korean Refugees and Humanitarian Workers Seized by Chinese Authorities”, 2013, pp. 9 and 20.

1497  TLC018.

1498  EJH003, TGC004, TJH010, TJH024.

1499  TLC026.

1500  EJH003, TGC004, TJH024.

1501  TGC004.

1502  TBG022.

1503  The Declaration for the Protection of All Persons From Enforced Disappearances 1992, article 1.1.

1504  ICCPR, articles 9 and 12.

1505  ICCPR, article 16.

1506  ICCPR, article 7.

1507  TLC040, TSH054.

1508  See section IV.A.

1509  TJH005, TJH021, TJH022, TBG016.

1510  A/67/370, [31-38].

1511  TJH029.

1512  TBG015, TJH029.

1513  Seoul Public Hearing, 23 August 2013, morning.

1514  TBG015.

1515  General Comment on women affected by enforced disappearances adopted by the Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances at its ninety-eighth session, 14 February 2013 (A/HRC/WGEID/98/2), 3.

1516  Ibid.

1517  ICCPR, article 7.

1518  ICCPR, article 2.

1519  On the violations entailed in enforced disappearances and their continuous nature, see Declaration for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearances, adopted by General Assembly resolution 47/133 of 18 December 1992, preamble and article 17.

1520  TSH021.

1521  Only one witness that spoke with the Commission had attended a separated family reunion, but the Commission does not conclude that this has been the total sum of abduction related family members that have been able to attend the separated family reunions.

1522  Seoul Public Hearing, 23 August 2013, afternoon (02:41:51).

1523  Tokyo Public Hearing, 29 August 2013, morning (02:34:43).

1524  Seoul Public Hearing, 23 August 2013, morning (03:05:00).

1525  The four Lebanese women, Ms Anocha Panjoy, Ms Dona Bumbea and Ms Soga Hitomi.

1526  See United Nations study on violence against children (A/61/299, 29 August 2006).

1527  Submission to the Commission: KWAFU.

1528  Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), article 9.

1529  CRC, article 7.

1530  CRC, article 13.

1531  CRC, article 14.

1532  CRC, article 16. See section I.A for further information about violations of children’s rights in the DPRK.

1533  CRC, article 5.

1534  CRC, article 9.

1535  Seoul Public Hearing, 23 August 2013, morning (03:35:00).

1536  See for example the testimonies of Mr Nam Jang-ho and Mr Choi Sung-yong, Seoul Public Hearing, 23 August 2013, morning.

1537  A/HRC/22/57.

1538  For details on the standard of proof, see section II.E.

1539  The Commission notes that other patterns of violations could entail crimes against humanity as well. In particular, purges undertaken to consolidate the rule of Kim Il-sung and stifle any challenges to the dynastic successions of Kim Jong-il and Kim Jong-un deserve to be closely examined with regard to crimes against humanity after access to relevant archives and more witnesses from within the state system becomes more readily available.

1540  See section V.A.

1541  See Antonio Cassese and Paola Gaeta, Cassese’s International Criminal Law, 3rd ed. (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2013), p. 105; Julian Fernandez and Xavier Pacreau, Statut de Rome de la Cour Pénale Internationale (Paris, Editions Pedone, 2012), p. 419. Where the definitions under the Rome Statute and customary international law apparently diverge from another, this has been noted. Considering that crimes against humanity could become subject to prosecution before the International Criminal court on the basis of the Rome Statute or prosecution before another international or national court that applies customary international law (see section VI.B), the commission has followed a “lowest common denominator” approach, Thus, it has applied the Rome Statute where it is narrower than customary international law and vice versa. Therefore, all crimes against humanity established by the Commission would amount to crimes under the definitions of crimes against humanity under both the Rome Statuate and customary international law.

1542  The policy required under the Rome Statute does not have to be incorporated in a written document or formal statement. The policy “need not be explicitly defined … an attack which is planned, directed or organized – as opposed to spontaneous or isolated acts of violence - will satisfy this [policy] criterion”. See Prosecutor v. Katanga et al, ICC-01/04-01/07 [ICC Pre-Trial Chamber I], Decision on the Confirmation of Charges of 30 September 2008, para. 396.

It is debated whether the requirement of a State or other organizational policy also forms part of customary international law or whether the Rome Statute introduces a new requirement. Against the proposition that customary international law requires the existence of a policy: Prosecutor v. Kunarac et al, IT-96-23& IT-96-23/1-A [ICTY Appeals Chamber], Judgment of 12 June 2002, para. 98 [with further references in id., fn 114]. For an overview of relevant arguments see William Schabas, Unimaginable Atrocities (Oxford University Press, 2012), pp. 128 ff.; Antonio Cassese, “Crimes Against Humanity” in Antonio Cassese, Paola Gaeta, and John R.W.D. Jones, eds.,The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court: A Commentary (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2002), pp. 375-376; Guénaël Mettraux, “The Definition of Crimes Against Humanity and the Question of a “Policy” Element”, in Leila Nadya Sadat, Forging a Convention on Crimes against Humanity (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2013), pp. 143 ff. This contested question of law has no bearing on the legal findings of the Commission since it finds reasonable grounds indicating that the crimes against humanity committed in the DPRK form part of systematic attacks. The notion of a systematic attack already indicates the existence of an underlying policy.



1543  See Rome Statute, article 7 (1). See also Antonio Cassese and Paola Gaeta, Cassese’s International Criminal Law, pp. 94 ff.

1544  See Rome Statute, article 30. It is subject to debate whether customary international law accepts a wider ambit of criminal intent that also extends to cases where perpetrators are aware of the possible risk that their conduct will result in the consequences defining the inhumane act and accept this risk (dolus eventualis in civil law systems; advertent recklessness in common law systems). For this proposition see e.g. Antonio Cassese and Paola Gaeta, Cassese’s International Criminal Law, p. 99.


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