Seoul - QNA
South Korea has joined hands with Japan and the European Union in drafting a resolution on North Korea’s human rights situation, calling on the United Nations to refer the case to an “appropriate” international justice mechanism, officials here said Tuesday. The resolution led by Japan and the EU was presented to the UN Human Rights Council on Sunday, with member states working on details for possible revisions, according to South Korea’s (Yonhap) News Agency. “The resolution includes some recommendations stated in the final report by the Commission of Inquiry (COI), which our government backs,” a government source here said, explaining the reason for Seoul’s decision to take part in the drafting of the resolution. After a year-long investigation, the COI published the hard-hitting report on North Korea’s human rights conditions last month, officially submitting it to the UN Council last week. The report states that the communist country has committed “organized, extensive and grave crimes against humanity,” recommending the U.N. refer the case to the International Criminal Court (ICC) or establish an ad hoc tribunal. In the resolution, the international community also called for the establishment of a new entity to be in charge of follow-up measures regarding Pyongyang’s grave rights situation, as the COI is to disband at the end of this month. The COI, chaired by retired Australian judge Michael Kirby, was established by the UN rights council in March 2013 with a one-year mandate. It was the international community’s first attempt to launch an official investigation into widely condemned human rights abuses in North Korea.