SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea on
Monday threatened a planned U.N. field office in South Korea set up to
investigate human rights abuses in the isolated country, saying anyone
involved would be "ruthlessly punished".
The
United Nations in March called for the field office to monitor human
rights in North Korea following the release of a 372-page U.N.
Commission of Inquiry report that detailed wide-ranging abuses,
including systematic torture, starvation and killings comparable to
Nazi-era atrocities.
"Anyone
who challenges our dignity and social system and agrees to go ahead with
the establishment of the office will be ruthlessly punished," the
North's Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea said in a
statement.
The committee handles issues related to South Korea.
South
Korean president Park Geun-hye and others from international human
rights organizations would "pay the price", the statement, carried by
the official KCNA news agency, said.
The
planned office was a "hideous politically-motivated provocation", and
an "anti-North Korean plot-breeding organization," led by South Korea
and the United States, it added.
North
Korea "categorically and totally" rejected the accusations set out in
the report, saying they were based on material faked by hostile forces
backed by the United States, the European Union and Japan.
North
Korea called Michael Kirby, the Australian judge who led the
investigation and held hearings in South Korea, Japan, Britain and the
United States, a "disgusting old lecher with a 40-odd-year-long career
of homosexuality".
North
Korea is under U.N., U.S. and other national sanctions due to repeated
nuclear and ballistic missile tests since 2006 in defiance of
international demands to stop.
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