Location: The Heritage Foundation's Lehrman Auditorium
North Korea is one of the world's most brutal and blatant
violators of human rights. The U.S. Department of State's annual
human rights report cites extrajudicial killings, disappearances,
arbitrary detention, political prisoners, harsh and life
threatening prison conditions, torture, forced abortions, and
babies being killed upon birth in prisons. Punishment for political
crimes is often inflicted upon generations of relatives and
repatriated refugees are treated harshly.
The advent of a new U.S. administration provides the opportunity
for a forward-looking policy-oriented discussion on North Korean
human rights. Is pushing progress on North Korean human rights a
threat to attaining North Korean denuclearization? Should the U.S.
advocate a Helsinki Process approach toward Pyongyang? Are forceful
U.S. Government public denunciations of North Korean human rights
abuses helpful or counter-productive? Is the North Korean Human
Rights Act sufficient or should the Congress adopt additional
measures or implement an alternative approach? To what degree
should the U.S. press China to facilitate the transit of North
Korean refugees to South Korea? Are there lessons to be drawn from
the Bush Administration approach toward North Korean human rights
abuses?
Join us as our panel of experts discusses U.S. policy towards
North Korea in the human rights arena, covering these topics and
more.
Location: The Heritage Foundation's Lehrman Auditorium
North Korea is one of the world's most brutal and blatant
violators of human rights. The U.S. Department of State's annual
human rights report cites extrajudicial killings, disappearances,
arbitrary detention, political prisoners, harsh and life
threatening prison conditions, torture, forced abortions, and
babies being killed upon birth in prisons. Punishment for political
crimes is often inflicted upon generations of relatives and
repatriated refugees are treated harshly.
The advent of a new U.S. administration provides the opportunity
for a forward-looking policy-oriented discussion on North Korean
human rights. Is pushing progress on North Korean human rights a
threat to attaining North Korean denuclearization? Should the U.S.
advocate a Helsinki Process approach toward Pyongyang? Are forceful
U.S. Government public denunciations of North Korean human rights
abuses helpful or counter-productive? Is the North Korean Human
Rights Act sufficient or should the Congress adopt additional
measures or implement an alternative approach? To what degree
should the U.S. press China to facilitate the transit of North
Korean refugees to South Korea? Are there lessons to be drawn from
the Bush Administration approach toward North Korean human rights
abuses?
Join us as our panel of experts discusses U.S. policy towards
North Korea in the human rights arena, covering these topics and
more.
More About the Speakers
Featuring Keynote Remarks by:
The Honorable Ed Royce (R-CA)
Ranking Member,
U.S. House of Representatives
Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation and
Trade,
and Senior Member,
House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Asia, the Pacific and the
Global Environment
Followed by a Panel Discussion Featuring:
Joel Charney
Vice President for Policy,
Refugees International
Roberta Cohen
Non Resident Senior Fellow in Foreign Policy
Studies,
The Brookings Institution
and Senior Associate in the Institute for the Study of
International Migration,
Georgetown University
Jared Genser
Partner,
DLA Piper LLP (U.S.) and
President,
Freedom Now
Carl Gershman
President,
National Endowment for Democracy
Hosted By
Bruce Klingner
Senior Research Fellow, Northeast Asia
Read More