E/CN.4/2005/61/Add.1
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religion by people belonging to national minorities in the State party, particularly in
the Muslim part of Xinjiang and in Tibet”. The Committee recalled “that a distinctive
religion is integral to the identity of several minorities and urge[d] the State party to
review legislation and practices that may restrict the right of persons belonging to
minorities to freedom of religion.”
Democratic People’s Republic of Korea
Communications and replies received
74.
On 3 November 2004, the Special Rapporteur sent a communication to the
Government of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea regarding information
received according to which parents were reportedly afraid to pass on their faith to
their children, as sporadic refugee accounts suggested believers were still punished for
practising their faith in secret. Churches in the Democratic People’s Republic lead an
entirely underground existence, meeting in unpopulated areas of the countryside to
evade bugging in homes or informants. It is often as refugees in China that citizens of
the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea first encounter religious life. Refugees
repatriated from China have reported that they were interrogated about their contacts
with mainly Protestant missionaries from the Republic of Korea, while the Koreans in
the north have reportedly set up a fake Protestant Church in China to lure back
defectors. In particular, a general in the army of the Democratic People’s Republic
who became a Christian was, after he had begun to evangelize in his unit, shot dead
by another senior army officer in 2003. Other known Christians are in some cases shot
or imprisoned. It was also reported that religious persons, particularly Christians, who
are imprisoned are subjected to worse treatment than other prisoners. Prison guards
sometimes allegedly offer material incentives to Christian prisoners if they recant
their faith.
75.
By letter dated 17 November 2004, the Government of the Democratic
People’s Republic of Korea responded that the information communicated by the
Special Rapporteur was false and fabricated by those forces hostile to the country.
This information was propagated either directly by these hostile forces or in the
name of those who fled to other countries after committing crimes in the Democratic
People’s Republic. In the Democratic People’s Republic, where a human beingcentered policy is in practice, the human rights and fundamental freedoms of the
popular masses are not only guaranteed legally but also exercised and enjoyed in
reality. Religious freedoms and related activities are not an exception.
76.
This act of fabrication is carried out by those hostile forces as part of their
constant attempts to destroy the country’s socialist system by using human rights as a
tool in parallel with nuclear issues and is intended to defame its dignity and prestige.
The Government therefore categorically rejected the allegations contained in the letter
of 3 November 2004.