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				 Retired Australian Judge Michael Kirby Kirby said it was 
				"completely unacceptable" for North Koreans to be kept in the 
				dark about the commission's report, which compared abuses in 
				their country to Nazi-era atrocities. (U.N. report: 
				http://bit.ly/M6b37J) 
				 
				Speaking at a Washington conference, he highlighted 
				recommendations from the Bush Institute think tank that hackers, 
				balloons and even drones should be used to overcome secretive 
				North Korea's information barriers. (Bush Institute: 
				http://bit.ly/1xJa5mP) 
				 
				Kirby, who spoke at the Center for Strategic and International 
				Studies think tank, questioned whether South Koreawas being 
				cautious about using balloons to take messages north across the 
				border to avoid damaging its long-term strategy of national 
				reunification. 
				 
				Turning to fellow panelist Lee Jung-hoon, South Korea's 
				ambassador for human rights, Kirby said another way to get the 
				details of the report into North Korea would be to hack into its 
				closed Internet, or intranet, system. 
				 
				"You have some of the cleverest technicians in the world," he 
				said to Lee. "You can't tell me ... that there wouldn't be a 
				technological way to get into the Intranet to get this in - if 
				there's a will." 
				 
				Lee said South Koreans were not against using balloons and it 
				was important to find other ways to get information to North 
				Korea, including via data sticks and SMS messages. 
				 
				Seoul has recently sought to dissuade activists from launching 
				balloons while it tries to engage Pyongyang in dialogue. 
				 
				Kirby's commission issued its report a year ago. In December, 
				the U.N. General Assembly urged the U.N. Security Council to 
				consider referring North Korea to the International Criminal 
				Court for crimes against humanity. 
				 
				Kirby said the commission would like to engage with North Korean 
				officials, but the latter were only willing to do so "on limited 
				terms," while North Korea's main ally, China, had not allowed 
				U.N. researchers to visit border regions. 
				 
				He said he would have welcomed North Korea's attendance at 
				Tuesday's conference - something that was not possible due to 
				U.S. rules requiring North Korean officials to get U.S. 
				government permission to travel outside of New York City, where 
				they are representatives at the United Nations. 
				 
				On Monday, North Korea's U.N. ambassador said North Korea was 
				not worried about the ICC threat because it was not guilty, and 
				wanted to attend the meeting to defend itself. 
				 
				(Reporting by David Brunnstrom; Editing by Lisa Shumaker) 
			[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
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