U.S. sanctions North Korean leader for
first time over human rights
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[July 07, 2016]
By David Brunnstrom and James Pearson
WASHINGTON/SEOUL (Reuters) - The United
States on Wednesday sanctioned North Korean leader Kim Jong Un for the
first time, citing "notorious abuses of human rights," in a move
diplomats say will infuriate the nuclear-armed country.
The sanctions, the first to target any North Koreans for rights
abuses, affect property and other assets within the U.S.
jurisdiction. They include 10 other individuals besides Kim and five
government ministries and departments, the U.S. Treasury Department
said in a statement.
"Under Kim Jong Un, North Korea continues to inflict intolerable
cruelty and hardship on millions of its own people, including
extrajudicial killings, forced labor, and torture," Acting
Undersecretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Adam J.
Szubin said in the statement.
But inside North Korea, adulation for Kim, 32, is mandatory and he
is considered infallible. A 2014 report by the United Nations, which
referred to Kim by name in connection to human rights, triggered a
strong reaction from Pyongyang, including a string of military
provocations.
Earlier this year, Congress passed a new law requiring U.S.
President Barack Obama to deliver a report within 120 days to
Congress on human rights in North Korea. It had designate for
sanctions anyone found responsible for human rights violations. Kim
Jong Un, the third generation of his family to rule the Stalinist
state, topped the list.
The U.S. Treasury Department identified Kim's date of birth as Jan.
8, 1984, a rare official confirmation of the young leader's
birthday.
 Many of the abuses are in North Korea's prison camps, which hold
between 80,000 and 120,000 people including children, the report
said.
The five agencies designated were two ministries that run North
Korea's secret police and their correctional services, which operate
the prison camps. Also named were the ruling Workers' Party's
Organization and Guidance Department (OGD), a key bureau used by Kim
to wield control of the party and the government.
The sanctions also named lower-level officials, such as Minister of
People's Security Choe Pu Il, as directly responsible for abuses.
FORCED LABOR
Senior U.S administration officials said the new sanctions showed
the administration's greater focus on human rights in North Korea,
an area long secondary to Washington's efforts to halt Pyongyang's
nuclear and missile programs.
The report was "the most comprehensive" to date on individual North
Korean officials' roles in forced labor and repression.
They said the sanctions would be partly "symbolic" but hoped that
naming mid-level officials may make functionaries "think twice"
before engaging in abuses. "It lifts the anonymity," a senior
administration official told reporters.
The North Korea mission to the United Nations did not respond to a
request for comment.
South Korea, which cut off all political and commercial ties with
its own sanctions against the North in February, welcomed the move,
saying it will encourage greater international pressure on the North
to improve its human rights record.
China's foreign ministry, asked about the new sanctions, reiterated
its policy of opposing unilateral sanctions.
 U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, visiting Beijing on Thursday,
said he is very concerned about rising tension on the Korean
peninsula and called on North Korea to refrain from making any
provocations.
MORE SANCTIONS TO COME
Using sanctions against a head of state is not unprecedented. In
2011, the United States sanctioned Syrian President Bashar al-Assad
and six other senior Syrian officials for their role in Syria's
violence. Former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi was also sanctioned.
Policymakers often worry that targeting a country's leader will
destroy any lingering chance of rapprochement, former diplomats say.
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Schoolchildren stand beside North Korean leader Kim Jong Un as he
arrives to attend "We Are the Happiest in the World", a performance
of schoolchildren to celebrate the 70th founding anniversary of the
Korean Children's Union (KCU), in this undated photo released by
North Korea's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) in Pyongyang June 8,
2016. REUTERS/KCNA/File Photo
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It is a sign "there probably isn't much of a hope for a diplomatic
resolution," said Zachary Goldman, a former policy adviser in the
U.S. Treasury's Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence.
The new sanctions follow a long list of measures that have had
little effect in pressuring North Korean leaders to change, experts
who study the North's political system said.
"The sanctions from today will do nothing whatsoever to alter North
Korea's strategic calculus and only underscore their thinking that
the U.S. has a 'hostile policy' against their country," said Michael
Madden an expert on the North Korean leadership.
"Considering the sanctions name Kim Jong Un, the reaction from
Pyongyang will be epic," he said. "There will be numerous official
and state media denunciations, which will target the U.S. and Seoul,
and the wording will be vituperative and blistering."
Peter Harrell, a former State Department sanctions official, said
the measures would signal to companies in China, as well as others
doing business with North Korea, the U.S. would continue escalating
sanctions.
Harrell added it was unlikely any assets would be blocked, however
"given the realities of where Kim Jong Un and his cronies likely
hide their assets."
In March, the U.N. Security Council imposed harsh new sanctions on
the country in response to its nuclear and missile tests.
That same month, Obama imposed new sanctions on North Korea after it
conducted its fourth nuclear test and a rocket launch that
Washington and its allies said employed banned ballistic missile
technology.
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Those steps froze any property of the North Korean government in the
U.S. and essentially prohibited exports of goods from the U.S. to
North Korea.
"The United States has maintained sanctions and pressure against the
North for 65 years since the Korean War, but there's not been a
single case where the intended result was accomplished," said Yang
Moo-jin of the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul.
"How much time is left in the Obama administration? There may be the
wish to prove the policy of 'strategic patience' against the North
has not failed, but when it comes to practical results, there won't
be much to show," Yang said.
(Additional reporting by Patricia Zengerle, Yeganeh Torbati and Joel
Schectman in Washington, Michelle Nichols at the United Nations and
Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Editing by Yara Bayoumy and Bill Tarrant)
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