|
| | SR0649 | | LRB098 14517 GRL 49267 r |
|
|
1 | | SENATE RESOLUTION
|
2 | | WHEREAS, Under the misnomer of the Democratic People's |
3 | | Republic of Korea, the current North Korean government is a |
4 | | continuation of the absolute dynastic dictatorship started by |
5 | | Kim Il-sung in 1948 after the bifurcation of Korea at the end |
6 | | of World War II; and
|
7 | | WHEREAS, Following his death in 1994, Kim Il-sung was |
8 | | succeeded by his eldest son, Kim Jong-il, and was designated as |
9 | | the "Eternal President" by the North Korean constitution; on |
10 | | December 17, 2011, Kim Jong-il succumbed to a heart attack and |
11 | | his youngest son, Kim Jong-un, was immediately installed as his |
12 | | successor; and
|
13 | | WHEREAS, The majority of the North Korean people have |
14 | | experienced unimaginable suffering during the regimes of all 3 |
15 | | dictators; the systemic ideological indoctrination in support |
16 | | of the "cult of personality" glorifying the dynasty amounts to |
17 | | a state religion; loyalty to this leadership cult determines |
18 | | not only social status but also employment, housing, and other |
19 | | resources, as well as such basic necessities, such as access to |
20 | | healthcare and even food; and
|
21 | | WHEREAS, The North Korean government's top priority is |
22 | | total control of all aspects of life in North Korea; all |
|
| | SR0649 | - 2 - | LRB098 14517 GRL 49267 r |
|
|
1 | | information, artistic expression, academic works, and media |
2 | | activity within its borders is strictly limited, as is freedom |
3 | | of speech; attempted defection, "slander" against the ruling |
4 | | party or its leaders, listening to foreign broadcasts, writing |
5 | | "reactionary" letters, or possession of "reactionary" printed |
6 | | matter is met with severe punishments and confiscation of |
7 | | assets; and
|
8 | | WHEREAS, In addition to the aforementioned and numerous |
9 | | incidents of human rights abuses that continue to occur in |
10 | | North Korea, the government has committed far more serious |
11 | | acts, such as the execution of political prisoners, other |
12 | | outspoken opponents of the regime, and certain "repatriated" |
13 | | defectors, as well as members of outlawed religions and |
14 | | organizations; these executions are sometimes performed at |
15 | | public meetings attended by workers, students, and |
16 | | schoolchildren; and
|
17 | | WHEREAS, The North Korean government currently holds |
18 | | almost a quarter of a million political prisoners in camps |
19 | | under deplorable conditions; forced labor, beatings, torture, |
20 | | and executions are common and those who survive such treatment |
21 | | often die from disease, starvation, and overexposure; |
22 | | eyewitness testimony provided to the United States Congress by |
23 | | survivors of these camps report that inmates are used as slave |
24 | | labor for the production of exported goods, as targets for |
|
| | SR0649 | - 3 - | LRB098 14517 GRL 49267 r |
|
|
1 | | martial arts practice, and the subjects of chemical and |
2 | | biological weapons testing; and
|
3 | | WHEREAS, In the early 1990s, more than 2 million |
4 | | inhabitants of North Korea died of starvation due to the |
5 | | failure of the North Korean government-operated centralized |
6 | | agricultural and distribution systems; a 2002 United |
7 | | Nations-European Union survey indicated that one out of every |
8 | | 10 North Korean children are acutely malnourished and 4 out of |
9 | | 10 are chronically malnourished; and
|
10 | | WHEREAS, Although the United States has provided more than |
11 | | 2 million tons of food to the North Korean people through the |
12 | | World Food Program since 1995, the North Korean government |
13 | | continues to prevent the World Food Program from monitoring the |
14 | | delivery of food aid and denies the use of Korean-speaking |
15 | | natives to help and travel access throughout the country; and
|
16 | | WHEREAS, The resultant risk of starvation, threat of |
17 | | persecution, and lack of personal freedoms have caused hundreds |
18 | | of thousands of North Koreans to flee, primarily into China, |
19 | | where the women are often at risk of being kidnapped and sold |
20 | | as brides, concubines, or forced into prostitution; in spite of |
21 | | China's obligation as a party to the 1951 United Nations |
22 | | Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees as well as the |
23 | | 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees, the Chinese |
|
| | SR0649 | - 4 - | LRB098 14517 GRL 49267 r |
|
|
1 | | government is cooperating with North Korean officials to locate |
2 | | North Koreans who are in China without official permission; the |
3 | | Chinese government classifies those seeking asylum as |
4 | | "economic migrants" and returns them to North Korea, without |
5 | | regard to the serious threat of persecution that awaits them |
6 | | upon their "repatriation"; and
|
7 | | WHEREAS, The Chinese government has consistently detained, |
8 | | convicted, and imprisoned foreign aid workers who, in accord |
9 | | with United Nations conventions and protocol, assist these |
10 | | North Korean aliens; it has been alleged that, in January of |
11 | | 2000, North Korean agents abducted Reverend Kim Dong-shik, a |
12 | | permanent resident of the United States and an advocate for |
13 | | North Korean refugees; his whereabouts and condition remain |
14 | | unknown; and |
15 | | WHEREAS, While the responsibility for domestic refugee |
16 | | resettlement naturally devolves to the South Koreans, who have |
17 | | legally admitted more than any other country with approximately |
18 | | 3,800 refugees between 1994 and 2003, the United States should |
19 | | play a leadership role in addressing the plight of these |
20 | | refugees and develop international solutions for this |
21 | | humanitarian crisis; therefore, be it
|
22 | | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE NINETY-EIGHTH GENERAL |
23 | | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we express our |
|
| | SR0649 | - 5 - | LRB098 14517 GRL 49267 r |
|
|
1 | | solidarity with the North Korean refugees in their quest for |
2 | | relief from hunger and persecution; and be it further
|
3 | | RESOLVED, That we applaud United States Secretary of State |
4 | | John Kerry's initiative for taking steps toward the development |
5 | | of a framework for the resumption of talks with the Democratic |
6 | | People's Republic of Korea and articulate our support for |
7 | | development of a Human Rights and Democracy program that |
8 | | includes meaningful cultural and educational exchanges with |
9 | | the Democratic People's Republic of Korea; and be it further |
10 | | RESOLVED, That we call upon President Barack Obama to |
11 | | appoint a special envoy for human rights in North Korea and |
12 | | implore both houses of the United States Congress to take a |
13 | | leadership role in forming an international framework for |
14 | | resettlement of North Korean refugees both here and abroad; and |
15 | | be it further |
16 | | RESOLVED, That we urge the Illinois Human Rights Commission |
17 | | to take notice of this resolution and to take whatever actions |
18 | | they might deem appropriate and necessary to address the issues |
19 | | raised therein; and be it further |
20 | | RESOLVED, That suitable copies of this resolution be |
21 | | presented to President Barack Obama, Secretary of State John |
22 | | Kerry, the members of the Illinois congressional delegation, |