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Seoul 'to criticise North Korea' | Seoul 'to criticise North Korea' |
(about 3 hours later) | |
South Korea is reported to be planning to challenge North Korea on its human rights record, indicating a harder line from Seoul's new government. | |
Reports quoting unnamed officials say the South is set to vote for a draft UN resolution expressing deep concern over the rights violations in the North. | |
The South has frequently abstained from such votes, fearful of souring relations with its communist neighbour. | |
The UN Human Rights Council in Geneva will consider the resolution this week. | |
The South Korean newspaper Chosun Ilbo quoted an official as saying the new government, which took charge in February, regards human rights as "a universal value". | |
"The government will show the first example of concrete action in the upcoming UNHRC vote," the official said. | |
The resolution expresses deep concern at what it says are continuing reports of systematic, widespread and grave violations of human rights in the North. | |
In the past five years, the South has voted for only one such resolution - in 2006 after Pyongyang's test of a nuclear weapon. | |
The BBC's John Sudworth, in Seoul, says successive liberal governments have taken a careful line with Pyongyang. | |
They have feared that harsh criticism might upset the efforts for closer engagement between the old enemies, our correspondent adds. | |
Analysts say the approval of the UN resolution would be the first sign that new conservative President Lee Myung-bak is prepared to take a tougher stance towards the North. |