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US will address N. Korean human rights and nuclear issues at same time: official

The captured image shows Daniel Nadel, a senior official from the Office of International Religious Freedom at the US State Department, speaking in a virtual interview with Yonhap News Agency in Washington on Wednesday. (Yonhap)
The captured image shows Daniel Nadel, a senior official from the Office of International Religious Freedom at the US State Department, speaking in a virtual interview with Yonhap News Agency in Washington on Wednesday. (Yonhap)
WASHINGTON -- The United States will continue to tackle the North Korean nuclear issue while at the same time pressing for improved human rights conditions, including freedom of religion, in the reclusive state, a senior US official said Wednesday.

Daniel Nadel, a senior official from the US Department of State office of international religious freedom, also argued that a push for improved human rights conditions in the North would ensure "better outcomes" by addressing fundamental problems.

"The nuclear issues are real. They are a significant challenge. We intend to address those issues head on, as we have. But there is no trade off between addressing human rights issues or addressing other matters of national security or bilateral concern," he said in a telephonic press conference.

"We can do all of these things at once, and in doing so, we both demonstrate the importance of our fundamental principles, but we also make better outcomes, because if we don't address these things in totality, then the possibilities for lasting peace and stability in the region are, in our view, reduced," he added.

His remarks came after the State Department released its latest international religious freedom report, which said the North continued to "strictly restrict" religious freedom of its people in 2020.

In December, the US designated the North as a state violator of religious freedom for the 19th consecutive year.

Nadel said putting human rights at center of diplomacy did not mean the issue will be raised at every chance the US has to talk with North Korea.

"It's really a matter of the fact that this administration has made it clear that human rights, including religious freedom, are central focuses of United States foreign policy overall," he said later in a virtual interview with Yonhap News Agency.

"Of course, it depends on the conversation, depends on the timing, it depends on all sorts of other factors, but the overarching perspective of the United States when it comes to these issues is they are not going to be parceled out and excluded from the broader discourse. That's the basic premise that we're working from," he added.

North Korea has often reacted angrily to the US reports on human rights and religious freedom, threatening to sever or boycott any dialogue with the US.

Nadel said the US reports were not about the US pointing its finger at others.

"When you look at what the reports actually are, these reports are not the voice of the United States government," he said in the interview.

"The only time the US government appears in the reports is as an actor in the US government action section," he added. "The rest of the reports are simply a gathering or collecting of information from a wide range of public sources from the United Nations, from NGOs, from religious communities themselves, and we are correlating that information but we don't originate that information."

In his earlier press conference, Nadel had also stressed the importance of a free flow of information into North Korea in a reaction to questions related to South Korea's anti-leafleting law that prohibits sending propaganda leaflets across the inter-Korean border to North Korea.

The US official said the US understood the concerns South Korea has in relation to the safety of its people who live close to the border.

"As part of our efforts to promote fundamental freedoms, we do believe access to information is vital. But we also recognize and understand the concerns that the Republic of Korea government was operating under with respect to this law," he told Yonhap, referring to South Korea by its official name.

"So I don't believe we have an opinion on the law itself. However, the important principle is that the information be available to individuals inside of North Korea," he said, adding the US seeks to use a "number of different means" to transmit information to people in closed societies. (Yonhap)

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