产品展示
  • 适用于07-11年款CRV车窗玻璃外压条车门防水条外切水胶条刮水亮条
  • 长城风骏5仪表台避光垫汽车内饰装饰用品配件中控台改装防晒垫
  • 适用日产轩逸/E-POWER汽车后备箱改装专用隔板装饰隔物板收纳配件
  • 风帆6-QF-80适配宝马奔驰沃尔沃奥迪启停专用电瓶AGM汽车蓄电池
  • 皮卡丘车贴比卡丘车窗玻璃贴三角窗电动摩托机车汽车装饰划痕贴纸
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车电瓶

Over 70% of South Koreans support promoting human rights in North Korea

2024-06-07 01:11:51      点击:468
People bow to portraits of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in Pyongyang,<strong></strong> in this November 2021 file image. More than 70 percent of South Koreans said they are in support of promoting North Korea's human rights issues, according to a poll released Thursday. Yonhap
People bow to portraits of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in Pyongyang, in this November 2021 file image. More than 70 percent of South Koreans said they are in support of promoting North Korea's human rights issues, according to a poll released Thursday. Yonhap

By Jung Min-ho

More than 70 percent of South Koreans said they are in support of promoting North Korea's human rights issues, according to a poll released Thursday.

A survey, conducted by the Peaceful Unification Advisory Council between March 24 and 28, shows that 70.5 percent of the respondents said they support their government's efforts to improve the human rights situation in North Korea by conducting studies and cooperating more closely with other countries.

Only 28.5 percent said they do not support such efforts, while 1 percent refused to respond.

Notably, the support rate among those who identify themselves as politically liberal was 77 percent, which was higher compared to their conservative and moderate counterparts, at 69.3 percent and 68.8 percent, respectively.

This particular result refutes the traditional assumption that liberal voters would support a more conciliatory, no-shaming approach to Pyongyang ― a stance backed by liberal parties.

"The result goes against the expectations that liberal voters would not support the policy of promoting North Korea's human rights issues," an official at the presidential body said. "Our citizens generally share the view that awareness should be raised regardless of their political views."

Promoting the issue on the world stage has been one of the key North Korea policies under President Yoon Suk Yeol. His government co-sponsored a U.N. General Assembly resolution on its human rights abuses for the first time in four years last December; it also allowed the public access to Seoul's annual report on North Korea's rights situation for the first time this March.

Despite growing security threats from the regime, 47.8 percent of the respondents said they view North Korea as a potential counterpart that their government should help and work with. The rate was the highest since the quarterly poll for second quarter of 2018 when 48.4 percent responded so.

While 37.1 percent said they view North Korea as a hostile entity, 12.6 percent said they had little or no interest in the country.

Nevertheless, a majority of the respondents are pessimistic about the prospects of inter-Korean relations, with 79.1 percent saying they think it will remain unchanged or become worse.

Asked whether stronger security ties between Seoul, Washington and Tokyo would be effective in preventing North Korea's provocations, 46.2 percent said they think so.

While 35 percent said a stronger partnership would make the situation worse on the Korean Peninsula, 16.1 percent said it would not affect the regime's behavior.


Top US nuclear envoy warns N. Korea will pay 'consequences' for escalating tensions
N. Korea's youth holds rally against S. Korea