Michael Kirby -- the head of a special UN inquiry into North Korean rights abuses -- had told yesterday's get-together convened by Australia, France and the United States that "perpetrators must be held accountable".
"It is necessary to deter further crimes," the Australian judge said, adding that he also wanted the reclusive regime hauled before the International Criminal Court (ICC) for prosecution.
Kirby's Commission of Inquiry on North Korea released a hard-hitting report on the nuclear-armed totalitarian state in February that documented a range of gross human rights abuses, including extermination, enslavement and sexual violence.
North Korea refused to cooperate with the probe and said the evidence was "fabricated" by "forces hostile" to the country.
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Pyongyang did not send a representative to yesterday's meeting, which was also snubbed by China -- North Korea's sole major ally -- and Russia.
Today, the North's official news agency KCNA released typically robust quotes attributed to a spokesman for Pyongyang's foreign ministry in which he slammed the meeting and Kirby's report.
"The US and the West had better put under control the worst human rights abuses in their own countries and mind their own business," the statement added.
"The more vociferous the US and its allied forces become in their human rights racket intended to hurt the prestige of our dignified Republic and its social system, the stronger our single-minded unity will grow and the faster the speed of our advance towards the final victory will become.