Ten of the council's 15 members had asked for the meeting in a letter sent to Chadian Ambassador Cherif Mahamat Zene, whose country holds the council's presidency for December.
North Korea's sole major ally China and Russia did not sign the letter.
Chad agreed to the request and will schedule a meeting, although no date has been set, spokesman Boukar Doungous of the Chadian mission told AFP yesterday.
Australia, Britain, Chile, France, Jordan, Lithuania, Luxembourg, South Korea, Rwanda and the United States said they were "deeply concerned" by the situation in communist North Korea.
"These violations threaten to have a destabilizing impact on the region and the maintenance of international peace and security," they wrote in the letter obtained by AFP.
The year-long inquiry heard testimony from North Korean exiles and documented a vast network of harsh prison camps holding up to 120,000 people along with cases of torture, summary executions and rape.
Responsibility for these violations lies at the highest level of the secretive North Korean state, according to the inquiry led by Australian judge Michael Kirby, who said that the atrocities amounted to crimes against humanity.
Other than China and Russia, council members Argentina, Chad and Nigeria also did not join the push for North Korea's rights record to be discussed.
The move came less than three weeks after a landmark resolution was adopted in a General Assembly committee condemning North Korean rights abuses and calling on the Security Council to consider referring Pyongyang to the International Criminal Court (ICC).
UN diplomats said it was likely that China, which has veto power at the council, would block any move to refer North Korea to the ICC.
The General Assembly is due to vote on the resolution again this month.
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