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Natural disasters in North Korea trigger widespread food shortage – ‘Definitely people are dying. How many is the big question’

Wednesday, September 5, 2012 18:50
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Desdemona Despair

Farmers in North Korea work in a corn field in August 2012 which was damaged by floods in July. Typhoons Bolaven and Tembin have renewed fears of a humanitarian crisis in the impoverished country. David Guttenfelder / The Associated Press / Reuters

By Ben Blanchard, Reuters
31 August 2012

North Korea could be heading toward a crisis similar to the 1990s when a million people are thought to have died after a series of natural disasters brought widespread famine, said an aid worker, just back from a tour of the impoverished state.

North Korea has suffered heavy floods this year, including from a typhoon earlier this week and another storm heading in its way, and has little capacity to deal with any more damage, said Kim Hartzner, managing director of Mission East, a Danish aid group which focuses on providing food aid to children.

“The scale and the magnitude of the disaster has been mind-blowing,” he told Reuters in Beijing late Wednesday, referring to flooding in late June and the end of July that killed at least 169, leaving some 400 people missing and 212,200 homeless. “They’ve been through five or six consecutive disasters. It is a long-term problem and the supplies are likely to be very low,” he said, adding there was a lack of even basic materials for rebuilding homes, such as concrete and iron bars.

“The damage to the arable land will not have an effect tomorrow or the day after; it will have an effect in two or three months. They can eat the maize they have already harvested,” Hartzner added. “But I think this will affect a sizable proportion of the maize. It is extremely serious if the maize and rice crops are damaged,” he said, after returning from a six-day visit where he visited several areas hard-hit by the recent floods.

A famine in the 1990s killed an estimated million people and North Korea has continued to endure chronic food shortages, which many experts say reflect systemic failings in the reclusive country’s heavily centralized economic system, which has sapped farmers’ productivity.

Since then, North Korea’s agricultural sector has become increasingly vulnerable to floods and drought as a result of widespread deforestation.

While a United Nations official said earlier this month that the country was a long way from the famine levels seen in the 1990s, Hartzner said he was more worried.

“I think the chances are increasing that we’re getting to a situation which could have similarities to the crisis in the 1990s. Definitely people are dying. How many is the big question which I simply cannot answer,” he said.

Hartzner described conditions in three orphanages he visited in South Hwanghae province as awful. “There the conditions are beyond comprehension; 70 per cent of the children are suffering from acute malnutrition, either severely or moderately.” […]

Natural disasters in North Korea trigger widespread food shortage



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