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In recent weeks, a series of typhoons has lashed some parts of North Korea, leaving more people homeless. The damage and death tolls could not be independently confirmed, but Associated Press journalists who traveled through the countryside in August saw roadways ripped apart and entire hamlets swept away by water that gushed down denuded mountainsides. Last month, just weeks before the corn harvest, acres of stalks languished in the muddy fields of South Phyongan Province, a key agricultural area. United Nations officials said the extent of the damage to crops remains unclear and there are hopes it will be limited to areas hit hard by the flash floods. U.N. workers will fan out across the country starting next week for a far-reaching assessment that should provide a clearer picture on the current state of North Korea's food situation. Longer-term, said Kang, the Wonsan professor, North Korea needs to continue modernizing its farming techniques and equipment. "We need technology to step up to the world's standards," he told AP in an interview. Most tractors are 10 to 15 years old, and there aren't enough trucks and fuel to carry crops to threshing yards and storage sheds before they spoil, U.N. officials said. North Korea has also struggled to secure high-quality seeds and the fertilizer needed to pump up yields. This year, the U.N. has provided combine harvesters imported from Brazil and China, and state media said engineers at Kim Il Sung University have developed a more efficient harvester. North Korea is also sending farming experts to study in Russia, China and elsewhere, Kang said. But while food is plentiful in the capital, Pyongyang, where many have the cash to supplement state-provided rice and cornmeal with meat, vegetables and fruit, 16 million other North Koreans struggle to eat a well-balanced diet, according to a U.N appeal to donors in June. "Beyond the immediate needs due to flooding, the WFP is very concerned about the long-term intellectual and physical development of young children who are malnourished," said Claudia von Roehl, WFP's representative in Pyongyang, "mainly due to a monotonous diet lacking in key proteins, fats and micronutrients." Even if the fall harvest isn't as bountiful as hoped, Kang said, he doesn't anticipate a return to the dark days of the Arduous March. "We won't go back to those hard times again," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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