Red Cross warns of food crisis in North
Korea as crops fail in heat
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[August 10, 2018]
By Stephanie Nebehay
GENEVA (Reuters) - A heat wave in North
Korea has led to rice, maize and other crops withering in the fields,
"with potentially catastrophic effects", the International Federation of
Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) said on Friday.
The world's largest disaster relief network warned of a risk of a
"full-blown food security crisis" in the isolated country, where a
famine in the mid-1990s killed up to three million people. It said the
worrying situation had been exacerbated by international sanctions
imposed due to North Korea's nuclear and missile programs.
In a statement issued in Geneva, the IFRC said there had been no
rainfall since early July as temperatures soared to an average 39
Celsius (102 Fahrenheit) across the country, whose official name is the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK). The next rain was expected
in mid-August.
The population of 25 million is already stressed and vulnerable with
malnutrition among children that could worsen, stunting their growth, it
said.
"This is not yet classified as a drought, but rice, maize and other
crops are already withering in the fields, with potentially catastrophic
effects for the people of DPRK," said Joseph Muyamboit, the IFRC's
program manager in Pyongyang.
"We cannot and must not let this situation become a full-blown food
security crisis. We know that previous serious dry spells have disrupted
the food supply to a point where it has caused serious health problems
and malnutrition across the country."
North Korea called last week for an "all-out battle" against the record
temperatures threatening crops, referring to an "unprecedented natural
disaster".
Drought and floods have long been a seasonal threat in North Korea,
which lacks irrigation systems and other infrastructure to ward off
natural disasters.
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North Korean farm in the field, along the Yalu River, in Sakchu
county, North Phyongan Province, North Korea, June 20, 2015.
REUTERS/Jacky Chen
In Seoul, South Korea’s Unification Ministry said it had no specific
information on the situation in the north, but that the Red Cross
had notified them of the heat wave last week.
The IFRC was helping the national Red Cross to support 13,700 of the
most vulnerable people at risk, in South Hamgyong and South Pyongan
provinces. It had deployed emergency response teams and 20 water
pumps to irrigate fields in the hardest-hit areas, it said.
David Beasley, the head of the U.N.'s World Food Programme (WFP),
visited North Korea in May to look into boosting food distributions
to hungry women and children, in the latest sign of an opening.
About 70 percent of North Koreans are "food insecure", meaning they
struggle to avoid hunger, and one in four children under five is
stunted from chronic malnutrition, the WFP said at the time. A 2015
drought worsened the situation, it said.
(Reporting and writing by Stephanie Nebehay; additional reporting by
Josh Smith in Seoul; Editing by Catherine Evans)
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