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News ID: 66067
Publish Date : 17 May 2019 - 22:10

North Korea Faces Worst Drought Amid Sanctions


SEOUL (Dispatches) -- North Korea is experiencing its worst drought in over a century, official media reported Friday (May 17), days after the World Food Program expressed "very serious concerns" about the situation in the country.
The North - which is under several sets of sanctions sponsored and led by the U.S. - has long struggled to feed itself, and suffers chronic food shortages.
It recorded its worst harvest for a decade last year, according to the United Nations, down by 500,000 tonnes as natural disasters combined with its lack of arable land and inefficient agriculture to hit production.
In the year to Wednesday the North received just 56.3 millimeters of rain or snow, the Rodong Sinmun newspaper reported Friday, the lowest since 1917.
Water was running out in the country's lakes and reservoirs, said the paper, the official organ of the ruling Workers' Party, adding: "The ongoing drought is causing a significant effect on the cultivation of wheat, barley, corn, potatoes and beans."
In their most recent estimates, the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization and the World Food Program (WFP) said about 10.1 million North Koreans - 40 percent of the population - were suffering from severe food shortages, a similar figure to recent years.
Hundreds of thousands are believed to have died during a famine in the mid to late 1990s, a period known as the "Arduous March" in the North.
The South received just 157 mm of rain in the same period this year, less than half the 364 mm in 2018, Seoul's Korea Meteorological Administration said, describing it as a "mild drought".
And according to China's National Meteorological Centre, rainfall in northeast China - which includes the provinces of Liaoning and Jilin, which border North Korea - was 27.6 mm in the year to May 9, down 55 per cent on 2018.
"We have very serious concerns" about the situation in the North, WFP's executive director David Beasley said during a visit to the South earlier this week.
Seoul is currently planning to provide food aid to the North - a politically controversial move after Pyongyang launched several short-range devices earlier this month with nuclear negotiations deadlocked with the United States, its first such tests for more than a year.
"The issue of food aid should be considered from a humanitarian perspective as fellow Koreans, regardless of the security issues," South Korea's National Security Advisor Chung Eui-yong said Friday.