N. Korea reports severe drought but help unlikely
NORTH Korea is reporting a serious drought that could worsen already critical food shortages, but help is unlikely to come from the United States and South Korea following Pyongyang's widely criticized rocket launch.
North Korea has had little rain since April 27, with its western coastal areas particularly hard hit, according to a government weather agency. The dry spell threatened to damage crops, officials said, as the country enters a critical planting season and as food supplies from the last harvest dwindle.
In at least one area of South Phyongan Province where journalists were allowed to visit, the sun-baked fields appeared parched and cracked, and farmers complained of extreme drought conditions. Deeply tanned men, and women in sun bonnets, worked over cabbages and corn seedlings. Farmers cupped individual seedlings as they poured water from buckets onto the parched red soil. "I've been working at the farm for more than 30 years, but I have never experienced this kind of severe drought," An Song Min, a farmer in Nampho area, said.
It was not clear whether the conditions around Nampho were representative of a wider region. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization said it had not yet visited the affected areas to confirm the extent of the reported drought.
North Korea has suffered chronic food shortages for the past two decades because of economic and agricultural mismanagement as well as natural disasters. A famine in the 1990s killed an estimated hundreds of thousands of people.
The US government suspended food handouts to North Korea in 2009 after Pyongyang expelled foreign food distribution monitors. In February, however, the US agreed to provide 240,000 tons of food aid in exchange for a freeze in nuclear and missile activities.
However, the deal collapsed after North Korea launched a long-range rocket last month.
North Korea has had little rain since April 27, with its western coastal areas particularly hard hit, according to a government weather agency. The dry spell threatened to damage crops, officials said, as the country enters a critical planting season and as food supplies from the last harvest dwindle.
In at least one area of South Phyongan Province where journalists were allowed to visit, the sun-baked fields appeared parched and cracked, and farmers complained of extreme drought conditions. Deeply tanned men, and women in sun bonnets, worked over cabbages and corn seedlings. Farmers cupped individual seedlings as they poured water from buckets onto the parched red soil. "I've been working at the farm for more than 30 years, but I have never experienced this kind of severe drought," An Song Min, a farmer in Nampho area, said.
It was not clear whether the conditions around Nampho were representative of a wider region. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization said it had not yet visited the affected areas to confirm the extent of the reported drought.
North Korea has suffered chronic food shortages for the past two decades because of economic and agricultural mismanagement as well as natural disasters. A famine in the 1990s killed an estimated hundreds of thousands of people.
The US government suspended food handouts to North Korea in 2009 after Pyongyang expelled foreign food distribution monitors. In February, however, the US agreed to provide 240,000 tons of food aid in exchange for a freeze in nuclear and missile activities.
However, the deal collapsed after North Korea launched a long-range rocket last month.
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