>> ASIAONE / NEWS / ASIAONE NEWS / STORY
Aid group says N. Korea's elite have had food rations cut amid shortages
Thu, Mar 20, 2008
AFP

SEOUL - NORTH Korea has suspended state food rations in its main grain-producing area and reduced them even in the capital amid worsening food shortages, an aid group said on Thursday.

The South Korean group Good Friends, which works in the communist state, said farm workers in South Hwanghae province had received no food rations since November.

The group, quoting residents, said in its newsletter that some farm workers had stopped work as a result, despite the impending spring planting season.

The problem was discussed at the province's communist party convention on Feb 26, it said.

Good Friends said the capital Pyongyang, where the food supply is better than elsewhere, has also been hit hard.

The group said the state reduced the amount of food rations by some 60 per cent in February and by a further 20 per cent this month. In some parts of the capital the rations had been suspended altogether.

'It badly affects us as well this year,' one unidentified official in the capital was quoted as saying.

'Even ranking officials have run out of their (rationed) food supply, while a ban on (private) trade is strictly maintained. It is nothing but a death sentence.'

South Korea's Hyundai Economic Research Institute warned last week that soaring international grain prices would aggravate North Korea's acute food shortage and encourage more people to flee the communist country.

The North was badly hit by famine in the 1990s which killed hundreds of thousands. It has since heavily depended on international food aid to help feed its population.

The World Food Programme said last month that almost a quarter of the North's 23 million people suffer from a severe lack of food.

In a report it said nearly six million people are in need of foreign food aid this year, with children, nursing and expectant mothers, and the poor most at risk. -- AFP

Is this article useful to you?
 

 
STORY INDEX
 
  Aid group says N. Korea's elite have had food rations cut amid shortages
   
 
  China's crackdown on Tibet seen hitting tourism
   
 
  Security tight for Tibetans in China's Chengdu city
   
 
  Taiwan ruling party chief says vote race narrowing
   
 
  Taiwan election likely to breathe life into economy
   
 
  Pol Pot's number two loses bail bid
   
 
  China's Hepatitis B carriers face gloomy future
   
 
  India culls chickens to stop bird flu spreading
   
 
  Olympics: Sit-down protests trigger bathroom renovation
   
 
  Olympic torch to go through Tibet as planned: organisers
   
>> RELATED STORY
Aid group says N. Korea's elite have had food rations cut amid shortages
Women up North
N Korea denies it executed group of returnees
US says N Korea to remain on terror list
Air China to launch regular N. Korea flights

Elsewhere in AsiaOne...

Travel: Passage to Pyongyang: Day 4

 

We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg
Search: