Severe flooding hits North Korea, kills 88
Severe
flooding across North Korea has killed 88 people and left tens of
thousands homeless, state media reported late on Saturday,
threatening to make the poverty-stricken country's already chronic
food shortage still worse.
28
July, 2012
The
floods caused by torrential rains and a typhoon this month caused
"big human and material losses", North Korea's official
KCNA news agency said, stranding nearly 63,000 people.
Since
the mid-1990s, North Korea's farm sector has often been devastated by
both floods and drought.
Even
before the rain and typhoon this summer, the country's dysfunctional
food distribution system, very high inflation and foreign sanctions
imposed because of Pyongyang's nuclear and missile programs had
contributed to what appears to be severe hunger in the North.
But
in April, after a North Korean rocket launch failed, the isolated
state abandoned an agreement with the United States, after Washington
suspended 240,000 metric tons (264,555 tons) of food aid it had
promised to the North as part of the deal.
Talk
that North Korea's young leader, Kim Jong-un, plans to reform the
broken economy is helping drive rice prices higher, at a time when
most families can no longer rely on paychecks from moribund state-run
enterprises.
Kim,
who is in his late 20s, took over as head of the dynasty last
December on the death of his father, whose rule took North Korea
deeper into isolation, abject poverty and large-scale political
repression.
The
young ruler, dropping his father's reclusive leadership style,
surprisingly confirmed this week that he was married and gave the
thumbs up to a performance featuring show tunes and Mickey Mouse.
He
is also gearing up to experiment with agricultural and economic
reforms after purging Vice Marshal Ri Yong-ho for opposing change, a
source with ties to both Pyongyang and Beijing told Reuters.
A
recent United Nations report classified 7.2 million of the 24 million
population as "chronic poor" and said one in three children
were stunted due to poor nutrition.
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