Ban Ki Moon calls on everyone (except Kim Jong Il) to cover North Korea’s grocery bils.
As I noted the other day, North Korea has announced its traditional million-ton food production shortfall for this year. True to form, its government has found a uniquely obnoxious way to address this that has nothing to do with increasing domestic food production or diverting foreign exchange toward the purchase of food:
North Korea demanded massive food aid from South Korea in return for concessions over a reunion programme for separated families, a Seoul official said.
The demand for 500,000 tonnes of rice and 300,000 tonnes of fertiliser was made when the two sides met in the North’s city of Kaesong to discuss reunions, media pool reports from Kaesong quoted the official as saying. [AFP]
Yes, I believe there is a word for this. At the other end of the hormonal spectrum, Ban Ki Moon pleads with us to think of the children:
The Secretary-General wrote that reports from inside the country indicate that North Koreans continue to suffer from chronic food security, high malnutrition and severe economic problems.
While serious concerns remain about political and civil rights in the insular nation, “I urge the international community not to constrain humanitarian aid on the basis of political and security concerns,” Ban wrote. [The Canadian Press]
You know, I’m long past believing that international food aid is ever going to make a damn bit of difference for North Korea’s children, for reasons that Ban unwittingly trips right over:
He also urged nations to “encourage improvements in the human rights situation” inside North Korea.
The Secretary-General said the North Korean government also had the responsibility “to take immediate steps to ensure the enjoyment of the right to food, water, sanitation and health, and to allocate greater budgetary resources to that end.”
“Such persistent problems as widespread food shortages, a health care system in decline, lack of access to safe drinking water and deterioration in the quality of education are seriously hampering the fulfilment of basic human rights,” Ban wrote.
Margaret Chan was not available for comment.
Ban said broad restrictions on civil and political rights, such as freedom of thought, religion, and expression continue to be imposed by the North Korean government on its citizens. “The government’s control over the flow of information is strict and pervasive,” his report said.
But with North Korea, there are always fresh reminders of why there is donor fatigue. Coincident with its demand that other nations feed its people, North Korea is on a palace-building spree. There is so much theft, corruption, and diversion, and so little monitoring and accountability, that markets have become a more efficient and equitable way of feeding the North Korean people, as opposed to the few who keep everyone else hungry and ignorant. Which is why I appreciate that Josette Sheeran is at least expressing the problem accurately:
The World Food Programme estimates North Korea has one million metric tons of food less than it needs to feed its population this year.
Josette Sheeran, the executive director of the Rome-based UN food agency, told reporters in Japan on Tuesday that she will travel to the North to urge Pyongyang to provide enough food and nutrition for its hunger-stricken people.
Adding that up to 50-percent of children in North Korea are malnourished, she said that the WFP will provide food to some 600,000 young children and pregnant women there. [Chosun Ilbo]
I look forward to Ban Ki-Moon joining the call for food aid donations … from Kim Jong Il.
I was wondering if you or one of your readers could help me out.
I am looking for a smaller, reputable, charity that helps the children of N/Korea.
Thanks in advance for your help.
Don’t send food. Send guns and ammo.
hi RealityZone,
The sad thing about Glans’s comment is that it has quite a bit of truth. Food or any other aid does tend to end up in the hands of the government or corrupt officials. I am certain that there are many in North Korea who would take up arms if they knew it would bring down the regime. Many would probably be willing to sacrifice their own lives if their kids had a chance.
That said, I believe among the groups linked here, Good Friends and Helping Hands have a good record of being able to get aid to needy people in N. Korea.
Liberty in North Korea focuses on helping refugees who have escaped and their work is quite commendable as well.
Those are the three that I can definitely vouch for. I am sure other readers here are knowledgeable about other groups.
Send some high-quality rice and some low-quality rice, clearly marked as such.
Taint the high-quality rice with mellowing agents. Place guns and ammo in random bags of the low-quality rice.