As North Korea heads into the time of year when its food supplies run low, it appears to be looking for new donors.
At a courtesy call on the Mongolian president last week, Pyongyang’s
new ambassador made a request for food aid, according to the official
website for the head of state.
“North Korea may face (a) severe food shortage,” Ambassador Hong Gyu
told President Elbegdorj, according to the account. Mr. Hong then asked
for Mongolia to consider the possibility of delivering food aid to North
Korea, the account said.
North Korea’s toughest part of the year for food begins in April and
runs through September, when the annual corn harvest begins. Kwon
Tae-jin, a scholar on North Korean agriculture in Seoul said that last
year’s yield was moderate, but not sufficient to tide the country over.
“We’ve learned that while rations are being delivered, it varies
region by region,” said Dr. Kwon, a director at the Korea Rural Economic
Institute in Seoul. “But it isn’t sufficient to go around for
everyone.”
There are other signs of food shortages. Daily NK, a news website
staffed by North Korean defectors, reported last week that Pyongyang did
not distribute food to the northernmost province for the biggest
holiday of the year; the April 15 anniversary of the birthday of North
Korean founder Kim Il Sung.
Since the severe famine in the 1990s, North Korea has struggled to feed its people.
Assistance from international organizations and South Korea has
dropped in recent years but President Park Geun-hye has pledged to
continue providing aid to the North despite a deterioration in relations
with Pyongyang.
- Wall Street Journal
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