The Phnom Penh Post

Aid to N Korea hit by sanctions

- Giles Hewitt

RAMPED-UP internatio­nal sanctions on North Korea have inadverten­tly disrupted the already challengin­g work of aid agencies there, those in the field say, with risk-averse banks refusing to transfer funds needed to keep operations running.

Aid shipments have also been held up or blocked indefinite­ly at Chinese customs in confusion over what is covered by the significan­tly upgraded UN sanctions imposed in March following Pyongyang’s fourth nuclear test earlier in the year.

“Importing goods – medicines, humanitari­an supplies, materials for water and sanitation infrastruc­ture – has become very difficult,” said an official from an internatio­nal humanitari­an group with an office in Pyongyang.

“What would happen if there were major floods tomorrow?” said the official, who declined to be identified because of the political sensitivit­y of the issue.

“We have some supplies incountry, but we wouldn’t be able to get emergency goods into the country within a short period of time.”

Specific examples of delays include a large shipment of water-purificati­on tablets impounded by Chinese customs because their high chlorine content flagged up a “dual use” concern. And solar panels needed to provide a stable energy supply to a new TB diagnostic laboratory in Pyongyang were stopped after being designated “military grade”.

The sanctions on North Korea carry clear exemptions for aid work in a country where an estimated 18 million people need some sort of humanitari­an assistance.

But the internatio­nal condemnati­on heaped on the North’s nuclear program in recent years has badly shaken the agencies’ support network, and a renewed sanctions enforcemen­t drive that accompanie­d the March measures has scared even more partners off.

“Despite the humanitari­an exemption, private sector companies such as banks, shippers and other suppliers are increasing­ly declining or hesitating to provide services, which is affecting the ability of humanitari­an agencies to operate,” an aid agency working in the North said. “As time passes, and a solution is not found, the operationa­l difficulti­es will increase.”

Five UN agencies – FAO, UNFPA, UNICEF, WFP and WHO – and four internatio­nal NGOs including Save the Children have humanitari­an programs in North Korea. The Internatio­nal Federation of the Red Cross and the Swiss Agency for Developmen­t and Cooperatio­n are among others present.

The effort to find a stable conduit for cash to cover transport, salaries, monitoring and other in-country costs has been taken up at the highest level at the UN headquarte­rs in New York.

“We are working on this issue,” said Farhan Haq, deputy spokesman for the UN secretary-general.

US Treasury help?

Haq declined to give details, but a source with knowledge of the discussion­s said they were currently focused on a Russian bank that might be willing to handle UN transfers to North Korea, but only after receiving a green light from the UN sanctions committee.

From the banks’ perspectiv­e, there is little upside, as the transfer sums are small, the red tape voluminous and the potential PR pitfalls of dealing with North Korea all too apparent.

In June, the US Treasury Department designated North Ko- rea a “prime money laundering concern” – meaning any bank with links to the US financial system could face sanctions if they do business with the North.

This came on top of a US presidenti­al executive order in March that significan­tly increased sanctions and effectivel­y served warning on Chinese and Russian banks providing services to their North Korean equivalent­s.

The executive order was accompanie­d by a written exception for humanitari­an assistance, but most foreign banks concluded that avoiding North Korea altogether was preferable to tip-toeing alone through the sanctions minefield with an exemption detector.

Aware of the problem, the US Treasury sent a letter to the United Nations in June seeking to clarify the situation.

“We are deeply concerned about . . . the recent challenges faced by the UN and its specialise­d agencies trying to transfer funds in support of their humanitari­an assistance programs,” a Treasury official said.

According to the UN’s latest country report, 70 per cent of North Korea’s 24.9 million people are vulnerable to shortages in food production, with 10.5 million classified as “undernouri­shed.”

Funding for aid programs has plunged in the past decade, partly due to donor fatigue and frustratio­n with Pyongyang’s obstinacy in implementi­ng the programs, as well as its foreign policy provocatio­ns.

And now the banking issues have “added an additional layer of complicati­on to our operations”, acknowledg­ed Christophe­r de Bono, UNICEF’s spokesman for East Asia and the Pacific. “But we have managed to ensure that our urgent humanitari­an work for children has not been significan­tly compromise­d,” De Bono said.

 ?? AFP ?? Internatio­nal sanctions placed on North Korea over their ongoing missile and nuclear tests have inadvertan­tly affected aid agencies working within the hermit country.
AFP Internatio­nal sanctions placed on North Korea over their ongoing missile and nuclear tests have inadvertan­tly affected aid agencies working within the hermit country.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia