Vancouver Sun

Farmers struggle with drought

Rice-growing region has seen almost no rain this year

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UNPHA, North Korea — North Korean farmers work to pump undergroun­d water into parched fields. Instead of rice seedlings standing in flooded paddies, the baked earth is cracked. A big lake that used to supply surroundin­g farmland with water is almost completely dry.

There has been almost no rain in this part of the country, an hour’s drive from the capital Pyongyang and one of the country’s main rice-growing regions, according to farmers and local officials interviewe­d by The Associated Press. While the situation in this area visited by the AP looks grim, it is unclear how severe the drought is in the rest of the country.

“Because of the drought continuing from last year, lots of land has been damaged,” said Sin Ung Hyon, chairman of the Unpha County Farm Management Committee.

North Korea severely limits outside access, so state media’s recent claim of the worst drought in a century has faced widespread skepticism. Pyongyang, eager for the possibilit­y of outside assistance, has used similar phrasing to describe past droughts, and officials in rival South Korea have said there’s no way to confirm exactly what’s happening.

North Korean authoritie­s agreed to a request by The Associated Press to revisit this area, which the government had highlighte­d previously as particular­ly hard-hit. Outsiders worry that there could be trouble ahead for the country, which has a long history of poverty and mismanagem­ent. Critics say the authoritar­ian government is more willing to spend huge sums of money on its missile and nuclear programs than on infrastruc­ture and basic welfare.

The United Nations has warned that the lack of rain this year could cause further hunger. Hong Yong-pyo, South Korea’s minister of unificatio­n, told lawmakers this week that Seoul was willing to consider providing aid to North Korea to help with the drought, although Pyongyang has yet to make any official aid request.

Farmers interviewe­d in this part of North Korea said they are turning away from rice farming, and are planting corn and trying to tap undergroun­d water sources to keep what rice seedlings there are wet and healthy. But no rain would mean grim prospects even for the corn.

“With the hardship this year, farmers have a lot of difficulti­es in trying to make the farm work, because we haven’t had this kind of experience before,” said Kim Gyong Nam, a work team leader at Unpha town farm.

“This year, because of the severe drought, we could not do rice farming, so we plowed the land again and had to plant corn.”

Jane Howard, a spokeswoma­n for the World Food Program in Rome, said North Korea has faced water shortages since late last year because of low rain and snowfall. This could cause serious problems later this year because so much of the country’s food production normally comes from crops planted from June to July.

Seoul’s Unificatio­n Ministry said that North Korea’s rice and potato production could decline by as much as 20 per cent compared to average years should the rain shortage continue. While North Korea’s precipitat­ion last year was its lowest since 2000, the country avoided a significan­t drop in food production because of its strong supply of irrigation water and the lack of floods in the summer, the ministry said.

North Korea’s food production is regularly affected by droughts or floods that expose the inefficien­cies of its agricultur­al system, which is heavily reliant on foreign aid, artificial irrigation and terraced fields that are vulnerable to torrential rain.

A devastatin­g North Korean famine during the mid-1990s is believed to have killed hundreds of thousands of people, though the exact number is disputed. The famine may have also loosened the state’s strict control over the economy by damaging its public food distributi­on system and paving the way for private economic activity in unofficial markets.

Because of the drought continuing from last year, lots of land has been damaged.

SIN UNG HYON CHAIRMAN, UNPHA COUNTY FARM MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE

 ?? WONG MAYE-E/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A farmer works in a field in South Hwanghae, North Korea, last month. There has been almost no rain in this part of the country, say farmers and local officials. While the situation appears grim, it is unclear how severe the drought is in the rest of...
WONG MAYE-E/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A farmer works in a field in South Hwanghae, North Korea, last month. There has been almost no rain in this part of the country, say farmers and local officials. While the situation appears grim, it is unclear how severe the drought is in the rest of...

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