The Borneo Post

‘Thousands in North Korea at risk months after devastatin­g floods’

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SEOUL: Thousands of survivors of floods that hit a remote corner of North Korea in August are in need of urgent aid as winter sets in, a senior internatio­nal aid official said yesterday.

The floods, the worst in North Korea for 70 years, hit near its northeast borders with China and Russia and affected 600,000 people and left 70,000 homeless, the Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies ( IFRC) said.

“There is still much to do. Many people lost everything,” IFRC president Tadateru Konoé said in a news release following a 10- day visit to the isolated country.

“They need basic relief supplies to get through the winter months and more investment is needed to restore health services, water supply and sanitation systems together with mass awareness campaigns to guard against the spread of communicab­le diseases”.

Underdevel­oped rural North Korea suffers from a lack of proper infrastruc­ture and much of its mountainou­s terrain has been deforested to make provide farm land, removing a natural flood barrier.

The country also suffers from very cold winters, meaning people made homeless by the f loods are particular­ly vulnerable.

In September, the IFRC made a US$ 15.5 million emergency appeal to help North Korea’s Red Cross Society reach more people with aid, but only 25 percent of the target had been met, the IFRC said. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Picture taken by Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) on Dec 7 and released yesterday shows an IFRC staff member showing the water level on a building damaged by floods in Musan County in North Korea’s North Hamgyong...
Picture taken by Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) on Dec 7 and released yesterday shows an IFRC staff member showing the water level on a building damaged by floods in Musan County in North Korea’s North Hamgyong...

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