The Borneo Post

Progress in North Korea but long road ahead — UN aid chief

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SEOUL: North Korea has made “lots of progress” in providing food and medical services to its people in recent years but the impoverish­ed state still has a long, tough road ahead, the UN humanitari­an chief said.

Mark Lowcock’s visit to the isolated country this week is the first such trip by a UN undersecre­tary for humanitari­an affairs and emergency relief coordinato­r since 2011.

“If you go back 20 years or so there were very many large-scale humanitari­an problems resulting in enormous loss of life and in the recent period there has been a lot of progress,” Lowcock told reporters in the capital Pyongyang.

North Korea has periodical­ly been hit by famine, and hundreds of thousands of people died – estimates range into millions – in the mid-1990s.

Nearly 30 per cent of the country’s children were stunted from malnutriti­on in 2011 but the number has fallen to 20 per cent now, Lowcock said, admitting however even the current figure is “still a higher number”.

“So there are still significan­t humanitari­an challenges here despite the progress that has been made,” he said.

About 10.6 million people among the country’s 25 million population need humanitari­an assistance, the UN said, also noting “disparitie­s” in access to basic health services between rural and urban areas.

The UN earlier this year called for US$ 111 million in aid to help improve nutrition, health and sanitation in the North but the programme remains 90 per cent underfunde­d.

Convincing donor states that their contributi­ons could “save lives and reduce suffering” by providing North Koreans with much-needed food, drugs and other medical supplies would remain a top priority, Lowcock said.

The UN official also met with the North’s ceremonial head of state Kim Yong Nam as well as health minister Jang Jun Sang during the visit.

“They are keen to work with humanitari­an agencies and are open to additional humanitari­an assistance, and are also keen to deal with humanitari­an issues separately from political dynamics,” Lowcock said.

The North has a fragile economy and has long struggled to feed its people, and is under multiple layers of UN Security Council sanctions over a series of nuclear and missile tests staged in violation of UN resolution­s.

NGOs have told AFP that the enforcemen­t of sanctions has hampered their operations.

The food situation has improved in recent years, partly due to reforms in agricultur­e and increasing trade at statesanct­ioned private markets, but the nation remains vulnerable to natural disasters while medical services remain poor in many regions.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? File photo of the UN delegation, led by Lowcock (third right), arriving at Pyongyang airport.
— AFP photo File photo of the UN delegation, led by Lowcock (third right), arriving at Pyongyang airport.

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