Bangkok Post

UN report warns of ‘starvation’

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SEOUL: North Korea’s most vulnerable are “at risk of starvation” with the economy worsening due to a selfimpose­d coronaviru­s blockade, and UN sanctions imposed over the country’s nuclear programmes should be eased, a UN human rights expert said yesterday.

The impoverish­ed nation has been behind a rigid blockade since early last year to protect itself from the pandemic, with the economy suffering and trade with key partner China dwindling.

In June, state-run KCTV admitted North Korea was facing a “food crisis”, sounding the alarm in a country with a moribund agricultur­al sector that has long struggled to feed the population. The same month, leader Kim Jong-un said the food situation was “getting tense”.

Ordinary North Koreans are “struggling on a daily basis... to live a life of dignity”, and the worsening humanitari­an situation could “turn into a crisis”, Tomas Ojea Quintana, UN special rapporteur on human rights, said in his latest report.

Pyongyang is under multiple sets of internatio­nal sanctions over its nuclear and ballistic missile programmes, which have seen rapid progress under Mr Kim.

Mr Quintana said such restrictio­ns should be eased to protect the country’s most vulnerable in the face of a severe food shortage. “The most vulnerable children and elderly are at risk of starvation,” he said.

“Sanctions imposed by the UN Security Council should be reviewed and eased when necessary to both facilitate humanitari­an and lifesaving assistance.”

The report comes about three months after the UN’s Food and Agricultur­al Organisati­on said North Korea was facing a food shortage of around 860,000 tonnes this year, and could experience a “harsh lean period”.

Pyongyang has stayed away from talks on its nuclear programme since the collapse of a second summit between Mr Kim and then US president Donald Trump in Hanoi and has rebuffed South Korean efforts to revive dialogue.

Under President Joe Biden, the United States has repeatedly declared its willingnes­s to meet North Korean representa­tives, while saying it will seek denucleari­sation. But this week Mr Kim blamed Washington for tensions on the peninsula.

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