Los Angeles Times

North Koreans face starvation threat

Kids and the elderly are most vulnerable in a food crisis worsened by pandemic rules and sanctions, U.N. says.

- By Edith M. Lederer Lederer writes for the Associated Press.

UNITED NATIONS — North Koreans living under strict pandemic restrictio­ns are facing a growing food crisis and the most vulnerable children and elderly people in the isolated Asian nation are at risk of starvation, a U.N. investigat­or said in a report released this week.

Tomás Ojea Quintana said in the report to the U.N. General Assembly that North Korea’s agricultur­e sector appears to be facing multiple challenges because of a drop in imports of fertilizer and other agricultur­al items from neighborin­g China, the effect of U.N. and internatio­nal sanctions stemming from its nuclear program, and an outbreak of African swine fever.

He said prolonged and strict pandemic measures since January 2020 have resulted in “severe economic hardship and increased vulnerabil­ity to human rights violations among the general population.” The measures include a full-scale border shutdown, travel restrictio­ns between cities and regions, and restricted imports of nonessenti­al supplies including humanitari­an goods.

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, the Argentine lawyer said, more than 40% of North Koreans were “food insecure,” with many suffering from malnutriti­on and stunted growth. That number has increased, according to the United Nations Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on, he said, pointing to rising prices for rice and corn in different regions in June and emergency government

measures.

North Korea said Monday that leader Kim Jong Un urged officials to overcome the “grim situation” and “unpreceden­ted difficulti­es” facing the country and make stronger efforts to improve the food and living conditions of his people. State media said that in his speech marking the 76th anniversar­y of the founding of the ruling Workers’ Party, Kim confirmed the party’s determinat­ion to carry out a fiveyear plan to boost “the national economy and solving the people’s food, clothing and housing problems.”

Ojea Quintana painted a grim picture of life for the North Korean people who have “already suffered and waited too long for peace, security, developmen­t and basic human rights.”

Since the COVID-19 restrictio­ns, he said, they have faced a worsening ordeal including further isolation, “wider and harsher state command over people’s lives, the further stifling of economic activity, and the exodus of humanitari­an agencies from the country.”

As a result, he said, “families can no longer support

themselves” and are increasing­ly taking out loans and selling household items to survive.

“Many factories and mines have shut down because of a lack of power, machine parts and raw materials,” Ojea Quintana said. “The number of homeless people and street children is increasing ... [and] social concerns such as prostituti­on, drug use, traffickin­g of drugs and robbery are reportedly on the rise due to economic deprivatio­n.”

He said the government has reportedly mobilized urban

residents, those recently discharged from the military, orphaned children and married women to bolster agricultur­al production and work on farms. But floods in early August and a lack of fertilizer, pesticides, fuel for vehicles and agricultur­al parts are “likely to impact food production,” he said.

In his wide-ranging final report released Wednesday as the U.N. special investigat­or on human rights in North Korea, Ojea Quintana called on the Security Council to consider lifting sanctions “that negatively affect humanitari­an assistance and human rights, including under the COVID-19 pandemic.”

He renewed his call for the U.N.’s most powerful body to refer the situation in North Korea to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court or establish a tribunal to investigat­e possible crimes against humanity. “These crimes are likely ongoing, epitomized by continued operation of large political prison camps,” Ojea Quintana said.

The existence of these camps, known as kwanliso, “represents the worst excesses of a system of governance that systematic­ally violates the human rights of its people,” he said.

Nuclear talks between Washington and Pyongyang have stalled for more than two years because of disagreeme­nts over North Korea’s demand to end U.S.-led sanctions and U.S. demands for significan­t steps toward denucleari­zation.

North Korea has ramped up its missile testing while making conditiona­l peace offers to South Korea, reviving a pattern of pressuring the South to get U.S. concession­s.

“This is the time to send clear signals, take concrete action and find creative ways to give momentum to the stalled diplomatic process for securing a peaceful resolution to the conflict,” Ojea Quintana said, “and it could include the announceme­nt of a peace declaratio­n among parties.”

Since his appointmen­t in 2016, North Korea has refused to let Ojea Quintana visit the country. He said COVID-19 has restricted his visits to neighborin­g countries, so he held a series of online meetings with victims of human rights violations, their families, civil society groups and U.N. agencies and member nations.

 ?? Cha Song Ho Associated Press ?? A TEACHER checks students’ temperatur­es in Pyongyang, North Korea. Prolonged and strict pandemic measures since 2020 have led to “severe economic hardship” for the general populace, a U.N. investigat­or says.
Cha Song Ho Associated Press A TEACHER checks students’ temperatur­es in Pyongyang, North Korea. Prolonged and strict pandemic measures since 2020 have led to “severe economic hardship” for the general populace, a U.N. investigat­or says.

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