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UN World Food Programme warns could suspend work in N. Korea

Country’s self-imposed coronavirus isolation pose problems for relief work

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 23 Feb 2021 8:15PM

UN World Food Programme warns could suspend work in N. Korea
People visit statues of late North Korean leaders Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il at Mansu Hill in Pyongyang. The World Food Programme says that should the import of food not be possible, following North Korea’s coronavirus isolation, operations will cease in 2021. – AFP pic, February 23, 2021 

SEOUL –  Strict coronavirus restrictions imposed by North Korea could force the World Food Programme to suspend operations in the country, where chronic malnutrition is rife, a report on the UN organisation’s website said yesterday.

The impoverished country  –  which is under international sanctions over its nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programmes  –  has long struggled to feed itself, suffering chronic food shortages.

The World Food Programme (WFP) has by far the largest international aid operation in the country and provides specialised foods to around a million pregnant women, nursing mothers and children every month, according to its website.

Sanctions have long complicated aid efforts but the WFP said the North Korea’s self-imposed coronavirus isolation was posing new problems for relief work.

North Korea closed its borders in January last year – the first country in the world to do so – to protect itself against the virus which first broke out in neighbouring China.

“Food imports, international staff deployments and physical monitoring access remain curtailed for a prolonged period,” the WFP said in a report outlining its plans.

“WFP will opportunistically use windows in which food imports are allowed to replenish and optimise in-country stocks’” it added. 

“There is a significant residual risk that, should food imports not be possible, operations will cease in 2021.”

Pyongyang has long insisted it has not seen any cases of Covid-19  – which has killed more than two million people worldwide  –  with its leader Kim Jong Un reiterating the claim at a huge military parade in October.

Experts suggest that is unlikely, given the virus first emerged in neighbouring China, its main provider of trade and aid.

More than 40% of North Korea’s 25 million people are considered food insecure, according to UN estimates. – AFP, February 23, 2021

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