 |
|
North
Korean children, suffering from malnutrition (AFP/File Photo)
|
BEIJING,
February 9 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Due to a funding
crisis, millions of helpless North Korean elderly, women and children
risk starvation during the harsh Korean winter, pushing the World Food
Program (WFP) to make a last ditch appeal for help Monday, February 9,
saying it was scraping the bottom of the barrel with cereal stocks
virtually exhausted.
Lack
of international aid to the famine-stricken country has left some
elderly, women and children in a desperate situation during the harsh
Korean winter, the United Nations agency said Monday, according to
Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"We
are scrapping the bottom of the barrel," WFP representative for
North Korea Masood Hyder said at a press conference in the Chinese
capital, Beijing.
"Over
four million core beneficiaries, the most vulnerable elderly, women
and children are now deprived of very vital rations. It is the middle
of the harsh Korean winter and they need more food not less."
The
WFP has targeted 485,000 tones of commodities valued at 171 million
dollars for 2004 but has so far only secured commitments for 140,000
tones and little of this has actually been delivered.
The
United States, Australia, Canada and the European Union recently
pledged 77,000 tones of aid but this will not arrive before April.
For
the next two months food rations will only be given to 100,000 people
- mostly child-bearing women and children in hospitals and orphanages,
according to the BBC News Online.
“A
quarter of the population who normally receive food aid will have to
survive winter without normal rations.
“Food
shortages have plagued North Korea for at least nine years, after
floods, economic mismanagement and the consequences of the break-up of
chief donor the USSR combined to precipitate the crisis.”
Hyder
cited as an example expectant women who over the course of their
pregnancies would be expected to gain 10 kilograms (22 pounds), but in
North Korea most women gain only five kilograms (11 pounds), even with
help.
"A
lady I visited who I thought was three or four months pregnant was in
fact full term and about to give birth," said Hyder, adding she
was already being helped.
The
funding crisis is also forcing a drastic scale back of food-for-work
activities while WFP-assisted factories producing enriched foods are
threatened with closure due to a shortage of donor-supplied
ingredients.
"Many
of those we cannot help only consume two thirds of the calories they
need," he said. "Unless they get help very soon the damage
will be irreparable."
Gains
At Risk
Although
the agency only has a partial picture of the situation in North Korea,
there is evidence that the level of nutrition has risen dramatically
and Hyder said these gains must not be thrown away.
"Painstaking
gains made in improving nutritional standards since the late 1990s
risk being reversed. That must not happen," he said.
The
WFP dishes out an average of 250 to 300 grams of cereal per day to
North Koreans involved in its aid program, about half of people's
daily ration. The rest is provided by a national distribution scheme.
Hyder
blamed the funding shortfall on a precarious political environment and
donor fatigue with a country which has received food aid for nine
years.
In
other countries, the WFP distributes food with the help of
organizations such as the Red Cross and Salvation Army, but North
Korea does not allow that, relying on its own public distribution
system instead.
That
leaves the United Nations agency in the dark about precisely where the
food aid is going, although Hyder said transparency was slowly
improving.
The
Stalinist nation has suffered serious famines since 1995, compounding
the near-total collapse of the country's planned economy.
"The
humanitarian imperative is especially compelling right now," said
Hyder. "We have sounded numerous early warnings to try to secure
sufficient food promptly for hungry North Koreans. This warning needs
to be heard, and quickly acted on."