S. Korea to send 50,000 tons of rice to N. Korea via WFP

Image: Yonhap. Sketched by the Pan Pacific Agency.

SEOUL, Jun 19, 2019, Yonhap. South Korea said Wednesday it will send 50,000 tons of rice in aid to North Korea via a U.N. agency as part of efforts to help the impoverished state cope with its worsening food shortages, reported the Yonhap.

The aid will be transported by the World Food Programme (WFP), which will also be in charge of its distribution and necessary monitoring in North Korea, according to the unification ministry.

It marks the first time for South Korea to provide rice to North Korea since 2010, when it sent 5,000 tons to support its efforts to recover from flood damage. It will also be the first time Seoul has sent locally harvested rice to the North through an international agency.

“In close cooperation with the WFP, we will work to get the food delivered to the North Korean people in need as soon as possible,” the ministry said. “The timing and scale of additional food assistance to North Korea will be determined in consideration of the outcome of the aid provision this time.”

The decision will be finalized after a government committee overseeing inter-Korean exchange approves it. Once approved, the promised rice will be purchased from the local market and transferred to the WFP, which will spearhead its shipment to the North, the ministry explained.

North Korea has been faced with worsening food shortages apparently caused by crushing global sanctions and years of unfavorable weather conditions.

In February, North Korea’s top envoy to the U.N. requested emergency food assistance, saying that his country will suffer a food shortage estimated at around 1.5 million tons this year.

The WFP and the Food and Agriculture Organization recently reported, based on a visit to North Korea, that the country’s crop output last year hit the lowest level since 2008, adding that an estimated 10 million people, about 40 percent of the population, are in urgent need of food.

The decision on the provision of rice came after Seoul recently donated US$8 million to the WFP and the U.N. Children’s Fund (UNICEF) for their projects in North Korea to support the nutrition of children and pregnant women and address their health problems.

Critics objected to Seoul’s push for food assistance to North Korea, citing its short-range missile tests in May. The Seoul government said politics should not play a role in dealing with such humanitarian issues.

The government expects that food assistance to North Korea could boost the cross-border reconciliatory mood and help advance inter-Korean relations, which have been in limbo apparently affected by a lack of progress in denuclearization talks.

Denuclearization negotiations have been stalled since February’s summit between North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and U.S. President Donald Trump ended without a deal as they failed to find common ground over the scope of Pyongyang’s denuclearization and Washington’s sanctions relief.

Since the breakdown of the summit, North Korea has not been responsive to South Korea’s push for cooperative cross-border projects, demanding Seoul stay independent of external intervention and have more say in its pursuit of inter-Korean cooperation.

President Moon Jae-in earlier expressed hope of meeting Kim before Moon’s planned summit with Trump slated for later this month and emphasized that he is ready to meet him regardless of timing, venue and formality. North Korea has yet to react Seoul’s offer of a summit.

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