Various degrees of chronic food insecurity
plague two-thirds of the North Korean population, whose healthcare system is
ill-equipped to respond to the malnutrition epidemic, a UN study finds.
Millions
of North Koreans suffer chronic food shortages and dire health care, leaving
one in three young children stunted, and there are no immediate signs of
reforms to spur economic growth, the United Nations says.
Some 16
million people -- two-thirds of the population -- depend on the state rationing
system and suffer varying degrees of chronic food insecurity, six UN agencies
operating inside the North say in a report released June 12.
About
one in three children aged under five are stunted -- too short for their age --
because of malnutrition, it says. The health care system is "in dire
shape", plagued by frequent power cuts and with less than 30 percent of
essential drug needs covered.
The
North is the only Asia-Pacific country not on track to meet Millennium
Development Goals on reducing child mortality, improving maternal health and
combating disease, says the report dated May 29.
Inadequate
access to safe water and poor sanitation, coupled with poor hygiene, are mainly
to blame for the high incidence of diarrhea among the under-fives.
The
report says natural disasters such as floods and landslides, worsened by the
deforestation of slopes, pose serious threats to life.
The UN
says the structural causes of food shortages can only be fully addressed
through government policy changes, but stresses that humanitarian assistance
does save lives.
It says
UN agencies need $198 million for their activities in the North this year but
less than 40 percent of this had been donated as of May.
While
there were "currently no signs" that the government would undertake
any of the structural reforms needed to spur growth, it has begun to publicly
acknowledge severe food shortages, the UN says.
In
January 2011, for the first time in seven years, it made an official request
for international food aid. But limitations on access for aid workers persist.
"The
government often places unacceptable constraints on access" required by
humanitarian agencies, the report says.
AFP
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