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View Full Version : DPRK Disaster: 54,700 Dead, 2.5 Million Homeless


PittsburghAfterDark
08-16-2006, 06:26 PM
Group: 54,700 dead, missing in N. Korea
By KWANG-TAE KIM, Associated Press Writer Wed Aug 16, 8:49 AM ET

SEOUL, South Korea - A South Korean aid group claimed Wednesday that massive floods in North Korea last month left about 54,700 people dead or missing and some 2.5 million homeless. The figure is by far the highest toll reported from floods that hit the impoverished communist country in mid-July.

The Seoul-based private aid agency Good Friends claimed it has "many sources" inside North Korea but didn't say where it obtained the information, which could not be independently confirmed because the North tightly controls media and information.

Good Friends' previous reports of activities inside the isolated country have been confirmed by South Korean government sources, although some of the aid group's figures have been disputed.

North Korea's official media have reported that "hundreds" were killed in the floods, without giving specific numbers.

Choson Sinbo, a newspaper published by a pro-North Korean association linked to the North, said this month that the floods killed at least 549 people and left 295 others missing.

Officials with South Korea's Red Cross and Unification Ministry, North Korea's economic cooperation office in Beijing and other agencies could not immediately be reached for comment Wednesday.

Representatives of Good Friends refused to elaborate on their report, saying they feared their sources would face government reprisal.

The agency said the floods destroyed more than 230 bridges and inundated hundreds of thousands of acres of farmland, further straining the North's ability to feed its population.

North Korea has relied on foreign food handouts since the mid-1990s, when famine caused by natural disasters and decades of mismanagement is believed to have killed up to 2 million people.

"Food prices are skyrocketing as food distribution has become nearly impossible" due to the floods, the agency said.

The agency also claimed the North, to curb possible unrest, prevented those left homeless from traveling.

A South Korean citizens' group said last week that North Korea had requested help from the South to cope with the devastation from the floods.
Link (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060816/ap_on_re_as/nkorea_floods)

Can you imagine that? You're homeless, have no food and the army keeps you in place, presumably at gunpoint?

The DPRK was rumored to have lost as many as 2.5 million dead in a mid-90's famine and now may lose a million or two more if these people can't be fed and can't move to areas with greater access to survival level food levels.

I can't imagine such a fate.

Communism, socialism and progessive political beliefs taken to their natural conclusion, such as this, kill.

Drocket
08-16-2006, 08:03 PM
Can you imagine that???You're homeless, have no food and the army keeps you in place, presumably at gunpoint?

So a lot like New Orleans, then?

Nathan Brazil
08-16-2006, 08:45 PM
Those fancy new Taepoe Dong II missiles they got should help them with this crisis enormously.

Mayberry
08-16-2006, 09:39 PM
So a lot like New Orleans, then? Are you serious? Neither has anything to do with the other. Anyone that stayed in New Orleans did so by their own choosing (except for invalids). They had plenty of warning. You could have WALKED to safe ground in the time they had. Sitting on your duff expecting Uncle Sam to come rescue you is ridiculous. Now because of all this, our coastal city governments are "trigger happy" calling for MANDATORY evacuations WAY too early, and now there is even talk of the governor being able to force evacuations before the city does. And of course, if you have children, failure to COMPLY with an evac order will result in fines/ criminal charges of child endangerment. Give me a break. I am intelligent enough to determine when and if I evacuate my family, as I have done successfully many times before. My weather forecast is generally more accurate than the dufus on TV. I knew Rita was going north of Corpus Christi before they did, and I had to watch it from an RV park in the hill country because I was forced from my home, a full 36 hours before I would even THINK of leaving. If my evacuation expenses were tax deductible, I'd leave at the drop of a hat, but they ain't.