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NKorea faces worst drought in 15 years; UN says China must stop repatriating refugees
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) July 21, 2017


UN envoy urges China stop repatriating N.Korea refugees
Seoul (AFP) July 21, 2017 - The UN's human rights envoy to North Korea on Friday urged China to stop repatriating escaped defectors to the North, where they face harsh punishment, torture or execution.

Tomas Ojea Quintana, the UN's Special Rapporteur on human rights in North Korea, said he was "alarmed by a surge in detentions and forced repatriations of North Koreans" who are caught in China after making it across the border.

Over the past few months he had shared these concerns with the Chinese authorities, recalling their obligations under the 1951 Refugees convention as well as relevant parts of the UN system, he said.

"I urge them again to address this problem by giving special protection to DPRK (North Korea) citizens who transit through China's territory", he said at a press conference in Seoul.

If forcibly returned, North Korean defectors are at risk of persecution, arbitrary detention, torture or other ill-treatment, enforced disappearance and execution, according to Human Rights Watch.

"Women continue to be especially vulnerable to violent practices when they are sent back. Strip-searches, cavity inspections, verbal abuse and sexual violence are still known to happen in holding centres near the border with China," Quintana said.

Human Rights Watch said in June, citing activists and family members, that at least 51 North Koreans had been detained in China since July last year, including a baby born in detention, four children and three elderly women in frail health.

Based on their information, the rights watchdog said it believed that at least 13 of the North Koreans had already been forcibly returned, while the others remained in China for now.

Quintana made his statement at the end of a five-day trip to South Korea, taken as he prepares his annual report to the UN on North Korea's human rights situation in October.

During the visit to Seoul, Quintana also met several men and women who left the North this year.

Interviews with them confirmed that "corruption is so widespread that it has become customary" for people to pay officials for travelling and receiving medical treatment, he said.

North Korea is facing severe food shortages after being hit by its worst drought in more than 15 years, the UN said, calling for urgent food imports to stop children going hungry.

A severe lack of rainfall in the first half of this year has badly damaged vital harvests in a country where malnutrition is already widespread, according to the report by the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

Seasonal rainfall has dropped below 2001 levels and could cause "a sharp deterioration in food security conditions of a large part of the population," said Vincent Martin, FAO Representative in China and North Korea.

"Immediate interventions are needed to support affected farmers and prevent undesirable coping strategies for the most vulnerable, such as reducing daily food intakes," Martin added.

The North has periodically been hit by famine in recent decades, with hundreds of thousands of people dying in the mid-to-late 1990s during a period known in the country as the Arduous March.

Even in good years, more than 40 percent of the population is categorised by the UN as undernourished.

But rainfall in the first half of this year has been far below the levels of 2001, when a particularly bad drought caused the country's cereal crop production to hit unprecedented lows.

In some key agricultural provinces, rainfall from April to June was 50 per cent below average.

Mismanagement is widely blamed for food shortages in an impoverished country, while critics point to the nation's vast expenditure on its nuclear and missile programmes, at the cost of investment in agriculture.

International food aid, especially from South Korea and the United States, has been drastically cut over the past decade amid soaring tensions over the missile programmes.

Frequent floods and droughts, as well as a lack of quality soil, seeds, fertiliser and equipment, are also to blame.

The FAO, which maintains a permanent office in North Korea, said that more than 50,000 hectares of farmland have been severely affected by this year's prolonged dry spell, particularly crops of rice, maize, potatoes and soybean.

Production of 2017 early season crops has plunged by over 30 percent, from the previous year's level of 450 000 tonnes to 310, 000 tonnes, the FAO report said.

Women, children and the elderly are particularly vulnerable to food shortages, with undernutrition a major cause of maternal and child mortality. Some 28 percent of North Korean children under the age of five are stunted.

NUKEWARS
S. Korea seeks rare talks with North to ease military tensions
Seoul (AFP) July 17, 2017
South Korea on Monday offered to hold rare military talks with North Korea, aiming to ease tensions after Pyongyang tested its first intercontinental ballistic missile. The offer of talks, the first since South Korea elected dovish President Moon Jae-In, came as the Red Cross in Seoul proposed a separate meeting to discuss reunions of families separated by the 1950-53 Korean War. The Sou ... read more

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