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Many people are starving to death. The
situation is worse than the famine during
the Arduous March. Since three years ago,
the food supply situation has continually
deteriorated. The waiting area at the
train station in Sariwon, North Hwanghae
Province has become overrun with male
and female kotchebi (homeless) of all
ages.h (End of March, woman in her 40fs
from South Hwanghae Province)
gIn the county of [redacted] in South
Hwanghae where I live, malnutrition is
spreading among the farmers. The farming
industry is not going well at all. Incidences
of eating human flesh have occurred in
the region.h (End of March, Male farmer
in his 30fs from South Hwanghae Province)
gI directly asked the top agricultural
official in South Hwanghae Province. He
resentfully responded that ethe lives
of farmers are really bad. The military
takes as much of the harvest as they want
for military supplies. The military completely
ignores the quality of life of the farmers.fh
(Beginning of March, Rimjin-gang reporter
Gu Gwang-ho while visiting the region
for interviews)
gSomeone starves to death everyday in
Haeju city of South Hwanghae Province.
I heard this a few days ago directly from
someone who came from the region. They
said the food supply in North Hamkyung
Province is comparatively much better
than that in North Hwanghae Province.
In North Hamkyung Province, only two meals
a day is not uncommon, but I was surprised
to learn how bad things were in North
Hwanghae Province, which is noted for
its rice production.h (Beginning of May,
North Hamkyung Province, Rimjin-gang reporter
Ha Su-ryon)
In this way, those living in North Korea
provide a growing body of evidence that
the people of Hwanghae are facing a crisis.
According to these statements, it is not
an exaggeration to say that by March at
the latest, the worsening of the food
supply reached the level of a humanitarian
crisis.
In addition, even after the 100 anniversary
celebrations of Kim Il-Sung on April 15th
and the governmentfs internal and external
appeals of gcelebrations outpour for prosperous
North Koreah, there are no signs of a
turnaround of the situation.
Information about the food crisis in Hwanghae
is beginning to trickle out of other media
outlets and humanitarian support groups.
An April 4th article by American RFA (Radio
Free Asia) reported that well-informed
local sources are attesting that gfarming
villages in South Hwanghae Province have
already exhausted their food suppliesh
and gdue to a lack of food in one village,
children are kicking their sick parents
out of the house, and other related acts
that are difficult to speak of are occurring.h
The Tokyo Shimbun (newspaper) reported
on April 21st that gaccording to North
Korean sources, from December 2011 until
April 2012, 20,000 people have starved
to death in South Hwanghae Province.h
The article also reports that glocal Workersf
Party officials requested support from
the central government but it is unclear
if the situation has improvedh and that
gin some regions, over 1,000 people starved
to death in one day; these conditions
are historically the worst so far.h
In addition, in an April 25th newsletter,
the South Korean humanitarian NGO gGood
Friendsh reported that according to statements
by Workersf Party officials, gin North
and South Hwanghae Provinces, even grass
does not remain (as it has been eaten).
The conditions are worse than those during
the Arduous March.h
This is not simply a gfood shortageh
Why is there a food shortage crisis occurring
in the breadbasket provinces of Hwanghae?
The purpose of this report is to suggest
an answer to that question. As the Hwanghae
provinces are the farthest from China,
it is difficult to come in contact with
the people from the region. Due to this
fact, there is a lack of information which
constrains our ability to fully analyze
the situation. However, Asia Press feels
that the causes of the gfamine in the
breadbasketh given the internal conditions
after Kim Jong-ilfs death, Hwanghaefs
location, and North Korean economic conditions,
are the following three points:
1. Land usurpation from farming villages:
The economic structure allows national
and municipal governments to exploit and
usurp land from farming villages
2. Systemic stagnation in agriculture:
Last yearfs flooding, the limits of collective
farming, and rampant fraud and corruption
are problems
3. Politically-made disaster: The strain
of stricter political control and increased
wasteful spending after the death of Kim
Jung-il is also a contributing factor
We hope to begin publishing installments
and wish that our analysis will help in
understanding the current situation in
North Korean society, and when the international
community begins to deal with this food
shortage crisis, these reports will be
some of the materials used.
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PART 2
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