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North Korea’s Kim visits farms hit by typhoon amid food lack

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HUNGRY NORTH. This undated picture released from North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency on Friday shows North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un (second from left) inspecting restoration activities at a farm in Anbyon-gun, Kangwon province, which was recently damaged by a typhoon. AFP

Seoul—North Korean leader Kim Jong Un visited typhoon-hit farms and oversaw military helicopters spraying pesticides to salvage key crops, state media said Friday.

Tropical Storm Khanun made landfall last week in the North, a country where natural disasters can be devastating due to weak infrastructure and widespread deforestation, which increases vulnerability to flooding.

The visit came hours after the UN Security Council accused the North Korean regime of spending heavily on its nuclear arms program while its people go hungry and lack basic necessities.

On Thursday, South Korea’s spy agency told lawmakers that around 240 North Koreans had starved to death between January and July this year, member of parliament Yoo Sang-bum told reporters after the briefing.

Kim visited rice paddy fields in Kangwon Province that had been flooded by the typhoon, but predicted a “complete recovery from the damage” thanks to the patriotism of soldiers who helped salvage the crop, the Korean Central News Agency reported.

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KCNA images showed Kim, in a white jacket and trousers, squatting at the edge of the paddy field while military helicopters sprayed crops.

The North Korean leader said the rapid response of the military to the typhoon damage had been “performing a miracle of recovering flooded farmland in a brief span of time.”

On Thursday, Seoul’s spy agency said people were starving in the North, with the country’s economy trapped in a “vicious cycle” with negative growth for three years from 2020 to 2022.

The North’s domestic product experienced a significant drop of 12 percent in 2022 compared to 2016, the agency told lawmakers during a briefing, according to lawmaker Yoo.

The number of North Koreans said to have died due to hunger between January to July was more than double the recent annual average of 110.

The North has periodically been hit by famine, with hundreds of thousands of people dying—estimates range into the millions—in the mid-1990s.

The country held a high-level party meeting in February to specifically address food shortages and agricultural problems.

As the storm approached the peninsula, the North had carried out “a dynamic campaign to cope with disastrous abnormal climate” and called for measures to minimize damage to the country’s economic output, state media reported.

Earlier this week, Kim berated “irresponsible” officials for failing to prevent damage from the storm. AFP

Despite its difficult economic situation, Pyongyang has conducted a record-breaking series of weapons tests this year, including its first solid-fuel ballistic missile — which experts say is a major technological breakthrough. AFP

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