WFP chief senses N. Korea ‘turning a new page’

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LONDON: The head of the UN’s World Food Programme said Saturday it appeared North Korea was “turning a new page in history”, following a four-day visit to the country.

David Beasley said he had enjoyed unprecedented access to the secretive state, spending two days in the capital Pyongyang and two in the countryside, accompanied by government minders.

He said there was undoubtedly a hunger problem in North Korea but it was not on the scale of the 1990s famine.

North Korea’s economy has been devastated by its own mismanagement and crippling international sanctions over its nuclear weapons programme.

However, its relations with the rest of the world are rapidly changing, with leader Kim Jong Un on a charm offensive.

Beasley told BBC radio that North Korea’s leaders had a “sense of optimism”.

Dialogue brokered by Seoul has seen US-North Korea relations go from trading personal insults and threats of war last year to a summit between Kim and President Donald Trump due in Singapore on June 12.

“There is a sense of turning a new page in history,” said Bealsey, 61, the former governor of South Carolina. He described the farming he witnessed outside the capital, in a country where only around a fifth of the land is arable.

“One of the most powerful things that I saw was out in the countryside – it’s spring, they’re planting – there’s not mechanisation. You’ve got oxen pulling ploughs, men and women in the fields,” said Beasley.

“It’s very structured, very organised, every foot and inch of dirt is being toiled with rakes and hoes and shovels, and they’re literally planting crops up to the edge of the road, down embankments, using every available space because it is a land that’s mostly mountainous.”

North Korea has periodically been hit by famine, and hundreds of thousands of people died – estimates range into the millions – in the mid-1990s.

A United Nations-led report in March said chronic food shortages and malnutrition were widespread. — AFP