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North Korea:
Severe Storms Flash Floods kill 88
AFP
July 28, 2012 11:17PM
FLOODING across impoverished North Korea this month has killed 88
people, left tens of thousands homeless and devastated swathes of
farmland.
A week of floods "caused by typhoon and downpour ... claimed big
human and material losses", Pyongyang's official news agency said.
The new death toll was a dramatic increase from the figure of
eight reported Wednesday.
A total of 134 people were injured and almost 63,000 people were
left homeless by the floods, which started on July 18, the Korean
Central News Agency (KCNA) reported, with thousands of houses
damaged or destroyed.
The biggest loss of human life was in two counties of South
Pyongan province, which were hit by torrential rains on Monday and
Tuesday, it said.
More than 30,000 hectares of land for growing crops was "washed
away and buried" or "submerged", KCNA said, a potential blow for a
state that is beset by persistent severe food shortages.
With rugged terrain and outmoded agricultural practices, the
country faces serious difficulties in feeding its 24 million
people. Hundreds of thousands died during a famine in the mid to
late-1990s.
UN agencies, after a visit to the North, estimated last November
that three million people would need food aid in 2012.
Some 300 public buildings and 60 factories were damaged in the
floods, as well as large stretches of road, KCNA said.
State media reported earlier this week that 60 flood victims were
rescued thanks to a helicopter urgently sent by leader Kim
Jong-Un.
The victims, including children and women, were trapped on Monday
on a hillock in the northwest of the country after a river flooded
due to heavy rain, the official news agency said.
"Isolated incommunicado, they did not find a way out, in panic at
rising water. At that time a helicopter appeared," it said.
"After receiving an urgent report, the dear respected Kim Jong-Un
issued an emergency sortie order to a unit of the Air Force of the
Korean People's Army."
After decades of deforestation, the impoverished North Korea is
particularly vulnerable to flooding.
Dozens were killed or injured by a storm and torrential rain in
the North in June and July last year. Thousands were also made
homeless and large areas of farmland were flooded.
The United States reached a deal on February 29 this year to offer
North Korea badly needed food aid in return for a freeze on
nuclear and missile tests.
But it rescinded the plan after the North's failed rocket launch
in April, seen by the United States and its allies as an attempted
ballistic missile test.
The North has been developing nuclear weapons for decades and
staged two nuclear tests in 2006 and 2009.