BBC NEWS Americas Africa Europe Middle East South Asia Asia Pacific Chinese Vietnamese Burmese Thai Indonesian
BBCi NEWS   SPORT   WEATHER   WORLD SERVICE   A-Z INDEX     

BBC News World Edition
 You are in: Asia-Pacific  
News Front Page
Africa
Americas
Asia-Pacific
Europe
Middle East
South Asia
UK
Business
Entertainment
Science/Nature
Technology
Health
-------------
Talking Point
-------------
Country Profiles
In Depth
-------------
Programmes
-------------
BBC Sport
BBC Weather
SERVICES
-------------
LANGUAGES
EDITIONS
Thursday, 20 June, 2002, 12:16 GMT 13:16 UK
North Koreans 'forced to eat grass'
North Korean school children eat foods supplied by the UN World Food Programme.
North Koreans have relied on food aid for years
North Koreans are turning to grass and seaweed as means of sustenance in the face of a severe shortage of food aid in the impoverished country.


Teachers say attendance at school is down because children are out collecting wild foods

WFP representative Gerald Bourke
A representative of the UN's World Food Programme, who has just returned from a visit to North Korea, said people were abandoning work and school to forage for sustenance.

"You see people of all ages going up into the hillsides with bags and sacks and coming back down with grasses. You see women on the seashores scavenging for edible seaweeds," said WFP's Gerald Bourke.

The agency has been forced to suspend cereal rations to more than one million people until at least August because of a lack of international donations.

Aid cut

In May, it had received only half the donations it needed and as a result cut its food distribution to 675,000 schoolchildren and 350,000 elderly people in order to be able to continue feeding those who were most vulnerable.

Those people not receiving aid were reliant on the inadequate government rations which most North Koreans get, Mr Bourke said.

Feeding North Korea
More than half the population is malnourished
45% of children under five are chronically malnourished
Reliant on food aid since 1995

They would each receive an average of 350 grammes per day - half the World Health Organisation's minimum recommended daily food intake.

"Teachers say attendance at school is down because children are out collecting wild foods," said Mr Bourke, adding that teachers themselves were also taking time off for the same purpose.

He said that he had asked a class of third graders, in the eastern coastal city of Kimchaek, how many had tasted meat in the last month.

"There were 25 pupils and only three of them had had meat in the last month," said Mr Bourke.

Lack of protein

"The basic staple at present is maize. Very occasionally an egg, a little bit of vegetable and that's it. No meat, no rice, no food. Very little protein."

Mr Bourke said that the slow donations were due to reasons including "donor fatigue", competing demands in war-torn Afghanistan and exasperation with Pyongyang's inertia over economic reforms.

He said that while additional food has been pledged since May, because of the time needed to transport it, the WFP would not be able to resume feeding those people without aid until August at the earliest.

And he warned that if further donations were not pledged immediately, any resumption in food distribution might only be temporary, and eventually, even more people might be cut off.


Nuclear tensions

Inside North Korea

Divided peninsula

TALKING POINT
See also:

09 Apr 02 | Asia-Pacific
05 Apr 02 | Asia-Pacific
04 Mar 02 | Asia-Pacific
10 Jun 01 | Asia-Pacific
03 Apr 02 | Asia-Pacific
28 Mar 02 | Asia-Pacific
Internet links:


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites

Links to more Asia-Pacific stories are at the foot of the page.


E-mail this story to a friend

Links to more Asia-Pacific stories

© BBC ^^ Back to top

News Front Page | Africa | Americas | Asia-Pacific | Europe | Middle East |
South Asia | UK | Business | Entertainment | Science/Nature |
Technology | Health | Talking Point | Country Profiles | In Depth |
Programmes