Caritas warns of severe food shortages in North Korea
(January 05, 2012) While world attention focuses on the death of North Korean leader
Kim Jong-Il, Caritas urges the international community not to neglect millions of
hungry people in the isolated Asian nation. Floods, a harsh winter, poor farming
infrastructure in North Korea and rising global food prices have left two-thirds of
the 24.5 million people without enough to eat. Caritas says aid is desperately needed
in the country, but North Koreans risk becoming victims of political tensions on the
peninsula. Caritas members including Caritas Internationalis Secretary General Michel
Roy recently discussed in Seoul the worsening crisis in North Korea and how best to
respond to the needs of the people in the politically isolated country. “Charity
does not know any borders,” said Archbishop Osvaldo Padilla, Apostolic Nuncio to Korea,
at the meeting. “In all these difficult realities of human pain and suffering, Caritas
Korea continues to demonstrate, practically and effectively, that we are all one family.”
Michel Roy said: “The message from within the country is that the people of North
Korea are in dire need of food aid. Malnutrition has left children, pregnant women
and the elderly so weakened that when a crisis hits its impact is even more dangerous.
The humanitarian imperative is that the ordinary people of North Korea receive aid
and are not held hostage by the geopolitics.” Catholics in South Korea rallied to
help their neighbours in 2011.