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South Korea offers humanitarian aid to flood-hit North

It is unclear whether North Korea would accept South Korea’s proposal for help.

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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un riding in a black inflatable inspects a flood-hit area in Sinuiju city, North Phyongan province, North Korea

South Korea has offered to send aid supplies to North Korea to help the country recover from heavy rains and floods that submerged thousands of homes and huge swathes of farmland.

It is unclear whether North Korea would accept South Korea’s proposal for help.

Animosity between the war-divided rivals is at its highest in years over the North’s growing nuclear ambitions and the South’s expansion of combined military exercises with the US and Japan to counter the North’s threats.

South Korea’s Unification Ministry, which handles inter-Korean affairs, said the South was willing to swiftly provide supplies to address the “humanitarian difficulties” facing North Korean residents following the recent storms.

An aerial view of a flood-hit area in Sinuiju city, North Phyongan province, North Korea
A flood-hit area in Sinuiju city, North Phyongan province, North Korea (Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP)

The ministry in a statement urged North Korea’s Red Cross to respond promptly to its calls for discussions to determine the types and amounts of South Korean supplies and how to deliver them.

North Korea did not immediately respond to the South’s offer.

North Korean state media said on Wednesday that recent heavy rains left 4,100 houses, 7,410 acres of agricultural fields and numerous other public buildings, structures, roads and railways flooded in the northwestern city of Sinuiju and the neighbouring town of Uiju.

The North has not reported details about casualties.

In an emergency Politburo meeting on Wednesday in Sinuiju, leader Kim Jong Un asked authorities to “strictly punish” those who he said neglected their responsibilities for disaster prevention and caused “even the casualty that can not be allowed”, according to the North’s Korean Central News Agency.

North Korea has suspended virtually all co-operation and diplomacy with the South after its larger nuclear negotiations with the US derailed in 2019 over disagreements on lifting crippling US-led sanctions and the North’s steps to wind down its nuclear and missile programme.

The North had also rejected South Korea’s offers for help while battling a Covid-19 outbreak in 2022.

Tensions between the rivals have worsened since 2022 as Mr Kim used Russia’s war on Ukraine as a distraction to further accelerate the expansion of his nuclear arsenal and issued belligerent threats toward Washington and Seoul.

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