Military officers in North Korea have pocketed and sold off supplies of
South Korean-donated milk powder that was intended for babies but
ordered by the Pyongyang regime to be distributed to undernourished
soldiers, according to North Korean sources.
Private South
Korean aid groups had provided the “Baby Love” brand powdered milk as
part of humanitarian assistance to the impoverished country but North
Korean authorities earlier this year handed them out as rations for
undernourished troops mobilized under a wartime alert, the sources said.
Military
officers secretly diverted the supplies, selling them through brokers
to local markets instead of distributing them to the soldiers, the
sources said.
In the first few months of the year, supplies of
the powdered milk coming from the military flooded local markets, where
they were a sought-after item, one source in North Hamgyong province
said.
“The South Korean Baby Love dry milk which was provided to
the military by the North Korean authorities was the best-selling item
at the local market until April,” the source said, speaking on condition
of anonymity.
“When the North Korean authorities provided it
for soldiers, the local market overflowed with Baby Love,” the source
said this month, adding that the infant formula was no longer available
on the shelves.
Expired supplies
The powdered
milk, made by South Korea’s Namyang Daily Products Co. Ltd., came in
four different types and in 700 and 800 gram (26 and 28 ounce) packages.
A source in Yanggang province said many of the packages sold in
local markets had expiration dates of 2009 and 2010 on them, though
some had had the dates removed.
Sources said the powdered milk
originally came from South Korean aid organization, who have provided
food assistance targeting groups in North Korea most vulnerable to
malnutrition, including with a 20-ton shipment of powdered milk sent by
the Red Cross in 2010 for infants and other shipments delivered to
orphanages.
Aid from South Korea has been cut back over the
past several years amid tensions on the peninsula over North Korea’s
nuclear program—tensions that hit a peak this spring following
Pyongyang’s December 2012 missile launch and February 2013 nuclear test.
North Korea ramped up its war threats against South Korea
earlier this year and, under a wartime special alert issued at the end
of last year, mobilized soldiers and sent them to live in tough
conditions in underground tunnels and caves, sources said.
'Wartime reserve' rations
The
supplies of powdered milk that ended up for sale at local markets were
supposed to have been sent as special “wartime reserve” rations to
soldiers who were going hungry while stationed in tough conditions
following the alert, the source in Yanggang province said.
Authorities
had instructed the formula be sent to units living in underground
tunnels and caves and those along the Military Demarcation Line border
with South Korea, he said.
“Because soldiers’ physical condition
got worse, the North Korean authorities provided them with the powdered
milk as ‘wartime reserve’ rations,” he said.
Popular item
While
it was still available on the black market, the milk formula was a
popular item despite its overdue expiration dates because it was made in
South Korea, the source in North Hamgyong province said.
Customers
bought the Baby Love powdered milk at double the price of Chinese
brands brought in through the thriving cross-border smuggling trade with
North Korea’s eastern neighbor, the source said.
“Even though
[800 gram packages of] Chinese dry milk sells for about 70 Chinese yuan
[U.S. $11] and the price of Baby Love is 140 yuan [U.S. $23] at local
markets, people were eager to buy the latter because they know Baby Love
is a South Korean product,” the source said.
North Korea has
relied on international handouts to feed its people since the
mid-1990's, with its underage population suffering from years of
malnutrition.
International food aid to North Korea has been
drastically cut over the past several years amid tensions over the
communist state's nuclear and missile programs.
Reported by Sung Hui Moon for RFA’s Korean Service. Translated by Hyosun Kim. Written in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.
Source: http://tinyurl.com/ma99syp
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