Tag: Humanitarian

  • Outside Information: One of the Keys to Empowering North Korean Citizens as Agents of Change

    Outside Information: One of the Keys to Empowering North Korean Citizens as Agents of Change

    The opacity of North Korean society—with outsiders having limited access to the country. North Korean citizens are often only seen as the victims—powerless and disconnected from the rest of the world. Because of this perception, decades of international efforts to engage and access the restrictive state have neglected to consider its people as a key partner in effecting change inside North Korea.

    However, evidence over the past two decades has shown that the North Korean people have survived poverty and repression by becoming more independent from the regime, claiming greater agency over their own lives. Recognizing the people are an integral part of the solution to security, human rights and humanitarian challenges in North Korea, the international community needs to do more than just stand on the side of North Korean citizens; it needs to empower them so that that they can play a key role in holding the regime accountable.

    https://www.38north.org/2023/06/outside-information-one-of-the-keys-to-empowering-north-korean-citizens-as-agents-of-change

  • North Korea: Residents tell BBC of neighbors starving to death

    North Korea: Residents tell BBC of neighbors starving to death

    People in North Korea have told the BBC food is so scarce their neighbours have starved to death.

    Exclusive interviews gathered inside the world’s most isolated state suggest the situation is the worst it has been since the 1990s, experts say.

    The government sealed its borders in 2020, cutting off vital supplies. It has also tightened control over people’s lives, our interviewees say.

    Pyongyang told the BBC it has always prioritised its citizens’ interests.

    The BBC has secretly interviewed three ordinary people in North Korea, with the help of the organisation Daily NK which operates a network of sources in the country. They told us that since the border closure, they are afraid they will either starve to death or be executed for flouting the rules. It is extremely rare to hear from people living in North Korea.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-65881803