BFF-05 UN moves to unblock humanitarian aid to North Korea

419

ZCZC

BFF-05

NKOREA-NUCLEAR-AID-UN-DIPLOMACY

UN moves to unblock humanitarian aid to North Korea

UNITED NATIONS, United States, Aug 3, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – The UN Security
Council is poised to back a US proposal aimed at removing some of the hurdles
that tough sanctions on North Korea have thrown up in the way of delivering
humanitarian aid, according to documents obtained by AFP.

North Korea’s humanitarian crisis has left about 10 million people —
nearly half of the population – undernourished, according to UN officials,
who have reported a drop in food production last year.

UN resolutions specify that sanctions should not affect humanitarian aid
but relief organizations argue that strict trade and banking measures are
creating bureaucratic obstacles and slowing down the flow of vital supplies.

A US proposal put forward last month would provide clear instructions to
aid organizations and governments to apply for UN sanctions exemptions for
North Korea, according to the text seen by AFP.

After weeks of negotiations, the UN sanctions committee is expected to give
final approval to the new guidelines on Monday.

Once approved, a notice will be sent to the UN’s 193 member-states by the
committee “to provide a clear explanation of its comprehensive humanitarian
exemption mechanism” which will “improve the delivery of humanitarian
assistance to DPRK,” according to the documents.

The move comes as the United States is calling for maximum pressure to be
maintained against North Korea to compel Kim Jong Un to follow through on his
pledge to denuclearize the Korean peninsula.

After Russia and China urged the council to ease sanctions, US Ambassador
Nikki Haley said the United Nations should not do “one thing” until North
Korea takes action to dismantle its nuclear and missile programs.

A US official said the guidelines would ensure that “only critical, life-
saving humanitarian activities needed in North Korea can continue” and that
requests for exemptions will undergo a detailed review.

“The United States has been very clear that we will continue to enforce the
current sanctions until we achieve the final, fully verified,
denuclearization of North Korea,” said the official, speaking on background.

Asked about the new guidelines, a Dutch official, speaking as the chair of
the sanctions committee, said: “We want to make clear that this is about
easing the process, not about easing the sanctions.”

– Unintended consequences –

The Security Council last year adopted three rafts of sanctions targeting
North Korea’s economy in response to Pyongyang’s sixth nuclear test and a
series of ballistic missile launches.

Those sanctions ban North Korea’s exports of raw commodities while severely
restricting imports of a range of goods and supplies of oil — vital for the
country’s military.

The measures have had a chilling effect, with UN agencies and aid
organizations struggling to find partners willing to deal with the
bureaucratic red tape from the tight sanctions regime on North Korea.

“Economic sanctions are not supposed to have an impact on impartial
humanitarian action. But they do. They have unintended consequences,” said
Simon Schorno, the head of aid operations for the International Red Cross in
Asia.

“We haven’t seen the guidelines yet but we have been promised that they
will speed up procedures, exemptions, and generally make processes run
smoother. We’re hopeful that the guidelines will make carrying out our work
easier,” he said.

At a UN meeting last month, North Korean Deputy Ambassador Kim in Ryong
complained that deliveries of medical equipment such as X-ray machines, anti-
malaria insecticides and reproductive health kits had been held up for
months.

Kim said humanitarian aid was being “politicized” and argued that denying
assistance to North Koreans in need was a violation of human rights.

The United Nations is also facing a major funding shortfall for its aid
operations in North Korea.

An appeal for $111 million in funding for food, medicine and other basic
needs for six million North Koreans has so far raised only $12 million —
10.9 percent of the total amount needed.

Only four countries have come forward with donations: Switzerland, Sweden,
Canada and France.

BSS/AFP/MRI/0805 hrs