产品展示
  • 10寸车载低音炮重低音改装超薄座位下自带功放有源全频汽车音响
  • 上海大众08-11款老朗逸中央扶手箱总成带盖中间手托箱杂物盒原装
  • 13-22款三菱欧蓝德后备箱遮物帘隔板尾箱汽车专用品改装内饰配件
  • 大众新捷达宝来POLO朗逸速腾途安高尔夫途观原装电瓶瓦尔塔蓄电池
  • 生化危机车贴保护伞个性搞笑汽车贴纸遮划痕贴车身贴车门创意车饰
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

产品中心

N. Korea ramps up efforts to minimize damage from heavy rains

2024-06-06 22:03:56      点击:945
North Korean Premier Kim Tok-hun,<strong></strong> center, inspects a farm in South Hwanghae Province amid the monsoon season in this July 17 photo carried by North Korea's Central News Agency. Yonhap
North Korean Premier Kim Tok-hun, center, inspects a farm in South Hwanghae Province amid the monsoon season in this July 17 photo carried by North Korea's Central News Agency. Yonhap

North Korea has ramped up efforts to minimize damage to crops from the monsoon season, with its premier inspecting farms in several counties to call attention to grain protection, state media said Monday.

Kim Tok-hun called for "scientifically" managing crops and mobilizing all means for weeding during his latest visits to farms in some regions, including South Hwanghae Province and South Pyongan Province, according to the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA).

He instructed officials to better manage drainage facilities and seawalls with "responsibility" to brace for abnormal weather, such as heavy rains and typhoons, it added.

North Korea has put its top priority on crop protection in the face of a food crisis that has been aggravated by its COVID-19-related border closure and global sanctions on its nuclear and missile programs.

Downpours could be devastating to the North, as it is vulnerable to flash flooding due to poor irrigation and deforestation.

South Korea's unification ministry said there has been no known damage from heavy rains in the North and repeated its call on Pyongyang to give prior notice if it releases water from dams near the inter-Korean border.

"We once again request North Korea to take sincere measures to prevent its inaction from causing damage (to border areas)," ministry spokesperson Koo Byoung-sam said in a press briefing.

In October 2009, North Korea agreed to notify the South in advance when it plans to release water from dams, following an accident that killed six South Koreans after the North discharged water from the Hwanggang Dam without notice.

But last year, North Korea released water from the Hwanggang Dam without notifying Seoul, prompting the ministry to voice regret over the North's action. (Yonhap)


Human rights chief meets UN official, urges resolving N. Koreans' repatriation
N. Korean high schools set to adopt elective course system