Tuesday, August 14, 2012

NKoreans recount terror when flood engulfed hamlet

Displaced North Korean women, left homeless by July flooding, walk among temporary tents set up in their destroyed neighborhood in Ungok, North Korea on Monday, Aug. 13, 2012. Floods killed at least 169 North Koreans nationwide and destroyed tens of thousands of homes. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)

Displaced North Korean women, left homeless by July flooding, walk among temporary tents set up in their destroyed neighborhood in Ungok, North Korea on Monday, Aug. 13, 2012. Floods killed at least 169 North Koreans nationwide and destroyed tens of thousands of homes. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)

North Koreans work to build a sandbag wall on Monday, Aug 13, 2012 as they try to repair damage brought by July flooding in Songchon County, North Korea. Floods killed at least 169 North Koreans nationwide and destroyed tens of thousands of homes. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)

A North Korean boy and soldiers ride in a truck in a riverbed during near Songchon County, North Korea on Monday, Aug 13, 2012. Floods killed at least 169 North Koreans nationwide and destroyed tens of thousands of homes. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)

North Korean soldiers try to drive their military truck from a riverbed to a road during operations to help victims of flooding near Songchon County, North Korea on Monday, Aug. 13, 2012. Floods killed at least 169 North Koreans nationwide and destroyed tens of thousands of homes. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)

A North Korean man stands near his makeshift shelter, set up in a riverbed on Monday, Aug 13, 2012, as he and others from his village work to rebuild the road and riverbank that was destroyed by July flooding in Songchon County, North Korea. Floods killed at least 169 North Koreans nationwide and destroyed tens of thousands of homes. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)

(AP) ? Tears rolled down Ri Hyang Ran's cheeks Monday as she recalled her terror the night floods engulfed her farming-and-mining hamlet northeast of North Korea's capital, Pyongyang.

As the rain pounded down, town officials went door to door hustling residents out of their homes in the middle of the night. Still in her pajamas, Ri said she only had time to grab two things: her portraits of North Korea's late leaders Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il.

Huddling with her neighbors in the mountains high above the village, she could see nothing in the darkness but the sheets of rain that pummeled Songchon county on the night of July 23.

"But I could hear the sound of walls collapsing, and it was terrifying," she told The Associated Press, wiping her tears away with a towel. When dawn broke, she discovered that her home for the past two decades was gone, swept away by the torrent of water that tore through this part of South Phyongan province.

The threat of floods is nothing new to the area, a valley where four rivers converge. But this year's rains were the worst in recent memory, villagers said Monday, many standing on the rocky dirt where their homes once stood.

The floods not only killed at least 169 North Koreans nationwide and destroyed tens of thousands of homes, according to official accounts, but also left huge swaths of farmland submerged in water. Across the county, corn, rice and soybean plants already damaged from a protracted drought in May and June lay withered and stunted just a month before harvesting season is set to begin.

Mountainous North Korea already struggles to feed its people. A U.N. report in June said some two-thirds of the country's 24 million people are coping with food shortages, with hunger dire in some areas. Emergency food aid shipments started last week, the World Food Program said.

The prospect of flooding strikes fear in North Koreans, who well remember when heavy rains in the mid-1990s triggered deadly landslides. An ensuing famine killed hundreds of thousands of people, a period North Koreans call "the Arduous March."

New leader Kim Jong Un addressed land management in the first official treatise issued after he took power following the death of his father Kim Jong Il in December, calling for officials to shore up rivers and reforest mountains denuded of trees in decades past.

Along the rutted roads to Songchon county, soldiers and workers were carrying boulders, sometimes one by one, to rebuild levees damaged by the floods and repair collapsed roadways that have left villages such as Ungok District cut off from the relief and repair work. The AP was among several foreign media organizations taken by the North's Red Cross Society to the village on a requested reporting trip Monday. The journalists were not escorted by government minders.

Ri, who lost her home in Ungok District, said she stayed with neighbors until the Red Cross came last week with emergency supplies: blankets, a hand mirror, a camping kitchen set, medicine, a water jug and a tarp that she draped over a rustic wooden frame made of branches. The box that the goods came in served as a dresser; her husband's clothes hung on a clothesline outside.

"As long as they can reopen the roads and bring in cement, we can start rebuilding ? and my home really was grand," she said, dissolving into tears. She said she wishes she had saved family photos and the medals her sons won during their military service.

North Koreans are taught from childhood to revere the Kim family, and portraits of the two late leaders are prominent in every home. It is not unusual for them to be protected with more care than family photos.

Ri said she had only a split second to leave and grabbed the portraits off the wall as she fled. She said they are being stored at her husband's workplace for safekeeping.

A few tents down, Pak Un Su sat hugging her 5-year-old daughter as she recalled the terror of that night.

"I came rushing out in my shorts," she said, sobbing. "You have no idea how scared my child was. She was yelling 'Mother, run faster! The rain's coming down hard!"

Next to her on the navy blue blanket provided by the Red Cross, she had set up a temporary kitchen: a bag of potatoes, squash in a green plastic bowl, utensils washed and stored in a red container. Outside, a tin pot of cornmeal noodles sat on a makeshift campfire.

"My heart hurts when I think about how we're going to live without a home," she said. "We have to hurry and rebuild."

Twenty people from Songchon county died in the floods, including seven from Ungok District, and 5,000 lost their homes, said Kim Sok Chol, chairman of the county branch of North Korea's Red Cross Society.

The once-bustling village was like a ghost town Monday, with collapsed homes on one side and a line of makeshift lean-to tents on the other. As music played on loudspeakers, a dog dozed in the wreckage of one home while children darted around the charred walls of another that had lost its roof. A child's shoe and a mitten peeped out from a pile of rocks; a drawing of a girl lay abandoned on the ground.

"All the men have left to help fix the roads. The only people left here are the aunties," said former miner Ri Ung Ho, as he stood on the dirt patch where his house once stood. "I'm keeping watch over them."

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Associated Press writer Jon Chol Jin contributed to this report.

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Follow AP's Korea bureau chief at www.twitter.com/newsjean.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-08-13-NKorea-Flood%20Damage/id-1f7602678208495893cc9256ff420e23

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