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Flash floods caused by
heavy rain killed 40 people in North Korea's northeastern border area over the
weekend, the International Federation of the Red Cross said Wednesday. Particularly heavy rain
accompanying Typhoon Goni battered the Rason special economic zone where the borders
of North Korea, Russia and China converge, the IFRC said in a statement.
The
floods affected more than 11,000 people, with 153 houses completely destroyed
and 849 houses damaged, it said, adding its report was based on information
provided by North Korean authorities.
AFP report continues:
The
federation said the North's Red Cross Society had quickly sent an 80-member
team to assist evacuation and hand out non-food relief goods in cooperation
with IFRC officials.
These
included tarpaulins, family tents, cooking sets, water containers, shelter
toolkits, quilts, hygiene kits and water purification tablets.
"More
rain is forecast in (North Korea) and many disaster-prone areas in other
provinces are likely to be affected," Khaled Masud Ahmed, a IFRC disaster
management delegate in North Korea, said in the statement.
The
North's official KCNA news agency confirmed heavy rain caused 40 "human
casualties" in Rason and inundated large swathes of farmland.
Up
to 250 mm (9.8 inches) pummelled Rason from early Saturday to late Sunday,
destroying 5,240 houses, 99 public service buildings and 51 railway sections,
KCNA said.
In
June the impoverished country said its main rice-growing provinces had been
badly damaged by what state media described as the worst drought for a century.
Poor
weather makes it harder for the communist state to feed its 24 million people
as it lacks advanced agricultural technology and infrastructure.
Decades of deforestation
and decrepit infrastructure have left it vulnerable to floods.
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