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China-Japan-Koreas
N. Korea Denies Aid Trucks From South
2004-04-27
DANDONG, China April 26 — North Korea balked Monday at opening its heavily armed border to relief trucks from rival South Korea, even as international aid groups sought more help for thousands injured or made homeless by a massive train explosion. As a cold rain fell on the devastated community of Ryongchon, relief workers warned that more food, blankets and medicine were needed immediately in the impoverished nation.
Unless they come from the evil South.
Video released by the United Nations showed patients squeezed two to a bed in shabby hospitals, with compresses over their eyes and facial injuries from being struck by a wave of glass, rubble and heat in Thursday's blast. Aid workers said North Korea was short of even basic equipment like sutures and intravenous drips, and that donated goods were being used up as quickly as they could be supplied.

The Red Cross distributed a three-month supply of antibiotics, anesthetics and bandages to North Korean hospitals over the weekend, but "according to the hospitals, they have already used these medical supplies and have requested more," said Niels Juel, an official for the agency who is based in Beijing. "The overall health system ... is very strained," said Brendan McDonald, a U.N. aid coordinator in Pyongyang, the North Korean capital. Electrical power and water supplies are "all inadequate," he said.
I want to make a snarky remark about the 'worker's paradise', then I think of the thousands of ordinary folks who didn't bring this on themselves.
The Red Cross launched an emergency appeal Monday for $1.25 million in aid for North Korea. "Some families have lost all their belongings," Juel said. "Also, the water and sanitation system in that area would need to be restored."

Days after the catastrophe, details were still only trickling out from the secretive, communist North. Aid workers who first arrived in Ryongchon on Saturday described seeing huge craters, twisted railroad tracks and scorched buildings. Nearly half of the dead were children in a school torn apart by the blast, and the disaster left thousands of residents homeless, the aid workers said. One worker who toured a hospital in the nearby city of Sinuiju said that injured children lay on filing cabinets because there weren't enough beds. The hospital was "short of just about everything," said Tony Banbury, Asia regional director for the U.N. World Food Program, after his visit Sunday.

U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell said Monday the United States will give financial assistance to North Korea in response to the disaster but gave no further details. The Bush administration is working with the United Nations and "we will be making an offer," Powell said.
For which we'll get no credit.
Japan, Russia, Australia are among the countries that have already offered to send supplies. Neighboring China dispatched truckloads of tents, blankets and food across its border over the weekend. But North Korea's border with South Korea remained sealed. At a cargo depot near Seoul, Red Cross trucks loaded with medical supplies, bottled water, clothes and packages of instant noodles were awaiting the green light. But North Korea was hesitant Monday about allowing them across the Demilitarized Zone that has separated the two Koreas for over half a century. The Pyongyang government also didn't respond to a South Korean offer to unload ships carrying relief goods at ports near Ryongchon.

Officials from North and South Korea planned to meet in the northern city of Kaesong on Tuesday to discuss relief operations. "It is most important to have the relief goods arrive in the site of the explosion as quickly as possible," said South Korean Prime Minister Goh Kun. "By land or by sea, a quick means of transportation should be found."
How 'bout Kimmie's train>
North Korea's Communist government relaxed its normally intense secrecy as it pleaded for international help. It has blamed the disaster on human error, saying the cargo of oil and chemicals ignited when workers knocked the train cars against the Dear Leader's noggin power lines.
Posted by:Steve White

#9  Hush We're fine go away I'm still the wind.
Posted by: Col Flagg   2004-04-27 8:24:46 PM  

#8  sooo...has anyone heard from Dear Leader yet???
Posted by: B   2004-04-27 1:29:03 PM  

#7  North Korea balked Monday at opening its heavily armed border to relief trucks from rival South Korea, even as international aid groups sought more help for thousands injured or made homeless by a massive train explosion.

Why are all these people even bothering? The best thing that could happen is a scenario where no aid is forthcoming and that Kim is apparently on his own. That would be his worst nightmare: no one gives a rat's ass.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama   2004-04-27 1:10:20 PM  

#6  "The Red Cross distributed a three-month supply of antibiotics, anesthetics and bandages to North Korean hospitals over the weekend" Want to bet that those supplies were hijacked by the KWP?
Posted by: Cyber Sarge (VRWC CA Chapter)   2004-04-27 12:08:51 PM  

#5  Dunno, RC. I suppose they could take the medical supplies and sell 'em in exchange for cash/weapons, first-release movie films, SK female movie stars, swimming pool chemicals, etc.
Posted by: mrp   2004-04-27 10:13:35 AM  

#4  The NorKs don't want supplies; they want cash. Cash they can use to buy more weapons and agents of influence. Medical supplies only let them keep hungry mouths alive.
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2004-04-27 8:11:46 AM  

#3  PBMcL - Even if they showed us DEAR LEADER, would we know for sure if it was DEAR LEADER, or simply a double for DEAR LEADER?

Without DEAR LEADER, then there is no leader, just a starved mass of crazed people with a nuke or two.

That is worse than if DEAR LEADER missed his appointment with boom, er. . . doom. When DEAR LEADER joins that politboro in the sky with DEAR DADDY, we got to take out the Nukes at the same time.
Posted by: Anonymous4052   2004-04-27 2:25:06 AM  

#2  Yeah - The government decreed that if the person responsible for this survived that he will volunteer for guinea-pig tesing of North Koreas WMD.

Also. Why are we giving $$$ ?. If the name USA printed on something is bad, we can simply buy stuff, and have someone piggyback it on their contribution. Someone who we'd trust IN THIS PARTICULAR SITUATION, eg Australia or Japan
Posted by: Anonymous4052   2004-04-27 2:20:27 AM  

#1  Has the Great PumpKim made an appearance since the big boom?
Posted by: PBMcL   2004-04-27 2:18:10 AM  

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