Monthly Archive for November, 2008

DPRK: 99 Luftballons

Release the Balloons!

Release the Balloons!

All this talk of balloons floating over North Korea and all the roil it is causing, reminds me of Nena’s #1 hit single “99 Luftballons” from the 80’s.  It is balloon warfare at it’s best.

The original song in German was a protest against the nuclear missile stand off between western europe and eastern europe; the United States against the Soviet Union.

As Korea is today, Germany was then a divided country.  The song reached #1 in West Germany in 1983.

It portrays a fictional account of how a cloud of balloons mistaken for an aerial missile attack might touch off an apocalyptic war.

Could the recent cloud of balloons over DPRK, each carrying thousands of leaflets, radios and sometimes dollars, cause a war?  Or, could it cause a different type of an end?

Each of those packets contain not just mere words, but information.  And the one thing that an authoritarian regime like North Korea fears the most is that it’s people will start to open their eyes to receive and believe in information from the outside.

Could this be the time when the masses are actually receptive to information?  The military seems to think so and wants it to stop.

Food Delivery Progressing Well

Last week, I met up with some relief workers monitoring the food distribution in the DPRK.  They are on their first set of well-deserved R&R after about 7 weeks of field work.  In general, they report good co-operation with their North Korean counterparts, although they acknowledge that they are working under difficult circumstances and that they have very little control over the political whirlwinds swirling around them.

I found a new appreciation for what they do, as they explained to me the level of detail in paperwork and record keeping that has to be accounted for.  From the port, to the regional distribution point, to the local schools, to the homes.  For the most part, they are riding on top of the existing socialist food ticket distribution system, but the spot checks that are allowed to happen at the lowest level seem exceptional for DPRK.  After checking the attendance and distribution records for a school, if children are listed as absent or unable to receive their food rations, the monitors have asked and been permitted to visit the families.  But, as reported before, the relief workers have to get one week prior approval.

One person from the US mentioned a little boy who literally froze motionless as the relief worker walked by, smiled and waved.  Not only was this the first caucasian this boy had ever seen in real life, but a representative from America - a country he was taught to hate.

The Christian food monitors introduce themselves as bringing food and help from the people of America and all the food shipments have the USAID logo on each bag.

In addition to the UN World Food Program, the following organizations are currently involved with the distribution of food aid in the DPRK: Mercy Corps, Word Vision, Samaritan’s Purse, Global Resource Services, and Christian Friends of Korea.

As winter nears, traveling the icy and mountainous roads will become more difficult.  According to the aid workers, there will need to be a balance with providing enough of a food supply buffer at the distribution centers and having adequate monitoring.

We wish them well and good health during the next couple months.