US calls off N.Korea food aid after rocket launch

US calls off N.Korea food aid after rocket launch

The United States called off plans to send food aid to North Korea after the impoverished state’s defiant rocket launch, as an aid group feared more than two million children would go hungry.

The United States had already suspended the plan to deliver 240,000 metric tons of assistance aimed at children and pregnant women as North Korea prepared what the regime called an unsuccessful bid to put a satellite in orbit.

President Barack Obama’s administration, which had fine-tuned the aid package for months before announcing it February 29, said it was “impossible” to move forward after what US officials considered a flopped missile test.

Under the February 29 deal aimed at easing longstanding tensions, the United States agreed to deliver aid under supervision in the authoritarian state and North Korea said it would freeze its nuclear and missile tests.

Asked if the food aid was off indefinitely, State Department spokesman Mark Toner said that the United States no longer “can frankly trust the North Koreans that this will end up in appropriate hands.”

Hundreds of thousands of North Koreans are believed to have died in a famine in the 1990s. UN agencies estimated in November after a visit to the North that three million people would need food aid in 2012.

Mercy Corps, one of five US non-governmental groups that would have delivered the aid, said the assistance would have reached more than two million North Korean children and tens of thousands of pregnant women.

David Austin, the North Korea program director for Mercy Corps, said that the United States for generations had donated food to the needy regardless of political considerations.

Austin visited North Korea in March and said he spoke to an administrator of an orphanage who told him that children were receiving 60 percent of normal daily rations and had not had any protein for two months.

Food delivery would come in bags emblazoned with the American flag and a message, “Free gift of the American people,” he said.

The European Union last year announced aid of 10 million euros ($13 million) in support for hungry North Koreans and the UN’s World Food Program in the country. But Austin said parts of the country receive no outside help due to underfunding.

The Obama administration’s food plan had been unpopular with many lawmakers of the rival Republican Party, who voiced concern that it would throw a lifeline to Kim Jong-Un’s communist dynasty.

Representative Ed Royce, a Republican from California, had sought to bar US food aid, saying that the assistance would allow the regime to spend money on weapons.

After the launch, Royce called for a “new, comprehensive North Korea policy” that includes addressing human rights concerns and bringing outside information into the closed state.

North Korea is estimated by some experts to spend one-quarter of its budget on its military. In March 2009, the regime abruptly kicked out US aid groups who left behind some 20,000 metric tons of food from a previous deal.

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