‘Severe’ punishment for North Korean officials after typhoon casualties

‘Severe’ punishment for North Korean officials after typhoon casualties
A man steps over a fallen tree as a typhoon passes by in Pyongyang on August 27, 2020. (AFP file photo)
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Updated 05 September 2020
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‘Severe’ punishment for North Korean officials after typhoon casualties

‘Severe’ punishment for North Korean officials after typhoon casualties
  • Typhoon Maysak brought heavy downpours across the country earlier this week
  • Punishing local officials a ‘way for the North Korean leadership to avoid blame’ for the casualties

SEOUL: North Korea has pledged severe punishment for local officials it says failed to protect residents from a typhoon which caused a “serious incident” with dozens of casualties, the ruling party’s newspaper reported.
Typhoon Maysak brought heavy downpours across the country earlier this week, with footage showing a street inundated with water in the eastern port town of Wonsan, Kangwon province.
Saturday’s Rodong Sinmun, an official newspaper, reported that leaders had decided to punish “irresponsible” city and provincial officials for causing “a serious incident involving dozens of casualties.”
The report did not say how many were injured, missing or dead.
The officials failed to “immediately organize a project to thoroughly identify properties at risk and evacuate all residents” despite being ordered by the ruling Workers’ Party of Korea headed by leader Kim Jong Un, it added.
“A decision was made to impose severe party, administrative, and legal punishment to those responsible for the casualties.”
Maysak also hit the South, killing at least two people. More than 2,200 people were evacuated to temporary shelters in the southern city of Busan.
Natural disasters tend to have a greater impact in the North due to its creaking infrastructure, and the country is vulnerable to flooding as many mountains and hills have long been deforested.
Punishing the local officials is a “way for the North Korean leadership to avoid blame” for the casualties, Ahn Chan-il, a defector turned researcher based in Seoul, said.
“They are sending out a message that Kim Jong Un never does anything wrong, but damages occur only because those who work for him fail to follow his order.”