The US supports providing humanitarian assistance to the vulnerable people of North Korea, but the UN sanctions must remain in place, a State Department spokesperson said.
“When we think about and assess the humanitarian suffering of the people of the DPRK, the simple truth is that the DPRK regime itself is responsible for the humanitarian situation in the country,” Yonhap News Agency quoted Ned Price as saying in a press briefing on Friday, referring to North Korea by its official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.
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“UN Security Council resolutions regarding the DPRK remain in effect and all UN member states are bound by their obligations under those resolutions,” he added.
The remarks came shortly after UN Special Rapporteur on North Korean Human Rights Tomas Ojea Quintana argued that the sanctions on the North should be eased during the Covid-19 pandemic.
“As long as the borders continue to be closed, we may be facing the risk of starvation among some segments of the population in the country,” Quintana said in a press conference in New York.
The price, however, insisted the US was already doing all it can to help ease the suffering of North Korean people.
“We are involved in efforts to facilitate the provision of humanitarian aid to the neediest in the DPRK. This is evidenced in a number of areas, including in our ongoing work to expedite approvals in the UN 1718 committee for organizations from around the world to deliver life-saving aid to the DPRK,” he said,
“The bottom line is this. Even when we disagree with a government or a regime like the DPRK, we must work to the best of our ability to alleviate the suffering of that country, people. That is why we continue to support international efforts aimed at the provision of critical humanitarian aid to the DPRK.”
(With IANS inputs)