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2016 North Korean floods

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Location
  
North Korea

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Date
  
August 2016 – September 2016

Deaths
  
525+ killed 144 injured 100,000+ homeless

The 2016 North Korean floods began in late-August 2016 as a consequence of Typhoon Lionrock, killing at least 525 people, and destroying more than 35,000 homes, leaving over 100,000 people homeless, mainly in the North Hamgyong Province as a result of the Tumen River, near the borders with China and Russia, breaking its banks, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs and Red Cross.

Contents

A UN official in North Korea said the scale of the disaster was "beyond anything experienced by local officials".

According to a statement published on 11 September, 2016, by the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), North Korea's official state media, the country's northeast has been affected by the "heaviest downpour" since 1945, with "tens of thousands" of buildings destroyed and people left homeless and "suffering from great hardship".

Typhoon Lionrock

Lionrock merged with a low-pressure system and resulted in very heavy rains over a three-day period (August 29-31) in North Korea, with as much as 12.6 in (320 mm) deluging one county in the province of North Hamgyong.

Response

In response to the floods, the North Korean government sent workers and the Korean People's Army to clear roads and restore communications in the hardest hit areas. About 1,000 volunteers from the local Red Cross chapter helped local workers in search and rescue missions. The agency had relief supplies for about 20,000 people, including tarpaulins, tents, kitchen sets, and water purification tablets. Red Cross workers coordinated with members of the international delegation between September 3–6, resulting in increased resources for health services. The World Food Programme provided emergency food rations for 140,000 people. The European Union donated 300,000 euros in flood relief.

References

2016 North Korean floods Wikipedia