South Korea says it is ready to offer flood damage relief to North Korea
SEOUL - South Korea is ready to provide North Korea with relief supplies for damage caused by recent heavy rainfall, South Korea's Red Cross said on Aug 1, marking a rare outreach under the administration of President Yoon Suk-yeol to its neighbour.
The authorities in the South were ready to discuss the relief supplies needed, the scale of aid and how to transfer it and looked forward to a swift response from Pyongyang, the Red Cross said.
The statement was issued by the South's Unification Ministry, which handles inter-Korean affairs.
The Red Cross has taken the lead in carrying out projects between the rival Koreas in the past, including reunions of separated families and supply of aid.
Heavy rain has hit the North's north-western areas in recent days, flooding more than 4,000 homes in the regions of Sinuiju and Uiju, North Korean state media have reported.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un personally inspected the flooded areas and expressed grave concern over the damage, state media said on July 29.
The region has been affected by heavy rainfall from Tropical Storm Gaemi in recent days, which caused a landslide killing 12 people in southern China and flash floods elsewhere.
There is a possibility of "significant human casualties" in North Korea, a Unification Ministry official said on Aug 1.
South Korea's TV Chosun reported more than 1,100 people and as many as 1,500 people dead or missing, citing an unnamed government official.
On Aug 1, the North's state media said there was work under way in the capital to prevent the flooding of the Taedong River that flows through Pyongyang.
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The offer of help comes as relations between the two Koreas, which remain technically at war, have been particularly strained