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North Korea faces 'worst ever outcome', except for the elite

The Hermit Kingdom's haves and have-nots
The elite get to live in Pyongyang
The rest of the population are barred from the capital
The elite can earn thousands of dollars a month
While the rest of the population scrape by on just $2 or $3
Ordinary people are forced into unpaid labor
The elite have constant access to fine food
A leader's diet
The rest of the population have barely enough to eat
The elite worry about their waistlines
The rest of the population fret about famine
The elite reside in upscale apartment blocks
Kim has 17 palaces to choose from...
The rest of the population live in rundown, no-frills housing
The elite enjoy swish en suite facilities
The rest of the population have to use public bathrooms
The elite have access to desirable black market goods
The rest of the population have no such luck
The elite follow the latest fashions
The rest of the population have more important things to worry about
The elite drive cars and ride battery-powered bikes
The rest of the population use bikes and ox or horse-drawn carts
The elite drive on smooth asphalt roads
The rest of the population struggle on dirt tracks
The elite don't have to cope with crippling power cuts
The rest of the population experience regular outages
The elite own multiple cellphones
The rest of the population are banned from owning cellphones
The elite have (restricted) access to the internet
North Koreans are also stopped from accessing the World Wide Web
The elite pamper their pet dogs
The rest of the population are more likely to eat the animals
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KCNA

The Hermit Kingdom's haves and have-nots

While North Korea’s pampered elite enjoy all the trappings of luxury in its capital Pyongyang, most of the country’s population endures grinding poverty and chronic hunger. In June, leader Kim Jong-un revealed at the ruling Workers' Party committee that the nation's people are dealing with "tense" food shortages. Kim blamed last year's typhoons, which led to flooding and meant grain targets couldn't be met.

However, the nation's response to the COVID-19 pandemic is also to blame. North Korea has firmly closed its borders to try to shut out the virus, although reports claim it hasn't succeeded, and has refused the offer of vaccines from Russia on several occasions, but this approach has also meant shutting off trade from its neighbor China, which it relies on for food, fuel and fertilizer. And so food shortages have got a lot worse in what was an already difficult situation as the country is under numerous sanctions due to its nuclear program. Kim has warned his people to prepare for the "worst ever outcome", which many believe is a reference to the 1990s famine, although he and his elite are unlikely to be hugely affected.

As the situation worsens for ordinary people, click or scroll through to discover the shocking gap between rich and poor in the notorious rogue state.

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lovemoney staff

19 July 2021

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