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South Korean doctor Lee Cook-jong, who carried out surgery on gunshot wounds sustained by a North Korean soldier, speaks about the condition of the soldier during a briefing at Ajou University Hospital in Suwon, south of Seoul, on November 15. Photo: Agence France-Presse

What the horrific parasites infesting a defector’s stomach tell us about North Korea

The squirming contents of the soldier’s stomach suggest a chronic shortage of modern fertiliser in North Korea – and a reliance on an unhealthy alternative

North Korea

The North Korean defector had sped across the demilitarised zone in a stolen jeep, then crawled south as the men who had been his comrades moments ago shot at him with handguns and AK-47 rifles.

South Korean soldiers found the defector under a pile of leaves, bleeding from at least five gunshot wounds.

He was brought to doctors, who expected to find the soldier in bad shape. But what they also found when they opened him up gave the world a glimpse into just how bad things are in North Korea.

Doctors repairing the unidentified soldier’s digestive tract found dozens of parasites in his intestines. One of the suspected roundworms was nearly 30cm long.
Human roundworms, seen here in a file photo, infested the digestive system of a North Korean defector, South Korean doctors say. Photo: Handout

“I spent more than 20 years of experience as a surgeon, but I have not found parasites this big in the intestines of South Koreans,” Lee Cook-jong, who leads the team treating the soldier, told the Associated Press.

I spent more than 20 years of experience as a surgeon, but I have not found parasites this big in the intestines of South Koreans
Surgeon Lee Cook-jong

Authorities have not released the name or rank of the defecting soldier. He has spent his first days in South Korea unconscious, sedated and relying on a breathing machine to stay alive.

But the worms tweezered from his intestines tell a story of the humanitarian and health crisis gripping North Korea even as it expends significant resources in its effort to become a global nuclear power.

North Korea spends 22 per cent of its gross domestic product on the military. Other public spending priorities have suffered, as North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has built and tested his nuclear arsenal while also trading radioactive barbs with Western leaders.

A Newsweek headline put it more succinctly – and brutally: “North Korea’s Kim Jong Un is starving his people to pay for nuclear weapons.”
South Korean doctor Lee Cook-jong, who carried out surgery on gunshot wounds sustained by a North Korean soldier, speaks to journalists at Ajou University Hospital in Suwon, south of Seoul. Photo: Agence France-Presse

According to a report by the United Nations, two of every five people in North Korea are undernourished. Seventy per cent of people require food assistance to survive, including 1.3 million children below the age of 5.

And the food they have access to can sicken or kill them. According to the New York Times, many North Koreans who’ve defected to the South have shown up infected with parasites.

That’s partially because North Korea lacks chemical fertiliser, and many farmers rely on human excrement to fertilise fields. As a fertiliser, “night soil” is free and abundant – and even made a cameo appearance in the movie The Martian.

But it’s notorious for transmitting parasites like the ones inside the North Korean defector’s stomach.

In a 2014 study, South Korean doctors checked a sample of 17 female defectors from North Korea and found seven of them infected with parasitic worms, according to the BBC. They also had higher rates of other diseases, including hepatitis B and tuberculosis.
A woman looks through binoculars towards North Korea from a South Korean observation post in Paju near the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) dividing the two Koreas on November 14. Photo: Agence France-Presse

Finding worms inside a soldier who once guarded one of the most scrutinised borders in the world is especially telling, a sign that North Korea’s food woes affect military members, who typically have a higher ranking on the food-rationing list. There are even reports that North Korean soldiers have been ordered to steal corn from farmers to stave off hunger.

The soldier’s vital signs were stabilising this weekend, but it was still unclear whether he would recover or wake up.

Until then, the parasites taken from his body were the only things telling a story, as Peter Preiser of Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University told the BBC.

“What they all do is take nutrients away from your body,” the professor told the BBC. “So (even) if most of them might go unnoticed, they all indicate a poor health status. To put it simply: People who have parasites are not healthy.”

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Worms found in defector sign of health crisis in North
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