North Korean Soldiers Raiding Farms After Food Provisions Cut

North Korean Soldiers Raiding Farms After Food Provisions Cut
A North Korean soldier guards on the Yalu river north of the border city of Sinuiju, North Korea, across from Dandong, Liaoning province, northern China on May 24, 2017 in Dandong, China. (Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
Matthew Little
11/9/2017
Updated:
11/9/2017
Reports of soldiers looting in North Korea continue to increase as the Kim Jong Un regime reels from the impact of economic sanctions along with a spring drought that led to a meager harvest.
The looting came after earlier reports that the communist regime has ordered the military to acquire its own food supplies.
Normally, the regime mobilizes citizens to collect supplies for the army, but in October, the military was ordered to collect its own provisions.
“Military leadership handed down orders last month detailing the quotas required to be collected,” a source in Ryanggang Province informed Daily NK on Oct. 18.
“It is quite absurd that military personnel have to collect these provisions themselves. And such orders were handed down in all provinces, covering all military divisions across the country.”
Korean soldiers work at the farmland near a North Korean flag on the outskirts of the North Korean city of Sinuiju in this picture taken on October 18, 2006. (Photo by Cancan Chu/Getty Images)
Korean soldiers work at the farmland near a North Korean flag on the outskirts of the North Korean city of Sinuiju in this picture taken on October 18, 2006. (Photo by Cancan Chu/Getty Images)
Since the order came down, reports of looting have increased, a source in Ryanggang Province told Daily NK on Nov. 2.
In one incident in the Kapsan region, the source said soldiers from the 43rd Brigade raided fields one night in early October.
“They all gathered for the surprise attack, fanned out across the farms and swept up all the corn.”
“It’s not an everyday occurrence for the 43rd Brigade to go around plundering the farms, but they have become much more brazen this year,” he said.
The looting was more notable because of the involvement of the brigade.
The 43rd Brigade was established as a special forces unit trained in mountain warfare and night combat once given commendations by former North Korean dictator Kim Jong Il.
North Korean farmers work in their fields outside the capital Pyongyang in 2008. Current food and money shortages have forced North Korean soldiers to raid farms in order to stay fed. (Mark Ralston/Getty Images)
North Korean farmers work in their fields outside the capital Pyongyang in 2008. Current food and money shortages have forced North Korean soldiers to raid farms in order to stay fed. (Mark Ralston/Getty Images)
While the source said it was a disgrace the soldiers were stealing food, the fault lies with the regime and its inability to supply provisions, leaving the military critically under-supplied. 
The spread of organized field raids has given rise to new nicknames for North Korea’s military.
Sources inside the country told Daily NK that people have begun referring to the military as the “Suppression Forces,” and the “Bandit Army.”
The raids show the North Korean regime faces a crisis of faith. Kim Jong Un, the third ruler of the Kim dynasty in North Korea, leads a communist state as a supposed “god leader.”
But decades of economic mismanagement and government corruption have left North Koreans increasingly cynical towards the regime.
A source, speaking to Daily NK said that during the previous Kim regimes the military at least feigned loyalty to the leader.
“These days they only worry about finding food and earning money. It doesn’t really matter if your military is 1 or 2 million people strong if almost none of them are actually following proper military routine,” a separate source in Ryanggang Province said.
North Korean soldiers ride on a bicycle on the Yalu river north of the border city of Sinuiju, North Korea, on May 23, 2017. (Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
North Korean soldiers ride on a bicycle on the Yalu river north of the border city of Sinuiju, North Korea, on May 23, 2017. (Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
The order to procure its own food has led to a rapid loss of discipline among North Korean soldiers, according to the news site, and criminal activity has increased.
“Continued neglect of the military is likely to result in further loss of confidence among the people,” reported Daily NK.