North Korea mobilizes labor for rice planting even as seedlings lag behind
North Korea has ordered a mass mobilization for the rice transplanting season in North Pyongan province even as some farms in the region have yet to begin planting due to poor seedling conditions caused by spring drought and erratic temperatures. A Daily NK source in North Pyongan province said Thur

North Korea has ordered a mass mobilization for the rice transplanting season in North Pyongan province even as some farms in the region have yet to begin planting due to poor seedling conditions caused by spring drought and erratic temperatures.
A Daily NK source in North Pyongan province said Thursday that mobilization orders reached farms in Yomju county on May 7, directing all available labor to report for agricultural work. Yet some farms have quietly pushed back their planting schedules because the seedlings have not grown adequately in their nursery beds.
North Korea’s state media uses the term “rice transplanting battle” for this annual campaign, which typically runs from early to mid-May through early June. During this period, authorities deploy soldiers, workers, housewives, and students to farms across the country to compensate for chronic labor shortages.
The source said the disconnect between ground conditions and the mobilization order is glaring. “It comes down to the same thing every year: push people in first and somehow get the transplanting done within the deadline,” the source said. “Even on farms where planting hasn’t started because the seedlings aren’t ready, people still have to show up and find something to do.”
The source added that authorities preach the principle of “planting at the right time for the right crop” while in practice ignoring whether mobilized labor is actually needed or useful. “They repeat the same forced mobilization pressure every year without ever asking whether it’s efficient,” the source said.
North Korean people stay indoors to avoid being drafted
The compulsory nature of the mobilization has fueled avoidance strategies at every level. Those with money or connections are already paying substitutes or pulling strings to be excused, a pattern the source said is visible again this year.
Those without such means are simply staying home. Since the mobilization order came down, streets in the area have grown noticeably quieter during daytime hours, with many people avoiding going out for fear of being swept up on the spot.
“People are saying it’s better to sleep at home than risk getting grabbed on the street and hauled off to the fields,” the source said. “There’s a saying here that the streets go quiet during rice transplanting season, and this year is no exception.”
The Rodong Sinmun newspaper ran a front-page editorial on May 11 declaring that rice transplanting had begun and insisting that success was essential to fulfilling the party’s commitments from the Ninth WPK Congress, held in early 2026, which set out major economic and agricultural production targets. The editorial called on all officials, party members, and workers to demonstrate “patriotic devotion” in the fields.
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