North Korea soldiers forced into soybean farming say officers take the best of the harvest

HomeNewsNorth Korea soldiers forced into soybean farming say officers...

North Korean soldiers stationed in Hamhung, the capital of South Hamgyong province, have been mobilized en masse for soybean planting on military-run auxiliary farms, with a deadline set for the end of May 2026. Even as military authorities frame the farming work as a way to improve soldiers’ nutrition, troops have responded with open cynicism, saying the best of the harvest goes to officers while rank-and-file soldiers see little benefit.

A Daily NK source in South Hamgyong province said on Tuesday that units under the Seventh Army Corps, one of North Korea’s major regional military commands headquartered in Hamhung, had deployed nearly all available personnel to auxiliary plots to complete soybean planting. “The corps command issued an order that soybean planting on auxiliary plots must be finished by the end of this month without exception,” the source said.

According to the source, North Korean authorities have emphasized soybean cultivation on military-run auxiliary plots since the early 2000s, citing soybeans as a source of protein and basic ingredients such as tofu and soybean paste. Units have carried out soybean farming every year since, and this year is no different.

The work is far from simple. Units must secure their own plots by negotiating with nearby collective farms or clearing new land on hillsides, and must independently obtain seeds, compost, and fertilizer. “Military units are farming through self-reliance, just like the rest of society,” the source said.

Farming on top of training pushes soldiers to the limit

Soldiers are now juggling military training, auxiliary farm work, and mobilization for the broader spring rice transplanting season, and the cumulative burden has become extreme. “With soybean farming, rural mobilization, and training all running at the same time, soldiers are saying their fatigue has reached the sky,” the source said.

Troops have also voiced deep skepticism about whether the farming effort benefits them at all. “The good soybeans all go to the officers and we only see the scraps,” soldiers have been heard saying. Others have put it more sardonically: “Even the soybean seeds in the ground are malnourished, just like us.”

The source said tofu, a primary product of the harvest, almost never appears in the mess hall. “Apart from the occasional side dish that an officer’s family brings in, tofu at the unit canteen is something you might see once at a holiday,” the source said. “Since soldiers can’t tell where the soybeans they worked so hard to grow end up going, it’s only natural that they see the farming as just another exhausting burden.”

The source added that soldiers’ frustration over auxiliary farm obligations will not ease unless the chronically poor state of military rations improves.

Read in Korean

A Note to Readers

Reporting from inside North Korea

Daily NK operates networks of sources inside North Korea who document events in real-time and transmit information through secure channels. Unlike reporting based on state media, satellite imagery, or defector accounts from years past, our journalism comes directly from people currently living under the regime. We verify reports through multiple independent sources and cross-reference details before publication.

Our sources remain anonymous because contact with foreign media is treated as a capital offense in North Korea — discovery means imprisonment or execution. This network-based approach allows Daily NK to report on developments other outlets cannot access: market trends, policy implementation, public sentiment, and daily realities that never appear in official narratives.

Maintaining these secure communication channels and protecting source identities requires specialized protocols and constant vigilance. Daily NK serves as a bridge between North Koreans and the outside world, documenting what’s happening inside one of the world’s most closed societies.


May 28, 2026 at 12:44AM

by DailyNK(North Korean Media)

Most Popular Articles