Prague Czech Republic hotels, hotels in Prague Czech Republic, Czech Republic Prague hotels accommodation in Prague

Info

***** 5 star Hotels in Prague, Czech Republic
**** 4 star Hotels in Prague, Czech Republic
*** 3 star Hotels in Prague, Czech Republic
** 2 star Hotels in Prague, Czech Republic
- Hostels in Prague, Czech Republic
- Apartments in Prague, Czech Republic
- Pensions in Prague, Czech Republic

- Prague Hotels in the city centre
- Prague Hotels near the city centre
- Prague Hotels outside the city centre

- Airport Transfers
- Sightseeing Tours
- Prague Guide
- Prague News
- Travel Links


News

23.08.2008 - N Korea 'develops a noodle which can delay feelings of hunger'

North Korean scientists have developed a new kind of noodle that delays feelings of hunger, a Japan-based pro-Pyongyang newspaper has reported.

The Czech Republic news are represented by www.czech-republic-prague.com

The noodles were made from corn and soybeans, the Choson Shinbo said.

They left people feeling fuller longer and represented a technological breakthrough, the newspaper said.

North Korea is dependent on foreign food aid. Last month the UN warned that residents were experiencing their worst food shortages in a decade.

But the communist country remains reluctant to allow experts to fully assess the scale of Six-party talks on North Korean denuclearisation end ...
G-8 foreign ministers meet in Japan ...
N Korea 'to deliver nuclear data' ...
Japan to battle greenhouse gases ...
the problem or give them adequate access to deliver aid.

UN warnings

According to the newspaper, which is seen as closely linked to the Pyongyang leadership, the new noodles have twice as much protein and fives times as much fat as ordinary noodles.

"When you consume ordinary noodles (made from wheat or corn), you may soon feel your stomach empty. But this soybean noodle delays such a feeling of hunger," it said on its website.

The noodles would be available soon across North Korea, the newspaper said.

An estimated one million people starved to death in North Korea in the late 1990s after natural disasters and government mismanagement devastated the country's economy.

In July, the World Food Programme warned that six million people were in urgent need of food aid, following severe flooding last year.

Most households had cut their food intake and more people are scavenging for wild foods, WFP assessors found.



(BBC)

<< Back

Search

Check-in
 
Check-out
 
Room
Class
Location



 
 
Copyright © 1999 - 2009 Czech-Republic-Prague.com . All Rights Reserved    
www.Karlovy-Vary-Czech-Republic.com :: www.Prague-Hotel-Hotels.com
_______________________________