Kuwait Times

North Korea rejects South Korea group’s offer for malaria help

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A South Korean civic group said yesterday that North Korea has rejected its offer to provide anti-malaria supplies to protest Seoul’s support of fresh UN sanctions on the country. The rejection could complicate efforts by South Korea’s news liberal President Moon Jae-in to try to expand civilian exchanges with North Korea as a way to improve strained bilateral ties. All major cooperatio­n programs between the rivals remain stalled amid an internatio­nal standoff over North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs.

In late May, Moon’s government allowed the Seoul-based Korean Sharing Movement to contact North Korea. It was South Korea’s first approval of cross-border civilian exchanges since January 2016. The civic group subsequent­ly exchanged emails with North Korea and was supposed to deliver anti-malaria items such as insecticid­es, diagnostic reagent kits and mosquito repellant to North Korea this week, according to group official Hong Sang-young.

But North Korea told his organizati­on yesterday that it won’t allow the visit because of UN sanctions adopted last week that Seoul has vowed to implement, Hong said. Despite the lack of South Korean assistance, North Korea has in recent years reported declining cases of malaria thanks largely to anti-malaria aid programs by internatio­nal organizati­ons. According to World Health Organizati­on records, North Korea had 21,850 malaria cases in 2012, but 7,010 cases in 2015.

The UN Security Council voted unanimousl­y Friday to add 15 individual­s and four entities linked to North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs to a UN sanctions blacklist. Its unclear if and how much the new UN sanctions would sting North Korea, which is already under multiple rounds of UN and other internatio­nal sanctions. Since Moon’s May 10 inaugurati­on, North Korea has test-fired three ballistic missiles in an apparent show of its resolve to expand its weapons arsenals to cope with what it calls US hostility.

Moon’s government has said it will evaluate expanding civilian exchanges with North Korea, while sternly dealing with its missile and other weapons tests. North Korea is pushing hard to build a nucleartip­ped missile that can reach the continenta­l United States.—AP

 ??  ?? PAJU: In this file photo, a girl uses binoculars to watch the North side at the Imjingak Pavilion near the border village of Panmunjom, which has separated the two Koreas since the Korean War, in Paju, South Korea.—AP
PAJU: In this file photo, a girl uses binoculars to watch the North side at the Imjingak Pavilion near the border village of Panmunjom, which has separated the two Koreas since the Korean War, in Paju, South Korea.—AP

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