Muscat Daily

COVID-19 outbreak causing ‘great upheaval’ in North Korea, says Kim

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Seoul, South Korea - Leader Kim Jong Un says a COVID outbreak is causing ‘ great upheaval’ in North Korea, which announced 21 new ‘fever’ deaths on Saturday.

Two days after confirming its first cases of COVID-19, the government said more than half a million people had been sickened nationwide.

Despite activating its ‘maximum emergency quarantine system’ to slow the spread of disease through its unvaccinat­ed population, North Korea is now reporting tens of thousands of new cases daily.

On Friday, ‘over 174,440 persons had fever, at least 81,430 were fully recovered and 21 died in the country’, the official Korean Central News Agency reported.

North Korea confirmed on Thursday that the highly contagious Omicron variant had been detected in the capital Pyongyang, with Kim ordering nationwide lockdowns.

It was the government’s first official admission of COVID cases and marked the failure of a two-year coronaviru­s blockade maintained at great economic cost since the start of the pandemic. From late April to May 13, more than 524,440 people have fallen sick with fever, KCNA said, with 27 deaths in total.

The report did not specify

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un taking part in Workers’ Party of Korea council to check the operationa­l status of the maximum emergency measuremen­t to prevent the spread of COVID-19 infection in Pyongyang on Saturday

whether the new cases and deaths had tested positive for COVID-19, but experts say the country will be struggling to test and diagnose on this scale.

North Korea has said only that one of the first six deaths it announced on Friday had tested positive for COVID-19.

“It's not a stretch to consider these ‘fever’ cases to all be COVID-19, given the North’s lack of testing capacity,” said Cheong Seong-chang of the Sejong Institute. “The actual number of COVID cases could be higher than the fever figures due to

many asymptomat­ic cases,” he said, adding that the pace of infection was growing ‘very fast’.

‘Great upheaval’

Kim said on Saturday the ‘crisis’ was causing ‘great upheaval’, as he oversaw a second Politburo meeting in three days to discuss the situation, KCNA reported.

“The spread of malignant disease comes to be a great upheaval in our country since the founding of the DPRK,” he said, referring to North Korea by its official name. Kim is putting himself ‘front and centre’ of the

country’s COVID response, said Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul.

“The language he’s used suggests the situation in North Korea is going to get worse before it gets better,” he told AFP.

“Engagers see this rhetoric preparing the way for internatio­nal assistance, but Kim may be rallying a population on the verge of further sacrifice,” he added. The meeting of the nation’s top officials discussed medicine distributi­on and other ways of “minimising the losses in human lives”, KCNA said.

North Korea has a crumbling health system - one of the worst in the world - and no COVID vaccines, antiviral treatment drugs or mass testing capacity, experts say. But the country will ‘actively learn’ from China’s pandemic management strategy, Kim said, according to KCNA.

China, the world’s only major economy to still maintain a zeroCOVID policy, is battling multiple Omicron outbreaks - with some major cities, including financial hub Shanghai, under stay-at-home orders.

North Korea has previously turned down offers of COVID vaccines from China and the World Health Organizati­on’s Covax scheme, but both Beijing and Seoul issued fresh offers of aid and vaccines this week.

Kim’s comments indicate North Korea ‘will try getting supplies from China’, said Yang Moo-jin, a professor at the University of North Korean Studies.

It also looks likely Pyongyang ‘will adopt a Chinese-style antivirus response of regional lockdowns’, Yang added.

So far, Kim said on Saturday, North Korea’s outbreak was not ‘an uncontroll­able spread among regions’ but transmissi­on within areas that had been locked down, KCNA said. Despite its COVID outbreak, new satellite imagery indicates that North Korea has resumed constructi­on at a long-dormant nuclear reactor.

“I can’t tell you when the reactor will be ready to go, but it is about 10x larger than the existing reactor at Yongbyon,” Jeffrey Lewis of the Middlebury Institute of Internatio­nal Studies wrote in a Twitter thread on Saturday.

It would produce 10 times more plutonium for nuclear weapons, he said, adding: “This would make good on Kim’s pledge to increase the number of nuclear weapons.”

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(AFP)

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