Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

N. Korea reports more fevers but claims anti-virus progress

- KIM TONG-HYUNG

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea said Saturday that it found nearly 220,000 more people with feverish symptoms, even as leader Kim Jong Un claimed prog- ress in slowing a largely undiagnose­d spread of covid-19 across his unvaccinat­ed populace and hinted at easing virus restrictio­ns to nurse a decaying economy.

Experts say North Korea is likely downplayin­g the true scale of the viral spread, including a strangely small death toll, to soften the political blow on Kim as he navigates the toughest moment in his decade of rule.

About 219,030 North Koreans with fevers were identified in the 24 hours through 6 p.m. Friday, the fifth straight daily increase of about 200,000, according to the North’s Korean Central News Agency, which attributed the informatio­n to the government’s anti-virus headquarte­rs.

North Korea said more than 2.4 million people have fallen ill and 66 people have died since an unidentifi­ed fever began quickly spreading in late April, although the country has only been able to identify a handful of those cases as covid-19 due to a lack of testing supplies. After maintainin­g a dubious claim for 2½ years that it had perfectly blocked the virus from entering its territory, the North admitted to omicron infections earlier this month.

Amid a paucity of public health tools, the North has mobilized more than a million health workers to find people with fevers and isolate them at quarantine facilities. Kim also imposed strict restrictio­ns on travel between cities and towns and mobilized thousands of troops to help with the transport of medicine to pharmacies in the country’s capital, Pyongyang, which has been the center of the outbreak.

During a ruling-party Politburo meeting Saturday, Kim insisted the country was starting to bring the outbreak under control and called for tightened vigilance to maintain the “affirmativ­e trend” in the anti-virus campaign, the news agency said. But Kim also seemed to hint at relaxing his pandemic response to ease his economic woes, instructin­g officials to actively modify the country’s preventive measures based on the changing virus situation and to come up with various plans to revitalize the national economy.

The agency said Politburo members debated ways for “more effectivel­y engineerin­g and executing” the government’s anti-virus policy in accordance with how the spread of the virus was being “stably controlled and abated,” but the report did not specify what was discussed.

While imposing supposedly “maximum” preventive measures, Kim has also stressed that his economic goals still should be met, and state media have described large groups of workers continuing to gather at farms, mining facilities, power stations and constructi­on sites.

Experts say Kim can’t afford to bring the country to a standstill that would unleash further shock on a fragile economy, strained by decades of mismanagem­ent, crippling U.S.-led sanctions over his nuclear weapons ambitions and pandemic border closures. State media have portrayed an urgent push for agricultur­al campaigns aimed at protecting crops amid an ongoing drought, a worrisome developmen­t in a country that has long suffered from food insecurity, and for completing large-scale housing and other constructi­on projects Kim sees as crucial to his rule.

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