Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

N. Korea reports new disease outbreak

- HYUNG-JIN KIM

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea reported a new “epidemic” of an intestinal disease on Thursday, an unusual announceme­nt from the secretive country that is already contending with a covid-19 outbreak and severe economic turmoil.

It’s unclear how many people are infected in what the official Korean Central News Agency said was “an acute enteric epidemic” in southweste­rn Haeju city.

The agency didn’t name the disease, but enteric refers to intestinal illnesses, such as typhoid, dysentery and cholera, which are caused by germs in contaminat­ed food or water or contact with the feces of infected people. Such diseases routinely occur in North Korea, where there is a shortage of water treatment facilities.

Some observers said the purpose of the announceme­nt was not so much to report the infections themselves as to mention that leader Kim Jong Un donated medicine from his personal stock.

The official Korean Central News Agency reported that Kim donated medicine from what it referred to as his family’s reserves. The country’s main Rodong Sinmun newspaper carried a front-page photo showing Kim and his wife, Ri Sol Ju, looking at saline solutions and medicine that the paper said they donated.

In a country where power is concentrat­ed is the hands of a small ruling elite and hospitals often lack even basic supplies, defectors say it’s common for anyone who can to keep stocks of medicine in their homes — and senior officials are typically able to stockpile more than ordinary citizens. Observers also said the donated medicine may have simply come from state storage facilities but was distribute­d in Kim’s name.

“The outbreak of measles or typhoid isn’t uncommon in North Korea. I think it’s true there is an outbreak of an infectious disease there, but North Korea is using it as an opportunit­y to emphasize that Kim is caring for his people,” said Ahn Kyung-su, head of DPRKHEALTH.ORG, a website focusing on health issues in North Korea. “So it’s more like a political message than medical one.”

Last month, North Korea reported a rising number of patients with fever. At the time, South Korea’s spy agency said that “a considerab­le number” of the cases included those sick with measles, typhoid and whooping cough.

KCNA said Thursday more than 4.5 million out of the country’s 26 million people have fallen ill due to an unidentifi­ed fever and 73 died. The country, which apparently lacks coronaviru­s test kits, has identified only a fraction of those as confirmed covid-19 cases. Many foreign experts question the North’s death toll, saying that’s likely under-reported to protect Kim from any political damage.

North Korea recently claimed progress in slowing the spread of covid-19 across the unvaccinat­ed population, though a top World Health Organizati­on official said this month the agency believes the outbreak is worsening.

During a ruling party conference last week, Kim claimed the pandemic situation has passed the stage of “serious crisis.” But the country still maintains elevated restrictio­ns. Some outside experts have said the measures will further strain the country’s already troubled economy hit by long-running pandemic-related border shutdowns and U.N. sanctions.

Late Thursday, South Korea’s Unificatio­n Ministry renewed its offer of help on health issues. After the North first announced the covid-19 outbreak, South Korea and the United States offered to ship vaccines and other medical supplies, but the North hasn’t responded.

 ?? (AP/Korea News Service/Korean Central News Agency) ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and his wife, Ri Sol Ju, prepare medicines Wednesday at an unannounce­d place in North Korea to send them to Haeju City where an infectious disease occurred.
(AP/Korea News Service/Korean Central News Agency) North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and his wife, Ri Sol Ju, prepare medicines Wednesday at an unannounce­d place in North Korea to send them to Haeju City where an infectious disease occurred.

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