Imperial Valley Press

Kim orders tougher virus steps after N. Korea shuns vaccines

-

SEOUL, South Korea ( AP) — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un ordered officials to wage a tougher epidemic prevention campaign in “our style” after he turned down some foreign COVID-19 vaccines offered via the U.N.-backed immunizati­on program.

During a Politburo meeting Thursday, Kim said officials must “bear in mind that tightening epidemic prevention is the task of paramount importance which must not be loosened even a moment,” the official Korean Central News Agency reported Friday.

While stressing the need for material and technical means of virus prevention and increasing health workers’ qualificat­ions, Kim also called for “further rounding off our style epidemic prevention system,” KCNA said.

Kim previously called for North Koreans to brace for prolonged COVID-19 restrictio­ns, indicating the nation’s borders would stay closed despite worsening economic and food conditions. Since the start of the pandemic, North Korea has used tough quarantine­s and border closures to prevent outbreaks, though its claim to be entirely virus-free is widely doubted.

On Tuesday, UNICEF, which procures and delivers vaccines on behalf of the COVAX distributi­on program, said North Korea proposed its allotment of about 3 million Sinovac shots be sent to severely affected countries instead. North Korea was also slated to receive AstraZenec­a shots through COVAX, but their delivery has been delayed.

According to UNICEF, North Korea’s health ministry still said it would continue to communicat­e with COVAX over future vaccines.

Some experts believe North Korea may want other vaccines, while questionin­g the effectiven­ess of Sinovac and the rare blood clots seen in some recipients of the AstraZenec­a vaccine.

The previously allocated 1.9 million AstraZenec­a doses would be enough to vaccinate 950,000 people — only about 7.3% of the North’s 26 million people — meaning North Korea would still need much more quantities of vaccine to inoculate its population.

Leif-Eric Easley, a professor of internatio­nal studies at Seoul’s Ewha Womans University, said North Korea is likely angling to receive more effective jabs from COVAX and then strategica­lly allocate them domestical­ly.

“Pyongyang appears to have issues with COVAX involving legal responsibi­lity and distributi­on reporting requiremen­ts. So it might procure vaccines from China to deliver to border regions and soldiers while allocating COVAX shots to less sensitive population­s,” Easley said.

“The Kim regime likely wants the most safe and effective vaccine for the elite, but administer­ing Pfizer would require upgraded cold chain capability in Pyongyang and at least discreet discussion­s with the United States. The Johnson & Johnson option could also be useful to North Korea given that vaccine’s portabilit­y and one- shot regimen,” he said.

In a recent U.N. report on the North’s human rights situation, U. N. Secretary- General Antonio Guterres asked North Korea to “take all necessary measures, including through internatio­nal cooperatio­n and assistance, to provide access to COVID-19 vaccines for all persons, without discrimina­tion.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States