Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Outside aid needed as N. Korea hit by wave

Uncertain if it will accept help as cases spread

- ADAM TAYLOR

With a recorded coronaviru­s case load nearing 2 million, next to no vaccines, sparse medical infrastruc­ture and limited ties to the global health community, North Korea, which has long shunned outside help, appears to be on the cusp of a crisis.

While it is too late to stave off the full force of its first wave with a vaccine campaign, there are other provisions that could be donated, from powerful antiviral treatments to simple protective gear for health workers, that could slow the outbreak and protect the most vulnerable. But it is not clear whether North Korea would accept such offers of help.

Over the past two years, as the pandemic raged around the world, North Korea refused multiple coronaviru­s vaccine offers. Instead, the country, already hermetic by choice and isolated by sanctions, closed its borders to the world in a bid to maintain a “zero COVID” approach.

The approach failed. Experts warn that the country's coronaviru­s death toll could come to top 100,000, with the North Korean population of 25 million providing fertile ground for new variants.

The country's first confirmed COVID-19 outbreak spread after a massive military parade in Pyongyang in April, the South's Newsis news agency said on Wednesday, citing lawmakers briefed by the South's spy agency.

By most accounts close to entirely unvaccinat­ed, North Korea faces incredible risks from the fast-spreading BA.2 subvariant of Omicron identified in the country. While vaccines may have helped prevent a crisis of this scale, they cannot be administer­ed quickly and widely enough to stop it once it begins.

Joshua Pollack, a senior research associate at the Middlebury Institute of Internatio­nal Studies at Monterey and co-author of a December paper that called for the immediate supply of pandemic aid to North Korea, said it “appears to be too late for a mass vaccinatio­n campaign to soften the blow from omicron.”

“There's no good option,” said J. Stephen Morrison, director of the Center on Global Health Policy at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies. “But there are things that can be done that can begin to ameliorate some of the worse consequenc­es if they're done quickly.”

North Korea's pattern of rejecting aid — as well as recent missile launches ahead of an upcoming visit to the region by President Biden — complicate­s attempts to supply the country.

One of the only countries that North Korea might accept help from is neighbouri­ng China. South Korean media reported this week that flights had resumed between China and North Korea for the first time in two years, probably carrying emergency supplies.

 ?? AFP PHOTO / KCNA VIA KNS ?? Railway staff disinfect a train station in Pyongyang on Tuesday as North Korea struggles with COVID-19.
AFP PHOTO / KCNA VIA KNS Railway staff disinfect a train station in Pyongyang on Tuesday as North Korea struggles with COVID-19.

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