The Korea Times

S. Korea to send Tamiflu drugs to N. Korea next week

- By Park Ji-won jwpark@koreatimes.co.kr

South Korea will send flu medication to North Korea early next week aiming to speed humanitari­an aid to the North.

An official of the Ministry of Unificatio­n said Thursday that South Korean and U.S. officials agreed via a video call to send 200,000 doses of Tamiflu and 50,000 packages of medical test kits to North Korea for humanitari­an assistance.

“The two agreed on sending Tamiflu to the North,” a unificatio­n ministry official told reporters on the condition of anonymity.

“We expect that the authoritie­s will finish discussion­s on delivery schedules within the week and push to send the goods by early next week.”

Seoul earlier promised to send the medication by Jan. 11 via a land route over their western border. However, the delivery was abruptly postponed as the government asked for more time. Insiders say the delay was because Seoul and Washington failed to narrow difference­s in its delivery and monitoring the process.

The government official said the South will push for the handover of the goods through discussion­s with the North on delivery and takeover while consulting on the effect of the drugs and its monitoring process.

Since the U.S. has eased limits on humanitari­an aid to Pyongyang recently amid internatio­nal sanctions against the North, Seoul has been looking for ways to give the North supplement­s amid stalled denucleari­zation talks between the North and U.S. Pyongyang has been asking for the lifting of sanctions against the country as a prerequisi­te to going ahead with denucleari­zation.

“I understand many American humanitari­an aid organizati­ons operating in the DPRK are concerned the strict enforcemen­t of internatio­nal sanctions has occasional­ly impeded legitimate humanitari­an assistance to the Korean people,” Biegun said in December during a trip to Seoul.

The U.S. move was considered as an overture to restart talks with the North, which haven’t produced palpable results since the Singapore summit in June.

Seoul’s efforts were backed by an agreement made between the leaders of the South and North in September to cooperate in tackling the spread of infectious diseases.

The last time Seoul sent Tamiflu packages to North Korea through a land route was December 2009 when then President Lee Myung-bak sent aid to fight the outbreak of H1N1 flu in the North in order to try and limit the spread of the disease.

At that time, the South gave North Korea 400,000 doses of Tamiflu and Relenza Rotadisk for about 100,000 people and $858,000 worth of hand sanitizers. Seoul used more than $15.3 million from the inter-Korean cooperatio­n fund for transporta­tion and other additional costs related to the aid provision.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic