Manila Bulletin

North Korea reports first Covid cases; Kim orders national lockdown

- No vaccines NORTH KOREAN leader Kim Jong-un (AFP)

SEOUL, South Korea (AFP) - North Korea confirmed its first-ever Covid cases on Thursday and declared a ‘’serious emergency,’’ with leader Kim Jong Un ordering lockdowns across the country.

The nuclear-armed country had never admitted to a case of Covid-19 and the government had imposed a rigid coronaviru­s blockade of its borders since the start of the pandemic in 2020.

But samples taken from patients sick with fever in Pyongyang ‘’coincided with Omicron BA.2 variant’’, the official Korean Central News Agency reported.

Top officials, including leader Kim Jong Un, held a crisis politburo meeting on Thursday to discuss the outbreak and announced they would implement the ‘’maximum emergency epidemic prevention system’’.

Kim ‘’called on all the cities and counties of the whole country to thoroughly lock down their areas,’’ KCNA reported, although details of the restrictio­ns were not immediatel­y given.

Kim told the meeting that the goal was to ‘’quickly cure the infections in order to eradicate the source of the virus spread,’’ according to KCNA.

Kim added that North Korea will ‘’overcome the current sudden situation and win victory in the emergency epidemic prevention work’’.

It was unclear from the KCNA report how many Covid infections had been detected.

North Korea’s crumbling health infrastruc­ture would struggle to deal with a major outbreak, with its 25 million people not believed to be vaccinated, experts say.

‘’For Pyongyang to publicly admit omicron cases, the public health situation must be serious,’’ Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul said.

‘’Pyongyang will likely double down on lockdowns, even though the failure of China’s zero-Covid strategy suggests that approach won’t work against the Omicron variant.’’

North Korea has turned down offers of vaccinatio­ns from the World Health Organizati­on, and China and Russia.

Accepting vaccines through the WHO’s Covax scheme ‘’requires transparen­cy over how vaccines are distribute­d,’’ Go Myong-hyun, researcher at the Asian Institute for Policy Studies told AFP.

‘’That’s why North Korea rejected it,’’ Go said.

North Korea is surrounded by countries that have battled -- or are still fighting to control -- significan­t outbreaks of Omicron.

South Korea, which has high rates of vaccinatio­n, has recently eased almost all Covid-19 restrictio­ns, with cases sharply down after an Omicron-fuelled spike in March.

Neighborin­g China, the world’s only major economy to still maintain a zero-Covid policy, is battling multiple Omicron outbreaks.

Major Chinese cities, including the financial capital Shanghai, have been under strict lockdowns for weeks.

It appears North Korea will try to avoid China’s extreme measures like ‘’virtually imprisonin­g residents in apartments,’’ said Cheong Seongchang of the Sejong Institute.

But even more limited lockdowns would create a ‘’severe food shortage and the same chaos China is now facing,’’ he said.

Seoul-based specialist site NK News reported that areas of Pyongyang had already been locked down for two days, with reports of panic buying.

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