Las Vegas Review-Journal

N. Korea allows citizens abroad to return as COVID rules ease

- By Hyung-jin Kim

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea said Sunday it will allow its citizens staying abroad to return home in line with easing pandemic situations worldwide, as the country slowly eases its draconian coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

In a brief statement carried by state media, the State Emergency Epidemic Prevention Headquarte­rs said those returning to North Korea will be put in quarantine for a week for “proper medical observatio­n.”

The statement didn’t elaborate. But analysts predicted the announceme­nt would lead to the return of North Korean students, workers and others who have had to stay abroad, mostly in China and Russia, because of the pandemic. The workers are a key source of foreign income for the country.

North Korea banned tourists, jetted out diplomats and severely curtailed border traffic and trade after the pandemic began. The lockdown has further worsened the North’s chronic economic difficulti­es and food insecurity.

Earlier this month, South Korea’s spy agency said North Korea was preparing to further reopen its borders gradually in a bid to revive its economy.

On Tuesday, a North Korean commercial jet landed in Beijing in what was the North’s first such commercial internatio­nal flight known to leave the country in about 3½ years. The plane returned from Beijing later in the day, but it wasn’t known who was aboard it.

Cheong Seong-chang, an analyst at the private Sejong Institute, said the return of workers from abroad will mean the loss of a rare source of foreign currency for North Korea, so the government will likely push to send other workers to replace them in China and Russia.

Accepting new North Korean workers would violate a U.N. Security Council resolution that required member states to repatriate all North Korean laborers from their territorie­s by late 2019.

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