North Korea's Kim orders lockdown as first COVID-19 outbreak is confirmed

In this image made from video broadcast by North Korea's KRT, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un wears a face mask on state television during a meeting acknowledging the country's first case of COVID-19, May 12, 2022, in Pyongyang, North Korea.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un ordered a
nationwide lockdown Thursday to try to contain a highly transmissible variant
of coronavirus that causes COVID-19, which was confirmed in the country this
week for the first time.
The official Korean Central News Agency said
genetic sequencing analysis of samples collected from a group of people on
Sunday in Pyongyang had identified the BA.2 strain, also known as the “stealth
omicron” for its relative difficulty of detection.
At least one person confirmed to have
COVID-19 has died, KCNA said Friday, and around 350,000 people have shown signs
of a fever that has "explosively spread nationwide" since late
April.
About 162,200 of them have been treated so
far, but it did not specify how many had tested positive for COVID-19.
North Korea has maintained a strict border
closure since February 2020 and instituted its own quarantine measures amid the
pandemic, which have now officially been breached.
BA.2 became the world’s dominant strain in March,
the World Health Organization said. It was also responsible for driving up
infections in South Korea to highs unseen before. In late April, North Korea
closed its rail line into China’s border city of Dandong after it registered a
spike in COVID-19 cases.
The detection of omicron and Pyongyang’s
public admission of it came as North Korea remains one of the last remaining
countries yet to run a vaccination program for its 26 million people.
And given that its medical system still
significantly lags behind those of its Asian neighbors, observers say it
appeared unlikely that Pyongyang would shift from its yearslong stance of
rejecting vaccine help and stick to its only allowable option of a border
closure.
Kim was seen wearing a mask for the first
time at Thursday's early morning politburo meeting, which he took off only when
addressing his masked aides.
He ordered a “thorough lockdown” in all
cities and counties, KCNA said. He directed businesses and construction
projects to continue to operate but in isolation to “perfectly block" the
spread of the virus.
“They only have one option: simply lock down
their country and try to prevent the spread of the omicron virus,” Park
Won-gon, professor of North Korea studies at Ewha Womans University in Seoul,
told VOA.
“Because North Korea doesn’t have simple
medicines, much less a medical system comparable to other countries, even if
they had the vaccines, they would not be able to stop omicron.”
Park doesn’t think North Korea will be
looking to solicit vaccines from outside parties; what it really wants is a
simple cure, which the world has yet to develop more than two years into the
pandemic.
North Korea will institute draconian measures
to those of its biggest ally, China, if not even more severe, Park predicted.
Based on several studies conducted on the
contingency of North Korea, Park said, there was a single scenario that would
incite a people’s uprising, and possibly the regime’s collapse: a pandemic
paired with extreme economic difficulty.
“That is why, for more than two years,
North Korea has been very sensitive and serious about this pandemic, even at
the deep economic cost of closing its border with China.”
North Korea is already dealing with a difficult
rice planting season, an important time on the socialist state’s calendar,
challenged by droughtlike conditions and a shortage of necessities such as
fertilizer.
Even prior to the pandemic's official
entrance to the country, the state had relocated office workers and laborers to
its agricultural regions to assist in building trenches for water transport,
according to the official newspaper Rodong Sinmun.
The movement restrictions set to be enacted
could complicate the effort, Park said, in a country that has chronically
experienced the shortage of food. “It will definitely have a huge negative
impact on their food supply in the near future.”
Still, Kim, in Thursday’s politburo meeting,
said more dangerous than the virus were “unscientific fear, lack of faith and
weak will” as he expressed confidence in the people’s ability to organize and
get behind a cause.
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