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North Korea's fever cases under 200,000 for second day amid silence on aid offer

North Korea's fever cases under 200,000 for second day amid silence on aid offer
Workers in protective suits stand next to a sealed-off area before the second stage of a two-stage lockdown to curb the spread of Covid-19.
PHOTO: Reuters

SEOUL - North Korea's daily fever cases stayed below 200,000 for a second day in a row, state media said on Monday (May 23), as Pyongyang remained silent on South Korean and US offers to help fight its first confirmed Covid-19 outbreak.

The Covid wave, declared on May 12, has fuelled concerns over a lack of vaccines, inadequate medical infrastructure and a potential food crisis in the country of 25 million.

US President Joe Biden said on Saturday that Washington had offered Covid-19 vaccines to China and North Korea, but "got no response."

North Korea reported 167,650 new patients suffering from fever on Monday and one more death.

More than 2.33 million of the 2.81 million cumulative cases reported since late April had recovered as of Sunday evening, the North's state news agency KCNA said. The official death toll stands at 68.

While staying silent on the offer for help, North Korea has boasted of a "favourable turn" in the country's virus situation.

"The crisis and responsibility awareness is further enhanced in every region, sector, workplace and post across the country to maintain the favourable turn in the epidemic prevention work and all inroads of the epidemic are checked through the strict execution of regional and unit lockdown and blockade measures,"the KCNA said.

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Such Covid-19 restrictions may be playing a role in North Korea's lack of response, a senior US administration official said Sunday.

Apparently deprived of testing supplies, North Korea has not confirmed the total number of people testing positive for the coronavirus. Instead, health authorities report the number with fever symptoms, making it difficult to assess the scale of the Covid wave, experts have said.

Authorities have distributed food and medicine across the country, with military medics deployed to help distribute drugs and conduct exams.

KCNA said pharmaceutical factories "are speeding up the production," but did not elaborate which medicines were being produced.

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