North Korea says it has identified the source of its COVID-19 outbreak – citizens touching “alien things” near the border with South Korea.
State media outlet KCNA reported: “It was known that an 18-year-old soldier surnamed Kim and a five-year-old kindergartner surnamed Wi contacted with alien things in a hill around barracks and residential quarters in Ipho-ri early in April.”
The pair had shown symptoms and later tested positive for the coronavirus.
Ipho-ri is on the east coast near the border with South Korea.
“The investigation results showed that several persons coming from the area of Ipho-ri in Kumgang County of Kangwon Province to the capital city in mid-April were in fever, and a sharp increase of fever cases was witnessed among their contacts,” KCNA added.
North Koreans were warned to “vigilantly deal with alien things coming by wind and other climate phenomena and balloons in the areas along the demarcation line and borders”.
North Korean defectors and South Korean activists used to fly balloons across the heavily-guarded border carrying leaflets and humanitarian aid.
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But this was stopped by the South Korean government in 2020, citing safety reasons, although critics said the move was aimed at improving relations with North Korean authorities.
South Korea’s unification ministry said on Friday that there is “no possibility” of COVID-19 entering North Korea through contaminated balloons from its side of the border.
Meanwhile, North Korea says its COVID outbreak is subsiding but it is difficult to assess this claim.
A reported shortage of COVID tests means that the North Korean health authorities only report the number of people with fever symptoms, rather than confirming they have COVID.
On Friday, the country said there were 4,570 more people experiencing fever, with 4.74 million fever patients recorded since late April.
The country first confirmed its outbreak in May, sparking international concerns about the vulnerability of a population that was unvaccinated and battling massive food shortages.
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A number of countries have offered aid, including vaccines and medical supplies, but an offer from the US sparked an angry response from North Korea’s foreign ministry on Thursday.
The ministry said that the US was only offering aid in an effort to silence critics of its hostile policy towards North Korea.
According to North Korea, that hostility is shown through military exercises and long-standing sanctions aimed at forcing Kim Jong-Un to cut his nuclear programme.
The North Korean foreign ministry said that the US had failed to handle its own COVID-19 crisis and should drop its “foolish” aid offer and concentrate on its own problems.