North Korea reports 'good results' in Covid pandemic fight

Pyongyang says its "anti-epidemic war" is showing positive outcomes even as cases of fever in the unvaccinated East Asian nation top two million with 65 deaths.

UN human rights agency warns of "devastating" consequences for North Korea's 25 million people amid the Covid surge.
AP

UN human rights agency warns of "devastating" consequences for North Korea's 25 million people amid the Covid surge.

North Korea has said it was achieving "good results" in the fight against the country's first confirmed Covid-19 outbreak, as the number of people with fever symptoms surpassed 2 million.

The isolated nation reported 263,370 more people with fever symptoms, and two more deaths, taking the total fever caseload to 2.24 million as of Thursday evening, including 65 deaths, according to state media KCNA.

Friday's report did not reveal how many of those cases had tested positive for the coronavirus.

Despite the caseload, the North said farming continues, factories are working, and it was planning a state funeral for a former general.

"Even under the maximum emergency epidemic prevention situation, normal production is kept at key industrial sectors and large-scale construction projects are propelled without let-up," KCNA said.

"Good results are reported steadily in the ongoing anti-epidemic war," it added.

READ MORE: North Korea's suspected Covid-19 cases near two million

Loading...

Devastating consequences

The rising caseload and a lack of medical resources and vaccines have led the UN human rights agency to warn of "devastating" consequences for North Korea's 25 million people, while World Health Organization officials worry an unchecked spread could give rise to deadlier new variants.

North Korea said on Wednesday the country's virus outbreak was taking a "favourable turn," although officials in South Korea say it is hard to draw a conclusion as it is unclear how North Korea is calculating the number of fever and Covid patients.

Cases of fever reported by the government have declined in Pyongyang but risen in rural provinces, and either through error or deliberate manipulation are unlikely to be fully accurate, said Martyn Williams, a researcher at the US-based 38 North.

"I doubt they represent the exact picture," he said on Twitter.

South Korea and the United States have both offered to help North Korea fight the virus, including sending aid, but have not received a response, Seoul's deputy national security advisor said on Wednesday.

READ MORE: North Korea's Kim blasts officials for failing to deal with Covid

Route 6