Journal for Peace and Nuclear Disarmament (Mar 2021)

The DPRK’s Covid-19 Outbreak and Its Response

  • Young-Jeon Shin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/25751654.2021.1906592
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. S1
pp. 320 – 341

Abstract

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On 25 January 2020, the DPRK shut down its border, switched to a state-run emergency quarantine system, organized a pan-ministerial organization, the Central People’s Committee for Health (CPCH), and established emergency command centers for epidemic response (ECCER) in provincial, county, and Ri-levels. Until now, it has continued to take the strongest Covid-19 quarantine measures in the world, including restricting cross border and regional movement. The DPRK responded swiftly and strongly to past major outbreaks such as SARS (2002–2003), measles (2006–2007), swine flu (2009–2010), Ebola (2013–14), and MERS (2015), as well as the periodic outbreak of typhoid fever, cholera, etc. In response to the coronavirus outbreak, the DPRK drew on its experience to implement aggressive measures such as border blocking, strengthening disinfection, and quarantine, as in response to past large-scale epidemic threats. Based on limited information, North Korea now seems to be managing the Corona epidemic at a certain level, but it needs international cooperation and will have to prepare for future economic crises and food shortages.

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