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Kim calls for boosting North Korea’s navy

By - Aug 30,2023 - Last updated at Aug 30,2023

This photo taken on Sunday and released from North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency, on Tuesday  (AFP photo)

SEOUL — Kim Jong-un has called for boosting North Korea’s navy, saying the country’s waters brimmed with “the danger of a nuclear war”, state media reported on Tuesday, as Seoul, Washington and Tokyo carried out joint naval drills.

Kim slammed growing trilateral cooperation between the “gang bosses” of the United States, South Korea and Japan, saying they had recently “closeted with each other”, the official Korean Central News Agency reported, in an apparent reference this month’s Camp David summit.

He accused Washington of being “more frantic than ever before” by conducting joint naval exercises and deploying nuclear strategic assets in the waters around the Korean Peninsula on a permanent basis, the report said.

“Owing to the reckless confrontational moves of the US and other hostile forces, the waters off the Korean Peninsula have been reduced into the world’s biggest war hardware concentration spot, the most unstable waters with the danger of a nuclear war,” Kim said, according to KCNA.

“To achieve the successes in rapidly developing the naval force has become a very urgent issue in view of the enemies’ recent aggressive attempts.”

Kim acknowledged that the North’s navy “had not been armed with up-to-date weapons and combat equipment” but said that even so, it had managed “great achievements of more weighty significance” than the country’s better-funded army.

He also promised that the navy would be given new weapons as part of North Korea’s policy for “expanding the tactical nuclear weapons operation”.

The navy will become a “component of the state nuclear deterrence”, he added.

 

‘Very weak’ navy 

 

Photos carried by the official Rodong Sinmun newspaper showed Kim, accompanied by his young daughter, inspecting the navy command and taking photos with scores of naval officers.

“South Korea, the United States and Japan agreed to strengthen military cooperation and decided to conduct joint military exercises on a regular basis at the Camp David summit,” Cheong Seong-chang, researcher at the Sejong Institute, told AFP.

“Therefore, North Korea may feel an urgent need to strengthen its naval power,” he said, adding that some intelligence reports suggested Russia and the North were considering holding joint naval training.

“For that North Korea would need a naval vessel but the country’s navy is very weak, so I think Kim Jong-un is showing off his will to strengthen the naval forces,” Cheong added.

The United States, South Korea and Japan held a joint naval missile defence exercise on Tuesday to counter Pyongyang’s growing nuclear and missile threats.

The exercise in international waters off South Korea’s southern island of Jeju involved destroyers equipped with Aegis radar systems from the three countries, the South Korean navy said in a statement.

Tuesday’s trilateral naval exercises marked the first such drills since the Camp David summit and followed similar ones in July, April, and February this year, according to the Yonhap news agency.

Seoul, Washington and Japan have beefed up their defence cooperation in recent months in response to increasing missile provocations by the North.

The United States and South Korea are also holding their annual Ulchi Freedom Shield exercises, which always infuriate Pyongyang.

North Korea has conducted a record number of weapons tests this year, and last week carried out its second attempt to put a spy satellite into orbit, although it ended in failure.

Kim has declared North Korea an “irreversible” nuclear power and has called for ramped-up arms production, including tactical nuclear weapons.

 

Wildfire in Greek national forest still 'out of control'

By - Aug 28,2023 - Last updated at Aug 28,2023

This photograph taken on August 24 shows the bodies of burned sheep in wildfires in Kirki, a village near Alexandroupoli (AFP photo)

ATHENS — A fire that has raged for over a week at the Dadia Forest in northeast Greece, a major European sanctuary for birds of prey, continues to spread despite efforts to contain it, firefighters said on Monday.

"The fire is still out of control," a spokesman for the fire service told AFP, adding that "nearly 500 firefighters backed by 100 vehicles, seven planes and three helicopters are fighting the flames".

The head of the fire spreads for nearly 10 kilometres, according to firefighters on site.

The blaze, which erupted on August 19, is devastating the region of Evros, near the port town of Alexandroupoli and the border with Turkey, forcing the evacuations of some villages.

On Sunday, the EU’s Copernicus climate observatory said on social media that “The burnt area has reached 77,000 hectares with 120 active hot spots”.

The Dadia forest is part of a UNESCO World Heritage national park, with vegetation so dense that the flames at times are impossible for firefighters to see, with water from hoses often failing to reach flames at ground level, experts say.

Since the fire started 20 people believed to be migrants, including two children, have been found dead in the area, part of the Evros region that is a regular entry point for migrants from neighbouring Turkey.

Another dangerous fire continued to destroy vegetation on Mount Parnitha, near Athens, for the sixth straight day, with 270 firefighters on the scene.

They are among several wildfires across Greece this summer that have so far burned more than 120,000 hectares, according to Greek authorities.

 

Ukraine says captured Robotyne, eyes breakthrough in south

By - Aug 28,2023 - Last updated at Aug 28,2023

KYIV — Ukraine announced on Monday it had recaptured a village on the southern frontline where its forces are hoping for a breakthrough in their grinding offensive against entrenched Russian positions.

Kyiv launched its pushback in June after stockpiling Western-supplied weapons, building up assault battalions and attacking Russian positions.

But officials in Kyiv have acknowledged that progress has been slow and Moscow says Ukrainian forces are running out of resources.

"Robotyne has been liberated. Our forces are advancing southeast of Robotyne and south of Mala Tokmachka," Deputy Defence Minister Ganna Malyar said on television.

Both settlements are in the southern region of Zaporizhzhia, one of four that the Kremlin claimed to have annexed last year despite not having military control over any of them.

Ukraine's limited advances on the southern front have spurred a political debate in Western capitals over political and military support for Kyiv.

Compared with previous offensives in the Kherson and Kharkiv regions, Ukrainian forces are crashing into Russian defensive lines of trenches and minefields that are kilometres deep.

But experts say that the capture of Robotyne is evidence Ukrainian forces can puncture Russian lines as they move towards the Black Sea.

The US-based Institute for the Study of War said Russia had “committed a considerable amount of materiel, effort, and manpower to hold the series of defensive positions that Ukrainian forces are currently penetrating”.

Apart from clawing back several hamlets in the south, Ukrainian forces have pressured the flanks of Bakhmut, a war-scarred eastern town captured by Russia in May.

Malyar said on Monday that Ukrainian troops were advancing south of Bakhmut and that they had recaptured 1 square kilometre there over the last week of fighting.

She also acknowledged a Russian push to take back territory in the northeast of Ukraine, describing fighting in the Kharkiv region as “very intense” over the past week.

Ukrainian officials have estimated that Russia has committed around 100,000 additional troops to frontlines in the northeast to pressure defensive lines.

British intelligence services have said Russia could try to divert Ukrainian military resources by solidifying their positions in Kharkiv.

While movement on the frontline has been stilted, both sides have pursued aerial assault campaigns.

 

Drone attacks 

 

A Russian missile strike overnight on an industrial facility in the central region of Poltava left three dead and five wounded, the police said.

Images released by Kyiv showed law enforcement officials standing next to a large blaze engulfing part of a factory with plumes of black smoke billowing into the sky.

Presidential chief of staff Andriy Yermak said on social media that Russian forces had hit an oil facility in the town of Gogoleve and that two employees were killed.

The air force said Russia had launched six cruise missiles and that air defence systems had downed four of them.

Russia’s defence ministry said those strikes had targeted a weapons depot and that the assigned targets had been hit.

Russian authorities earlier said its systems had destroyed a drone approaching Moscow and two in a region bordering Ukraine.

Russian-installed authorities in Crimea, which Moscow annexed in 2014, later said two Ukrainian drones had been shot down over the peninsula.

The head of Russia’s election commission, Ella Pamfilova, announced on Monday that early voting in local elections in the four newly annexed territories as well as Crimea would begin this week.

Previous ballots in occupied territories have been dismissed by Kyiv and its Western allies. Russia is holding local elections on September 10 for various regional officials.

Rights groups slam 'cruel' Taliban ban on women in national park

'We must take action from today'

By - Aug 28,2023 - Last updated at Aug 28,2023

A Taliban security personnel gestures as women stand in a queue outside the passport office in Herat on Saturday (AFP photo)

KABUL — Rights monitors condemned on Monday a ban on women visiting one of Afghanistan's most popular national parks, the latest curb shutting women out of public life under Taliban government rule.

The Taliban government's morality ministry closed the Band-e-Amir national park to women at the weekend, claiming female visitors were failing to cover up with proper Islamic dress.

The park, 175 kilometres west of Kabul, is renowned for its striking blue lakes surrounded by sweeping cliffs.

The Bamyan province park is a hugely popular spot for domestic tourism and is regularly swarmed with Afghans relaxing at the shore or paddling the waters in rented boats.

Human Rights Watch's Associate Women's Rights Director Heather Barr told AFP the decision to ban women was "cruel in a very intentional way".

"Not content with depriving girls and women of education, employment and free movement, the Taliban also want to take from them parks and sport and now even nature," she said in a separate statement.

"Step-by-step the walls are closing in on women as every home becomes a prison," she said.

The Minister for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice Mohammad Khalid Hanafi justified the ban on Saturday on the grounds women were failing to wear hijabs properly.

"We must take action from today. We must prevent the non-observance of hijab," he said during a visit to Bamyan province.

Ministry spokesman Akef Muhajir told AFP local religious leaders requested the temporary closure because women from outside the province were not observing the hijab dress code.

Other national parks in Afghanistan remain open to all, he said.

Since returning to power in August 2021, Taliban authorities have imposed a strict interpretation of Islam, with women bearing the brunt of laws the United Nations has labelled "gender apartheid".

UN Special Rapporteur on human rights in Afghanistan Richard Bennett asked on the social media site X, formerly known as Twitter, on Sunday "why this restriction... is necessary to comply with Sharia and Afghan culture?"

Women and girls have been banned from attending high school and university as well as barred from visiting parks, fairs and gyms in the years since the Taliban authorities returned to power.

They have also mostly been blocked from working for UN agencies or NGOs, with thousands sacked from government jobs or paid to stay at home.

The announcement of the ban on visiting Band-e-Amir elicited posts from women on social media with pictures of trips to the park and expressing hopes they will return one day.

Erdogan to push Putin on grain deal in Russia

By - Aug 28,2023 - Last updated at Aug 28,2023

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan last met Russia’s Vladimir Putin in October 2022 (AFP photo)

ANKARA — Turkey said on Monday that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will “soon” visit Russia for talks with Vladimir Putin on reviving a Black Sea grain deal that could be used as a springboard for broader Ukraine peace negotiations.

Erdogan’s ruling party spokesman Omer Celik told reporters that the meeting will take place in Russia’s Black Sea resort city of Sochi and focus on averting a looming “food crisis”.

“As you know, [Erdogan] will pay a visit to Sochi soon,” Celik said in televised remarks.

The Bloomberg news agency had earlier reported that Erdogan could meet the Russian president on September 8.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters that a meeting was being prepared “intensively” but provided no time or place for the talks.

Erdogan has used his good relations with Moscow and Kyiv to try to bring the two sides into formal peace talks.

He last personally met Putin in the Kazakh capital Astana last October.

The two also held a teleconference in April that inaugurated a Russian-built nuclear power plant on the eve of Erdogan’s tough re-election to his final term in office.

NATO member Turkey helped negotiate the only major agreement signed by the warring sides since the February 2022 invasion — a deal to ship grain from three Ukrainian ports across the Black Sea.

Russia and Ukraine are major grain exporters and their initial deal helped bring down global food prices that were contributing to starvation in Africa and parts of the Middle East.

 

Ukraine tests new route 

 

Moscow scuppered the UN-backed agreement last month citing its non-compliance with provisions aimed at easing Russia’s own exports of agricultural products and fertiliser.

Russia has since launched repeated attacks on Ukrainian port infrastructure and warned that it may consider any ships in the Black Sea as military targets.

Ukraine has also stepped up attacks on Russian targets around the Black Sea.

But Erdogan has remained undeterred.

He dispatched Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan to Kyiv last Friday in a bid to bring Ukraine on board for the talks.

Fidan used the visit to urge Ukraine to abandon its attempts to set up a new route — reportedly backed by Washington and the European Union — that ships can use without Russia’s involvement in time for the autumn harvest.

“We know alternative routes are being sought [for grain shipments], but we see no alternative to the original initiative because they carry risks,” Fidan said in Kyiv.

Fidan is due to visit Moscow in the coming days.

Ukraine now depends on land routes and a shallow river port that severely limits its grain export volumes.

It has sent two ships along a new route from a port in Odesa that reached Istanbul after hugging the shores of NATO members Romania and Bulgaria.

But Turkish officials argue that it is too dangerous.

Moscow warns that it may consider any ships in the Black Sea as military targets.

The Russian navy fired on and briefly boarded a Turkish-owned vessel that entered the Black Sea earlier this month.

Alps rockslide halts train services between France and Italy

By - Aug 28,2023 - Last updated at Aug 28,2023

This video grab obtained by UGC video on Monday shows a spectacular rockslide in the Maurienne valley of the French Alps after a heatwave followed by heavy rain has led to the suspension of rail and HGV traffic on a major route between France and northern Italy (AFP photo)

LYON — Train services between France and Italy have been halted until Thursday at the earliest, after a huge rockslide in the Maurienne valley of the French Alps which also blocked some roads, officials said on Monday.

Regional authorities in Savoie said the rockslide occurred at 5:15pm (15:15 GMT) on Sunday, when “boulders with a total volume of 700 cubic metres” slammed into a protective barrier along the RD 1006 road that leads to the Mont-Cenis pass into Italy’s Susa valley.

The landslide forced the suspension of all cross-border trains on the Chambery-Turin line, as well as TER regional trains in the Maurienne Valley, French rail operator SNCF said.

The Frejus tunnel connecting France and Italy under the Alps has also been closed to heavy trucks, whose drivers are being advised to use the Mont Blanc tunnel or the A8 motorway instead.

French Transport Minister Clement Beaune said a return to normal services “will require several days”.

“After this massive landslide yesterday in Maurienne, our services are mobilised to restore road and rail service as quickly as possible,” he said on social media.

Sunday’s landslide followed “heavy rain with sizeable downhill flows, after a heatwave throughout the Alps,” said Denis Roy, weather chief at Meteo France for the mountain region.

“There have always been rock falls, but there are periods more favourable than others, like this somewhat rare heatwave,” said Serge Taboulot, president of the Institute for Major Risks in nearby Grenoble.

Images shared on social media showed a huge cloud of dust detaching from a cliff and plunging onto the local road that runs alongside the railway line and the motorway.

The RD 1006 road had luckily been closed half an hour before when a single block of stone fell, said Jean-Philippe Laplanche, infrastructure chief in the Savoie department.

Authorities are “very vigilant about this kind of incident”, which have “been picking up due to climate change”, he added.

Rail operator SNCF said that “access to the site is still forbidden because there is still a risk of rock falls”.

Only when geologists arrive on the ground will the state-owned firm be able to evalute the damage and further risks, it added.

The ATMB company which runs the toll tunnel through Mont Blanc said queues had mounted to more than two hours on the French side and three on the Italian.

The last major geological event to disrupt rail traffic on the France-Italy line was a mudslide in 2019 that covered the track for 60 metres, halting traffic for three weeks.

 

After Moon landing, India eyes the Sun

By - Aug 28,2023 - Last updated at Aug 28,2023

An Indian paramilitary trooper stands guard as a live telecast is aired near a clock tower in Srinagar on August 23, showing the Chandrayaan-3 spacecraft minutes before its successful lunar landing on the south pole of the Moon (AFP photo)

NEW DELHI — Days after becoming the first nation to land a craft near the Moon’s largely unexplored south pole, India’s space agency said on Monday it will launch a satellite to survey the Sun.

“The launch of Aditya-L1, the first space-based Indian observatory to study the Sun, is scheduled for September 2,” the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) said on X, formerly known as Twitter.

Aditya, meaning “sun” in Hindi, will be fired into a halo orbit in a region of space about 1.5 million kilometres from Earth, providing the craft with a continuous clear view of the Sun.

“This will provide a greater advantage of observing the solar activities and its effect on space weather in real time,” ISRO said.

The spacecraft will be carrying seven payloads to observe the Sun’s outermost layers — known as the photosphere and chromosphere — including by using electromagnetic and particle field detectors.

Among several objectives, it will study the drivers for space weather, including to better understand the dynamics of solar wind.

While NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA) have previously placed orbiters to study the Sun, it will be the first such mission for India.

The unmanned Chandrayaan-3 — “Mooncraft” in Sanskrit — touched down on the lunar surface last week, making India only the fourth country behind the United States, Russia and China to land successfully on the Moon.

That marked the latest milestone in India’s ambitious but cut-price space programme, sparking celebrations across the world’s most populous country.

India has a comparatively low-budget space programme but one that has grown considerably in size and momentum since it first sent a probe to orbit the Moon in 2008.

Experts say India can keep costs low by copying and adapting existing technology, and thanks to an abundance of highly skilled engineers who earn a fraction of the wages of their foreign counterparts.

In 2014, India became the first Asian nation to put a craft into orbit around Mars and it is slated to launch a three-day crewed mission into the Earth’s orbit by next year.

It also plans a joint mission with Japan to send another probe to the Moon by 2025 and an orbital mission to Venus within the next two years.

 

Fires in Canada's north force another town to evacuate

By - Aug 28,2023 - Last updated at Aug 28,2023

OTTAWA — Another town in Canada's Northwest Territories was forced to evacuate on Saturday as strong winds and rising temperatures gave new life to vast wildfires.

The threat to Hay River, a town of about 4,000, was so great that even firefighters and essential workers were ordered to leave, authorities said.

The territorial government ordered everyone still in the town to travel to the local airport and await instructions.

"Anyone who remains in Hay River is doing so at their own risk," a government statement said. "There will be no emergency services or response available".

At this point, some two-thirds of the entire population of the Northwest Territories, a vast but lightly populated area, has been evacuated to neighbouring provinces, sometimes 2,000 kilometres away.

"Extreme southwest winds have pushed the fire closer to town along the highway, forcing crews and aircraft to pull back and regroup at a safe distance," said Shane Thompson, the region's environmental minister, calling the situation "very serious". 

Fire crews are fighting a wall of flames several kilometres long, authorities said, with heavy smoke hampering use of helicopters.

Hay River Mayor Kandis Jameson said 100 residents refused to follow the evacuation order.

“To look out the window and see that fire roaring towards your town was something I will never forget,” she told a news conference Saturday.

Meanwhile, fires raging near Yellowknife, the capital of the Northwest Territories that has been evacuated for a week, continue to burn “out of control”, according to authorities.

Canada is suffering through its worst forest fire season in recorded history, with much of the country hit by high temperatures and serious drought.

A total area of 15 million hectares has now burned, an area larger than Greece. 

That is more than double the previous record, and the 2023 wildfire season is not yet over.

In all, 200,000 people have been evacuated, and fires have claimed four lives. 

Experts say global warming has aggravated the conditions that favour wildfires.

 

Wagner boss Prigozhin's death confirmed by Moscow

By - Aug 28,2023 - Last updated at Aug 28,2023

A flag bearing the logo of private mercenary group Wagner flutters above a portrait of late head of Wagner paramilitary group, Yevgeny Prigozhin at a makeshift memorial in Moscow, on Sunday (AFP photo)

MOSCOW — Wagner mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin was formally confirmed dead on Sunday following genetic analysis, investigators said, as anger and questions over what caused his plane to crash earlier in the week continued to mount.

Speculation that the Kremlin may have been involved in the crash has been rife, with the incident coming exactly two months after Wagner staged a mutiny against Moscow's military leadership.

"Molecular-genetic examinations have been completed as part of the investigation into the plane crash in the Tver region," Svetlana Petrenko, a spokeswoman from Russia's Investigative Committee said.

"According to their results, the identities of all 10 victims were established, they correspond to the list stated in the flight list," she added.

Among the nine other people listed onboard the Embraer private jet that crashed on Wednesday was Dmitry Utkin, a shadowy figure who managed Wagner's operations and allegedly served in Russian military intelligence.

 

Makeshift memorials 

 

Russian officials opened an investigation into air traffic violations after the crash but have otherwise not disclosed details about its possible cause.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov described the incident as "tragic" to reporters on Friday, calling rumours of possible foul play an "absolute lie".

His comments came as the Kremlin appeared to rein in groups like Wagner, with a presidential decree signed Friday stipulating that paramilitary fighters will have to swear an oath to the Russian flag.

In an address Thursday, President Vladimir Putin said he had known Prigozhin — once a loyal ally — since the early 1990s, describing him as a man who made mistakes but "achieved results".

However, his comments did little to stem mounting questions and anger over the mercenary's chief's death, with makeshift shrines to Prigozhin springing up across Russian cities.

Video taken by AFP showed a makeshift memorial on Moscow's Varvarka street, just outside the Kremlin, as men stood solemnly before a line of red roses and pictures of the mercenary chief.

“He was killed,” said one man wearing a shirt marked with the letter “Z” — a symbol representing Russia’s offensive in Ukraine.

“He was killed by his enemies. We won’t say who. The investigation will reveal. But we hope that revenge will catch up with those who committed this crime,” he added.

Another man outside the memorial told AFP that Prigozhin had “plenty of enemies”, as he speculated over who was responsible.

“Prigozhin had a lot of enemies in our country, abroad, in Ukraine and Africa,” said Renat, 53.

Wagner forces, which Moscow used to prosecute some of the Ukraine conflict’s bloodiest battles, also maintained a significant military presence in Africa.

Similar memorials were spotted across the country, in cities like Perm and Saint Petersburg, Russia’s former imperial capital and Prigozhin’s birthplace.

 

Drone strikes 

 

Hostilities between Moscow and Kyiv continued to rage on Sunday, with Russia announcing its border regions were hit by drones again and Ukraine reporting an overnight strike.

Russia and the Moscow-annexed Crimean Peninsula have been hit by almost daily attacks in the past month, since Kyiv warned in July it aimed to “return” the conflict to Russian territory.

Moscow’s defence ministry announced two Ukrainian drones flying over border regions on Sunday had been repelled, after the governor of Belgorod region said a drone carrying explosives had killed a man the day before.

The governor of Russia’s Kursk region, which lies next to the Ukrainian border, said a drone had crashed into an apartment building in Kursk city overnight, blowing out windows on several floors.

“There were no fires, none of the residents were injured,” Governor Roman Starovoit said on social media, sharing an image of what appeared to be a charred mark on a tower block.

Ukraine was also targeted on Sunday, as its air force announced it shot down four cruise missiles in the country’s north and central regions during another Russian air raid overnight.

The head of Kyiv’s regional military administration, Ruslan Kravchenko, said falling missile fragments had injured two people and damaged 10 homes.

 

‘Juice’ 

 

Ukraine meanwhile mourned the loss of three pilots killed in a mid-air collision on Friday, as leading figures paid tribute to well-known fighter ace “Juice” killed in the crash.

The crash involving two combat training aircraft marks a painful blow for Kyiv, which has been looking to secure advanced F-16 jets to modernise its Soviet-era air force.

The 40th Tactical Aviation Brigade named the three dead as Major Vyacheslav Minka, Major Sergiy Prokazin and Captain Andrii Pilshchykov, better known by his call-sign “Juice”.

“Each of them was involved in air operations for the defence of Ukraine since the start of Russia’s full-scale aggression, including tactical tasks in the east and in Zaporizhzhia region,” it said.

President Volodymyr Zelensky has vowed an investigation into what happened.

N. Korea lets citizens abroad return in easing of COVID isolation

By - Aug 28,2023 - Last updated at Aug 28,2023

SEOUL — North Korea has allowed citizens stranded abroad by its strict COVID curbs to return home, state media reported on  Sunday, as the country moves towards a full reopening after three years of pandemic isolation.

The country had sealed its borders since early 2020 to protect itself from COVID-19, which prevented even its own nationals from returning.

But there have been increasing signs of a shift in border control in recent weeks, including the resumption of international commercial air travel.

In a statement carried by the Korean Central News Agency, the State Emergency Epidemic Prevention Headquarters said North Korean citizens abroad had been allowed to return home in line with “the eased worldwide pandemic situation”.

“Those returned will be put under proper medical observation at quarantine wards for a week,” it added.

The move signals that North Korea will shift its stringent COVID policy and gradually ease quarantine measures, Cheong Seong-chang, a researcher at the Sejong Institute, told AFP.

“With the latest announcement, it’s expected that a large-scale return of North Koreans will be made via the land route as well,” he added.

Last month, high-level Chinese and Russian delegations visited Pyongyang for a key anniversary celebration, the first foreign dignitaries allowed to visit the country in years.

And earlier this month, a delegation of North Korean athletes was allowed to attend a taekwondo competition in Kazakhstan, while state-run Air Koryo made its first international commercial flight in three years last week.

Despite the signs of easing of its pandemic isolation, analysts say North Korea is not yet ready to fully reopen its borders.

“First, North Koreans have not been vaccinated,” said Cho Han-bum, senior research fellow at the Korea Institute for National Unification.

He added Pyongyang was likely frightened by the “collapse” of China’s medical system after its abrupt decision last December to end its three-year zero-COVID policy.

The sudden end of curbs led to a massive surge in hospitalisations and deaths in China that health experts say were largely unreported by the government, with some studies saying nearly 2 million people died in the following weeks.

North Korea has a crumbling health system — one of the worst in the world — and no COVID vaccines, antiviral treatment drugs or mass testing capacity, and Cho said the situation was expected to be far worse.

The “very limited” flight service to China and Russia and allowing overseas citizens to return home “is by no means a complete reopening of the border”, said Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul.

The one-week quarantine for returning citizens suggests that tourism to North Korea will not be resumed any time soon, added Cheong of the Sejong Institute.

 

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