产品展示
  • 博世Q85L启停电瓶马自达昂克赛拉阿特兹CX-4 CX-5 CR-V汽车蓄电池
  • 创意汽车贴纸速度与激情贴车门引擎盖改装贴个性车身划痕车贴拉花
  • 16/17款大众帕萨特日行灯改装灯日间行车灯带流光转向led改装配件
  • nfa纽福克斯汽车电瓶充电器车用12V伏agm启停蓄电池大功率冲电机
  • 适用于长安金牛星前保险杠金牛星后保险杠原车配件前杠加厚带漆
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

新闻中心

N. Korea again on virus alert as cases rise in S. Korea, China

2024-06-07 01:31:17      点击:640
North Korea's Korean Central Television reports that COVID-19 cases have shot up in South Korea,<strong></strong> China and Japan during the winter, in this image captured from footage from the TV station, Jan. 8. Yonhap
North Korea's Korean Central Television reports that COVID-19 cases have shot up in South Korea, China and Japan during the winter, in this image captured from footage from the TV station, Jan. 8. Yonhap

North Korea has called for strengthening quarantine measures against the COVID-19 pandemic, citing the fast spread of the virus in such neighboring countries as South Korea and China, according to its state media Monday.

The state-run Korean Central Television reported Sunday that virus cases shot up in the winter season in the South, China and Japan due to the fast spread of Omicron subvariants, saying, "The virus situations in those regions are the most serious in the world."

It called on North Koreans to step up quarantine measures against the COVID-19 pandemic in a bid to "thoroughly" prevent infections.

The North has recently raised its guard against the latest spike in virus cases in the South and China apparently due to concerns that potential imported infections could further deal a blow to its economy.

In August last year, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un declared victory against the COVID-19 crisis, claiming the pandemic was brought under control three months after the county reported its first virus case in May 2022.

In September last year, Kim called for a vaccination campaign against COVID-19 and advised people to start wearing masks in November as immunity levels could fall around October. (Yonhap)


Top diplomats of S. Korea, US, Japan condemn N. Korean missile launch
NK human rights groups urge president to allow loudspeaker broadcasts, leaflets