North Korea is not known to have imported any COVID-19 vaccines, though media reports have suggested at least some key people, such as border control officials, may have been vaccinated.
Last year North Korea rejected planned shipments of AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine that were being organised under COVAX due to concerns over side effects, a South Korean think-tank said at the time.
Pyongyang also turned down an offer of 3 million COVID-19 vaccine doses of China’s Sinovac Biotech, UNICEF said last year.
“Gavi and COVAX are continuing the dialogue with (North Korea) to operationalise the COVID-19 immunisation program,” the Gavi spokesperson said.
North Korea has not officially confirmed a single coronavirus infection, though officials in South Korea and the United States have cast doubts on that the country is COVID-free.
It was one of the first countries to close its borders as the pandemic began to spread in 2020, and only last month began to allow a few trains across its border with China.
North Korea’s parliament approved a 33.3 per cent increase in spending to tackle the pandemic this year, state media reported on Tuesday.
“The emergency epidemic prevention work will be made the top priority of the state affairs and the epidemic prevention walls will be further intensified,” premier Kim Tok Hun said in a speech.
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