Pyongyang has been locked down following the rapid spread of an ‘unspecified’ respiratory illness.
North Korean authorities have not confirmed whether the situation is related to Covid-19 cases.
The five-day lockdown will see people in the city contained to their homes and ordered to take their temperatures.
Seoul-based NK News and the Russian embassy both reported the lockdown today, citing a notice issued by Kim Jong-un’s Government.
The notice states that ‘a special anti-epidemic period has been established’ as it called on foreign delegations to keep employees inside.
It also called for individuals to measure their temperatures four times a day and report the results to a hospital by phone.
The notice made no mention of Covid-19.
However, it did cite an ‘increase in winter cases of recurrent flu and other respiratory diseases’.
The lockdowns were first reported by South Korea’s NK News, which monitors the secretive North Korea from afar.
On Tuesday, the website reported that Pyongyang residents appeared to be stocking up on goods in anticipation of stricter measures. It was unclear if other areas of the country had imposed new lockdowns.
Covid-19 cases started springing up in North Korea in May, after Kim Jong-un claimed the country had been coronavirus-free for the previous two years.
At the time, the majority of the nation was unvaccinated and the country severely lacked testing kits.
In July, North Korea suggested the Covid outbreak was caused by people who came into contact with balloons flown from South Korea.
By August had declared victory over the virus.
True case numbers were never confirmed by authorities, so the true impact of the pandemic on the country has not been revealed.
Pyongyang had simply reported daily numbers of patients with fever, a tally that rose to some 4.77 million, out of a population of about 25 million.
But it has not reported such cases since July 29.
State media have continued to report on anti-pandemic measures to battle respiratory diseases, including the flu, but have yet to report on the lockdown order.
On Tuesday, state news agency KCNA said the city of Kaesong, near the border with South Korea, had intensified public communication campaigns ‘so that all the working people observe anti-epidemic regulations voluntarily in their work and life’.
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