产品展示
  • NFA纽福克斯12V 25A全自动汽车电瓶充电器蓄电池充电机 引擎启动
  • 02-12老捷达扶手箱老款捷达王春天前卫伙伴改装配件专用志俊3000
  • 适用于荣威550 350 360 名爵MG6 GT 倒车镜内三角板 后视镜后饰板
  • 适配广汽传祺GS4GS5GS8GA6GA5GA3平衡杆稳定开口胶套原厂专用推荐
  • 丰田适用高音喇叭罩锐志卡罗拉雷凌花冠威驰致炫雅力士三角位加装
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车电瓶

Last remaining int'l aid workers leave NK: Russian official

2024-05-21 04:44:32      点击:259
An official of the Hygienic and Anti-epidemic Center disinfects the building in Pyongyang,<strong></strong> North Korea, in this Feb. 5 photo. AP-Yonhap
An official of the Hygienic and Anti-epidemic Center disinfects the building in Pyongyang, North Korea, in this Feb. 5 photo. AP-Yonhap

The last remaining aid workers stationed in North Korea left the country in March, a Russian news service reported Wednesday, citing a Russian official, as Pyongyang has maintained tight border controls amid concerns over the coronavirus pandemic.

Pyotr Ilichev, who heads the department of international organizations of Russia's foreign ministry, also called for U.N.-led sanctions against North Korea to be lifted, pointing out that it has hit the North's economy hard, according to RIA Novosti.

North Korea has claimed to be coronavirus-free but has taken relatively swift and tough measures against the global pandemic. It has maintained tight border controls since early last year to ward off an outbreak.

Ilichev said that the North's border closure has rendered international assistance organizations unable to get replacement workers into the country, with supplies necessary to carry out projects being cut off, the new agency said.

He was also quoted as saying that no container shipments have arrived in the North since August last year.

U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric hinted last month that its workers in North Korea have returned to their home countries.

There are growing signs that the North is moving to ease its strict border controls with China amid a recently reported increase in trade with the neighboring country. China accounts for almost all of the North's international trade. (Yonhap)


North Korean leader's sister warns S. Korea
Biden gov't likely to seek incremental sanctions relief for North Korea: CRS report