North Korea establishes international fund to fight TB, malaria
North Korea has set up an international fund to fight tuberculosis and malaria.
In downtown Pyongyang, the Korea Fund against TB &
Malaria (KFTM) is an independent organization working closely
with the Ministry of Public Health on TB and malaria control
plans, North's Korea Central News Agency (KCNA) reported
Tuesday (September 18).
According to the KCNA, the
fund aims to provide technical and financial help to public
health organizations on TB and malaria control by relying on
donations from home and abroad.
North Korea has
been suffering from a high incidence and mortality from
infectious diseases such as tuberculosis. The number of cases
detected in the country has been rising in recent years
despite the international community's humanitarian aid.
In
particular, many TB patients are suffering from
multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB). Experts say this is
because North Koreans tend to abuse antibiotics, after the
country's drug management system collapsed following the great
famine called the Arduous March in the mid-1990s.
"The
fund is now pushing forward such projects as ensuring
medicines for prevention, diagnosis and treatment of TB and
malaria, improving medical services, elevating the technical
qualification of medical workers in the field of TB and
malaria control and cooperating with them in their scientific
researches," the report said.
"Hong Sung Il,
president of the fund, told the KCNA that the fund will
strengthen its activities to eradicate TB and malaria through
positive domestic and foreign support and cooperation."
The
foundation of KFTM comes after the Global Fund to Fight AIDS,
TB and Malaria (GFATM), known more generally the Global Fund,
pulled out of North Korea as of June 30.
GFATM
spokesperson Seth Fiason has been
telling
media that "... the unique operating environment in the DPRK
(North Korea) prevents us (the Global Fund) from being able to
provide our Board with the required level of assurance and
risk management for the deployment of resources."
"We
do independent checking in other countries in a way that is
not fully possible in DPRK."
The Global Fund has
disbursed more than 100 million dollars for North Korea since
2010 and the grants were administered through UNICEF and WHO.
Medical doctors and activists from abroad who have
been working in North Korea to fight epidemics have
urged
the Global Fund to reconsider its withdrawal, pointing out
North Korea's national epidemic programs are largely dependent
on the Global Fund.
The North Korean government has
also made its voice heard against the Global Fund's decision
to end its grants.
According to KCNA, North Korean
vice-minister of Public Health Kim Hyong-hun sent a letter to
Peter Sands, the Executive Director of the Global Fund on
March 10, saying the Global Fund should consider the human
suffering it would cause to the country were the Global Fund
to leave.
Source:
The Korea Times