North Korea will bar entry to foreigners on tourist trips
from Friday, because of worries over the spread of the deadly Ebola virus,
according to operators of tours to the isolated country.
At least 4,877 people have died in the world’s worst
recorded outbreak of Ebola, the World Health Organization (WHO) estimates, with
nearly 10,000 cases recorded by 19 October, though the true toll could be three
times as much.
It was not immediately clear if the North Korean ban also
covered non-tourist members of the diplomatic or business community with ties
to Pyongyang.
“We have just received official news from our partners in
the DPRK that, as of tomorrow, tourists from any country, regardless of where
they have recently visited, will not be permitted to enter,” said Gareth
Johnson of Young Pioneer Tours, a travel company based in China that runs tours
in North Korea. DPRK is short for the North’s official name, the Democratic
People’s Republic of Korea.
In late September, the North’s official news agency, KCNA,
said it was stepping up quarantine efforts to detect foreigners and tourists who
might be carrying the virus.
Other travel agents specialising in tours to North Korea
confirmed the news, which they said came through official channels in Pyongyang
and Beijing.
“It is unknown how long this closure will be in effect, and
due to the very changeable nature of DPRK policy, we are still hopeful we will
be able to run the three tours we have scheduled for the remainder of 2014,”
said Nick Bonner of Koryo Tours, a travel group based in Beijing that also specialises
in North Korea tours.
International travel to North Korea is rare and although
there have been no reported cases of the Ebola virus in the reclusive country,
in the past it has sealed its borders to foreign visitors over health concerns.
“In 2003, the country closed its borders due to the threat
of SARS, despite not a single case being reported there,” said Bonner of Koryo
Tours.
Source-The Guardian
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