
IMAGE SOURCE, REUTERS
Nearly 2.5 million people have been sickened by “fever” in North Korea and it is under a nationwide lockdown, according to the country’s state media.
It is thought to be particularly vulnerable because it has little testing or vaccine supply.
Mr Biden announced the offer at a press conference in South Korea.
“We’ve offered vaccines, not only to North Korea but to China as well, and we’re prepared to do that immediately,” Mr Biden said in a joint appearance with South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol.
“We’ve got no response,” he added.
Instead it claimed to have successfully kept Covid out of the country by sealing its borders, although experts believe the virus has been present there for some time.
State media has recommended remedies such as herbal tea, gargling salt-water and taking painkillers such as ibuprofen, while the country’s leader, Kim Jong-un, has accused officials of bungling the distribution of national medicine reserves.
At the news conference in the South Korean capital, Seoul, President Biden said he was willing to meet Mr Kim under the right circumstances.
“It would depend on whether he was sincere and whether he was serious,” Mr Biden said.
But two years ago, Mr Kim questioned whether there was any need to continue “holding hands” with the US.
The US and South Korean presidents also agreed to deploy American weapons if necessary to deter North Korea and to increase military drills – which had been scaled down in recent years in an effort to reduce tensions.
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