North Korea's official stance on the coronavirus remained the same on Monday, according to a state-run newspaper: "The infectious disease did not flow into our country yet."

South Korea's Daily NK news organization, however, reported that 200 soldiers are dead from the virus and another 4,000 people are in quarantine.

North Korea's military is scrambling to control the spread of the coronavirus outbreak, the Daily NK reported, citing an anonymous source.

Its response includes disinfecting the areas where quarantined soldiers are being housed, monitoring soldiers with compromised immune systems, and increasing the amount of food given to each soldier.

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Hundreds of North Korean soldiers have reportedly died from the coronavirus — and thousands of others are being quarantined.

But the secretive nation's leaders are sticking to the official narrative that the global epidemic has not reached them.

According to Daily NK, a South Korean news organization, the COVID-19 virus killed 180 North Korean soldiers in January and February and has sent another 3,700 into quarantine. And according to South Korea's government-backed Yonhap News Agency, North Korea quarantined almost 10,000 people over coronavirus fears but released nearly 4,000 because they didn't present symptoms.

But the North Korean government line hasn't changed. The cloistered nation has remained stubbornly resistant to providing transparent information about the reported outbreak in the country.

"The infectious disease did not flow into our country yet," North Korea's government-controlled Rodong Sinmun newspaper said on Monday, according to Newsweek.

As of Monday, the coronavirus had infected more than 111,000 people globally and led to nearly 3,900 deaths.

The North Korean military is reportedly initiating new protocols to deal with the virus

The Daily NK attributed its information to a medical-corps report from within the North Korean military. Hospitals serving different parts of the army were asked to provide data about the number of soldiers in their care who died of high fevers triggered by pneumonia, tuberculosis, asthma, and colds, as well as those who were in quarantine.

The report itself caused a furor in the military's leadership, according to a Daily NK source, who said that officials have ordered military hospitals to thoroughly sanitize the areas where quarantined soldiers are being housed. Soldiers with compromised immune systems or those who have a history of poor health are also being closely monitored, the source said.

Military-unit leaders can also expect to be punished if the proper protocol directed at controlling the spread of the coronavirus is not followed, the Daily NK said.

"Future evaluations on battle readiness will include a review of how many soldiers have died," the source said, adding that officers will "be held responsible for the deaths that have occurred in their units."

The coronavirus began in China, which has a relatively porous border with North Korea. Getty Images

Officials are looking into increasing the soldiers' supply of food so their bodies are better equipped to resist COVID-19, the Daily NK's source said, adding that people "in charge of the military's logistics operations are stressing that soldiers are supplied at least 800 grams worth of food per day. They also are emphasizing that soldiers eat three meals of pureed soybean soup per day, instead of the usual one per day."

North Korea is threatened by its porous border with China, an absence of medical supplies, and a "crumbling" healthcare system, experts say. But officials, despite insisting that there have been no coronavirus cases, put 380 foreigners, most of whom are diplomats, in quarantine for over a month, North Korean state media reported on February 24.

A warning was issued in Rodong Sinmun that deemed it "absolutely unacceptable" for North Korean citizens to interfere with the government's steps to halt the coronavirus. That includes those who object to wearing face masks, according to Newsweek.

The COVID-19 outbreak poses an "unpredictable" danger, so the country's "work to completely lock down all routes through which the infectious disease can flow in — the border, sea, and air — should be continued with high intensity," Rodong Sinmun said.