In a move to forestall the possible transmission of the deadly Ebola virus that has killed thousands in parts of West Africa, on the 23rd of last month North Korea decided to quarantine foreign visitors

in the country for 21 days. The Daily NK has learned that since it imposed the measure, Pyongyang has also demanded that the visitors pay their lodging

expenses.

“Chinese merchants in Rasun and visiting

foreign tourists have been put under a 21-day quarantine,” a source in North Hamkyung Province told the Daily NK on Friday. “They have been asked to pay 600 RMB a day for room and board,” adding that the merchants and tourists are being held at Bipa Hotel

[nominally a five-star facility] on the coastal outskirts of Rasun.

“On top of being subjected to the mandatory

quarantine, they have been asked to pay their expenses, and so the guests are

not happy,” he said. “Some

tourists only came with enough money for their trip and now don’t have enough to pay for the period they’re being held. So hotel officials are getting ‘contracts’ from other Chinese merchants based in Rasun to lend them money.”

According to the source, the visitors are

being monitored every day by medical staff conducting routine checks for signs

of the disease. “It looks like a ploy to make more

money off of them using Ebola as an excuse,” he

asserted.

A different source in Yangkang Province

reported that during a recent inminban [people’s unit] meeting

on Ebola, people were informed, “Ebola is a disease where your blood vessels explode and all patients

die.” Residents at the meeting were instructed to take

measures to protect themselves from contracting it and any other contagious

disease.

“We were told not to come in contact with

people who have been overseas,” he explained, “and that people who have been to Russia, China, and Angola recently all need to be tested for Ebola.”

In mid-October, North Korea placed

restrictions on people visiting Pyongyang to prevent potential transmission of

the Ebola virus, as previously reported by the Daily NK. The travel

restrictions are still said to be in place, but people carrying health

certificates issued by provincial quarantine offices are allowed to travel.