
-
Greece on high alert as heat and wind fuel fire outbreaks
-
Norris tops Silverstone practice as Horner quizzed over Verstappen
-
Brathwaite out for nought in 100th Test before West Indies rebuild
-
Russia brushes of talks after largest assault on Ukraine
-
England's James ready for Euros opener with France, says Wiegman
-
Keys latest to fall in Wimbledon wipeout as Alcaraz resumes title bid
-
Smith and Brook tons lead England revival against India in second Test
-
France praises China Cognac progress, warns of unresolved issues
-
Australian Open champion Keys stunned at Wimbledon
-
Hamas says holding consultations on Gaza truce proposal
-
Top gun Pogacar targets fourth Tour de France triumph
-
Heavy snow hits Turkey's northeast as southwest burns
-
Pakistan building collapse kills 7
-
Osaka still dreams of glory despite latest Wimbledon flop
-
Hamilton on top after opening practice for British GP
-
Alcaraz back in action at Wimbledon as Raducanu eyes Sabalenka shock
-
Court strikes suspension for Nigerian senator who complained of sexism
-
Riquelme leaves Atletico Madrid for Real Betis
-
Osaka blows chance to reach Wimbledon fourth round
-
England's Smith stuns India with blistering century in second Test
-
Meltdown: Swiss glaciers hit annual tipping point weeks early
-
Salah 'frightened' to return to Liverpool after Jota death
-
Wimbledon pays tribute to Jota after Liverpool star's death
-
Macron to co-chair Ukraine talks with Europe leaders while in UK: Elysee
-
Dozens hurt in fuel station blast heard across Rome
-
Vingegaard 'stronger than ever' as Tour de France start looms
-
Russia brushes off talks, launches largest assault on Ukraine
-
Stocks, dollar drop as tariff talk dominates
-
Besiktas take Tammy Abraham on loan from AS Roma
-
Wimbledon defends prize pot as players push for bigger share of profits
-
Siraj's double strike leaves England reeling in second Test
-
Pakistan building collapse kills 6: police
-
Nico Williams pens new Athletic deal in transfer twist
-
Russia hits Ukraine with largest barrage of war after Putin-Trump call
-
China to require EU brandy exporters to raise prices or face tariffs
-
Swiss Alps hits annual glacier tipping point weeks early
-
At least five dead in Pakistan building collapse: police
-
Firefighters master one Turkey wildfire as two others rage on
-
Second day of travel chaos as French air traffic controllers strike
-
Putin hits Ukraine with largest barrage of war after Trump call
-
Philippines asks Japan's help searching lake for missing cockfighters
-
Rio to host BRICS summit wary of Trump
-
Trump to sign 'big, beautiful' bill on US Independence Day
-
Schmidt confident sidelined Wallabies' trio will be fit for Lions
-
North Korean detained after crossing land border: Seoul military
-
Bayern stand before PSG in battle of Club World Cup favourites
-
Record cold grips Argentina, Chile and Uruguay
-
Abidjan dreams of becoming Africa's next cinema hub
-
Fired in bathrobe: Slovak cultural heads recall their dismissals
-
Scott Barrett says All Blacks not 'disrespected' by France

As climate warms, S. Korea fights new border threat: malarial mosquitoes
Near the heavily fortified border that divides North and South Korea, a monitoring device is working 24-7 -- not tracking missiles or troop movements, but catching malaria-carrying mosquitoes that may cross the border.
Despite its advanced healthcare service and decades of determined efforts, achieving "malaria-free" status has remained elusive for South Korea, largely thanks to its proximity to the isolated North, where the disease is prevalent.
The South issued a nationwide malaria warning this year, and scientists say climate change, especially warmer springs and heavier rainfall, could bring more mosquito-borne diseases to the peninsula unless the two Koreas, which remain technically at war, cooperate.
The core issue is the DMZ, a four-kilometre-wide no man's land that runs the full length of the 250-kilometre (155-mile) border.
The demilitarized zone is covered in lush forest and wetlands, and largely unvisited by humans since it was created after the 1953 ceasefire that ended Korean War hostilities.
The heavily mined border barrier area has become an ecological refuge for rare species -- an Asiatic black bear was photographed in 2018 -- and scientists say it is also an ideal breeding ground for mosquitoes, including malaria carriers that can fly as far as 12 kilometres.
The DMZ has stagnant water plus "plenty of wild animals that serve as blood sources for mosquitoes to feed on in order to lay their eggs", said Kim Hyun-woo, a staff scientist at Seoul's Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency.
South Korea once believed it had eradicated malaria, but in 1993 a soldier serving on the DMZ was discovered to have been infected, and the disease has persisted ever since, with cases up nearly 80 percent last year to 747, from 420 in 2022.
"The DMZ is not an area where pest control can be carried out," Kim Dong-gun, an environmental biology professor at Sahmyook University in Seoul, told AFP.
As mosquito populations increase, more malaria carriers are "feeding on soldiers in the border region, leading to a continuous occurrence of malaria cases there", he said.
The South Korean health authorities have installed 76 mosquito-tracking devices nationwide, including in key areas near the DMZ.
- 'Disease republic' -
North of the border, malaria is more widespread, with WHO data indicating nearly 4,500 cases between 2021 and 2022, with the country's extreme poverty and food insecurity likely exacerbating the situation.
"North Korea is a republic of infectious diseases," Choi Jung-hun, a former North Korean doctor who defected in 2011 and now works as a physician in the South, told AFP.
Choi said that even though he lived in the north of the country, he had treated malaria patients, including a North Korean soldier who had been based near the border with the South.
Outdated equipment like old microscopes hampers early and accurate malaria diagnoses, Choi said, while malnutrition and unhygienic water puddles and facilities make residents especially vulnerable to the disease.
The severe flooding that struck the North this summer could make things worse. In Pakistan, catastrophic flooding in 2022 contributed to a fivefold increase in malaria cases year-on-year.
"North Korea continues to rely on outdated communal outdoor toilets. Consequently, when floods occur, fecal water overflows, resulting in the swift spread of (all kinds of) infectious diseases," Choi told AFP.
- 'So painful' -
In the last decade, around 90 percent of South Korea's malaria patients were infected in regions near the DMZ, official figures show -- although rare cases have occurred in other areas.
Shin Seo-a, 36, was diagnosed with malaria in 2022 after being hospitalised with recurring high fevers, but she had not visited a border region that year before getting sick.
"I have no recollection of being bitten by any insects," she told AFP of the period before she became ill.
Doctors initially thought she had a kidney infection and it took around 10 days before she was finally diagnosed with the mosquito-borne disease.
Having malaria felt like "I was being stir-fried on a really hot pan," she told AFP, saying it was so painful that in tears, "I once even begged the nurse to just knock me out."
Malaria on the Korean peninsula is caused by the parasite Plasmodium vivax and is known to be less fatal than tropical malaria caused by Plasmodium falciparum, which affects many African countries.
Even so, after contracting malaria Shin developed Nontuberculous mycobacteria, a lung disease that typically affects individuals with a weakened immune system.
"Malaria is a truly terrifying disease," she told AFP, adding that she hoped more could be done to prevent its spread.
But with the nuclear-armed North declaring Seoul its "principal enemy" this year and cutting off contact, as it rejects repeated offers of overseas aid, cooperation on malaria looks unlikely.
T.Ward--AMWN