US President Trump requests coronavirus test kits from South Korea: Seoul

South Korean President Moon Jae-in, center, visits a Seegene research facility, a Seoul-based developer of COVID-19 diagnostic solutions, in Seoul on March 25, 2020. (AFP)
Updated 25 March 2020
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US President Trump requests coronavirus test kits from South Korea: Seoul

  • South Korea was once the hardest-hit country outside China but appears to have brought its outbreak under control
  • By midnight on Tuesday more than 367,000 people in South Korea had been tested

SEOUL: US President Donald Trump has requested novel coronavirus test kits from South Korea, his counterpart Moon Jae-in said Wednesday, as Washington pushes for a quick reopening of the world’s biggest economy.
The South was once the hardest-hit country outside China, where the virus first emerged, but appears to have brought its outbreak under control thanks to a huge testing and contact-tracing effort.
By midnight on Tuesday more than 367,000 people in the South had been tested — processes that are free to anyone referred by doctors, those who have links to a confirmed case, and individuals who test positive.
The US has the third-highest number of confirmed cases globally with 55,000, behind China and Italy, and did little testing initially.
Trump’s request for test kits came as he called for a quick end to social distancing and declared the beginning of the end of the health crisis in the US.
“President Trump of the United States... made a request to us for the urgent provision of quarantine items such as diagnostic kits,” Moon said while visiting a test developer in Seoul.
During their phone call Moon told Trump the equipment could require US FDA approval, which Trump said he would seek “within the day,” the South’s presidential Blue House said earlier in a separate statement.
“If there is a domestic surplus, I will support as much as possible,” Moon told Trump.
No indication was given on quantities, or whether the supplies would be donated or provided on a commercial basis.
The White House confirmed that the two leaders spoke on Tuesday, but did not say whether Trump made any such request.
Trump, who is keen to get his reelection campaign back on track, on Tuesday said social distancing has caused too much pain to the US economy, adding “we lose thousands and thousands of people a year to the flu. We don’t turn the country off.”
Seoul and Washington are in a security alliance but their relations have recently been strained by the Trump administration’s demands the South pay billions of dollars more toward the costs of 28,500 US troops stationed in the country to protect it from the nuclear-armed North.


Denmark hails ‘very constructive’ meeting with US over Greenland

Updated 4 sec ago
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Denmark hails ‘very constructive’ meeting with US over Greenland

BRUSSELS: Denmark’s foreign minister said Thursday he was “more optimistic” after technical talks kicked off with the United States over Greenland.
“We have had the very first meeting at senior official level in Washington yesterday regarding the Greenlandic issue,” Lars Lokke Rasmussen told journalists at an EU meeting in Brussels.
“It went well in a very constructive atmosphere and tone, and new meetings are planned. It’s not that things are solved, but it’s good.”
The trilateral talks come after US President Donald Trump last week backed down from his threats to seize the autonomous Arctic territory of EU and NATO member Denmark.
“There was a major detour. Things were escalating, but now we are back on track,” Rasmussen said. “I’m slightly more optimistic today than a week ago.”
Trump’s threats over Greenland plunged the transtatlantic alliance into its deepest crisis in years.
The unpredictable US leader backed off his desire to take control of Greenland after saying he had struck a “framework” deal with NATO chief Mark Rutte to ensure greater American influence.
But few concrete details appear to have been agreed — with authorities in Denmark and Greenland refusing to discuss handing over any sovereignty.
“I have stated on many occasions, we, of course, share the US security concerns regarding the Arctic, this is something we want to solve in close cooperation,” Rasmussen said.
As part of the compromise with Washington NATO is expected to bolster its activities in the Arctic, while Denmark and Greenland could renegotiate a 1951 treaty on US troop deployments.