North Korea Joins WHO’s Leadership—But This Isn’t the Issue

North Korea Joins WHO’s Leadership—But This Isn’t the Issue
A man enters the headquarters of the World Health Organization in Geneva on June 15, 2021. Sean Gallup/Getty Images
David Bell
Updated:
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Commentary

International organizations that facilitate an exchange of ideas and data are a global good. However, when these organizations begin to dictate what citizens within a country can and can’t do, they become something quite different.

No self-respecting totalitarian dictatorship would ever allow such interference with its own rule, while no rational democracy would countenance outsourcing its governance to others. Enthusiasm for such an institution could only come from national leaders who are working for other interests or are capable of being coerced.

The Case of the WHO and North Korea

North Korea, or the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, a dictatorship run by three generations of the Kim family and known for concentration camps and a habit of executing senior officials, has just commenced a three-year term on the executive board of the World Health Organization (WHO). Nations from different regions of the WHO take their turn, and it’s North Korea’s turn on behalf of the Southeast Asian region.
The WHO doesn’t pretend to be a bastion of democracy and human rights; the director general of the WHO was a former minister in a dictatorial government that’s accused of human rights abuses. Saudi Arabia’s co-chair of the WHO’s Working Group on International Health Regulations (WGIHR) recently stated that greater restrictions on human rights are appropriate when the WHO thinks them necessary. So North Korea holding such influence isn’t something unusual.

As the WHO represents all of its 194 member states, each country should have a turn of helping to run things, just as large countries such as China and India should have a commensurate influence on its decisions.

The point is that, as democracies, we should treat recommendations arising from such a body in this light and ignore them unless they’re fully in line with our own interests.

Over the next two years, relationships with the WHO will change. States will have “undertaken” to follow all future recommendations (Article 1, new art. 13A) from the director general regarding the management of health emergencies, whenever he or she decides that something within the biosphere might pose a threat. A massive surveillance program, costing more than three times the WHO’s annual budget, will ensure that such threats are found.

States will need to have actively rejected proposed amendments to the WHO’s International Health Regulations, or the director general’s dictates will have force under international law. Alternatively, they can leave the WHO altogether. As this takes over a year, such action would have to start soon.

In two years’ time, when the IHR amendments come into force, this organization, directed by a combination of dictatorial regimes, Western bureaucrats, and corporate and private sponsors, will be telling we-the-people whether we can work, see our families, or travel. It'll tell us when we must be confined, examined, tested, and injected (Article 18). They'll have “undertaken” to follow a long list of other directives that the director general will dictate—and to suppress our disagreement should we complain (amendment to Article 33).

Who Gains From This?

We can at least rest assured that the Kim family ruling North Korea has no intention of being told how their people should be managed the next time a bunch of Swiss-based careerists conjure up an existential threat to their well-being. They realize that people paid to find threats will find them, and they can read, so they know that actual pandemics are rare and have low impact. But they do have an obvious interest in Western societies buying into this and watching us go down the drain.
The pandemic agenda isn’t a problem for countries such as North Korea or China, where people’s freedom is already at the will of their government. But it’s anathema for countries where government supposedly exists on the will of the people. So why do our leaders go along with this? Klaus Schwab, chair of the World Economic Forum, boasts that it’s because his organization has “penetrated” our cabinets.
Many current and recent Western leaders, after all, are alumni of his school for compliance, the Young Global Leaders Forum. The benefits that his members gained from the COVID-19 response have validated his corporate-authoritarian model, and politicians dependent on their largesse will find it hard to defy such wealth. Those most compliant have certainly done well to date.

Who Cares?

Whether any of this matters depends on one’s viewpoint. Maintaining one’s rights takes effort and an element of risk, including risk for family and friends, as many in North Korea know well. Ignorance, compliance, and subservience are easier, at least for a while. Bodily autonomy is a good catchcry to defy the “right-wing” and religious but inconvenient when it undermines the needs of the billionaire left. The “greater good” is always there to excuse any necessary oppression on their behalf.

Alternatively, we could decide to take charge of our own lives, our own health care, and our own countries. We could decide that the former wisdom of public health, that community-based decision-making is vital and that responses should always be tailored to local needs, still makes sense. After all, we only changed this paradigm in the direction of the software developers and pharmaceutical companies who would gain from it.

In the end, it’s immaterial whether North Korea is on the WHO Executive Board. If the WHO was simply there to be called on when needed, then all countries should have their turn. If we now decide that the WHO should dictate how we manage basic challenges in our lives, then we‘ll just have to face what comes from that. We’ll be our own enemy, far more than North Korea could be. We'll have given up centuries of hard-fought gains and reembraced the feudalism that constitutes the Kim family’s preferred model, but we can’t blame North Korea for that.

Compared to the other forces that are subverting our democracies through this perpetual emergency agenda, an East Asian country taking its turn in an organization it intends to ignore is barely relevant.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
David Bell
David Bell
Author
David Bell, senior scholar at the Brownstone Institute, is a public health physician and biotech consultant in global health. He is a former medical officer and scientist at the World Health Organization (WHO), programme head for malaria and febrile diseases at the Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics (FIND) in Geneva, Switzerland, and director of Global Health Technologies at Intellectual Ventures Global Good Fund in Bellevue, Wash.
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