Many miracles seem to reportedly take place in the
mysterious country of North Korea. From claims of their former
leader having golfed 11 holes-in-one, to developing a cure
for AIDS, the Hermit Kingdom is never short of extraordinary
claims.
Its latest contribution to society, however, won't be
needing a healthy dose of miracles to be true. Instead,
its latest pharmaceutical product — developed by the
state-owned Korea Oriental Instant Medicinal
Center — seems to work as it should: treating sexual
dysfunction.
Called Neo-Viagra, the purported “herbal medicine” is being sold
in North Korea for between $12 and $15, with indications of it being ready for export.
After being analyzed in a lab, Pfizer, the pharmaceutical
corporation that manufactures the original Viagra, found
that around 50-milligrams of sildenafil, the active synthetic
ingredient in Viagra, was present in the North Korean version.
A lab analysis of the two also showed stark differences. Besides
looking completely different — Neo-Viagra being brown
granules contained in a vial, whereas Pfizer’s version is a
signature blue pill — Pfizer sells Viagra with 25, 50,
and 100-milligrams of sildenafil.
But the differences don’t end there. Not only is Neo-Viagra
claimed to treat both female and male patients, according to The Washington Post, the
packaging also claims to relieve back, shoulder and knee pain,
ease paralysis, and alleviate “kidney malfunction, sciatic
neuralgia, high blood pressure and brain artery hardening.”
This wouldn’t be the first time that North Korea has been caught
hawking knock-offs of foreign products. In addition to manufacturing fake Viagra pills
in the past, they’ve also been accused of producing counterfeit
$100 “supernotes” and Marlboro cigarettes.
The isolated state has also been discovered to have a drug
problem of a different sort. Reports have sprouted with the notion that
North Korea may be undergoing a major methamphetamine-abuse
problem. Once a hub of opium production, after floods
and natural disasters ruined their poppy farms, the state took to
a different approach to producing a cheap and fast way of
generating revenue in the black market.
It’s unclear whether or not this ambitious cure will ever make
its way to consumers in the west, however, the product has
already been found being sold in parts of China. As of
now, North Korea may have to face legal ramifications
— after The Post sent their sample of Neo-Viagra to Pfizer
analysts, the pharmaceutical company stated that they were
reviewing the possibility of patent or copyright infringements
from North Korea.
All in all, illicit activities provide a major boost to the
Hermit Kingdom's sidelined economy. A report from the Center for
Strategic and International Studies
estimates that North Korea earns annually "$15 million
to $100 million from counterfeiting, $80-160 million from
cigarette counterfeiting, and a total annual criminal activities
income of $500 million to $1 billion."
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