South Korea reports record 950 cases in COVID-19 'emergency'
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[December 12, 2020]
By Heekyong Yang
SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea reported a
record 950 daily coronavirus cases on Saturday, exceeding the late
February peak of 909, with the president calling the country's third
wave of COVID-19 an "emergency".
The South Korean authorities warned they may tighten social-distancing
restrictions to their strictest level but held off for now.
Of the Friday cases reported by the Korea Disease Control and Prevention
Agency (KDCA), 928 were locally transmitted and 22 were imported,
bringing the total to 41,736 infections with 578 deaths.
More than 70% the domestically transmitted cases were from Seoul and its
neighbouring areas, where about half of the nation's 52 million people
live.
"This is indeed an emergency situation," said President Moon Jae-in,
ordering the mobilisation of police, military personnel and public
medical doctors in an effort to curb the further spread of the
coronavirus, chiefly driven by small, widespread clusters..
"We plan to extensively expand drive-through and walk-through
coronavirus testing methods ... as preemptive measures to track down
infected people and block the spread," Moon said in a Facebook post.
South Korea is likely to see a further rise in the caseload with
significant increases in testing, he added.
The surge has been a blow to South Korea's vaunted pandemic-fighting
system, which used invasive tracing, testing and quarantine to blunt
previous waves without lockdowns, keeping daily infections below 50 for
much of the summer.
“I was worried when I heard the daily coronavirus count was beyond 900
infections," Chae Hyeong-chan, 29, told Reuters on a visit to Seoul for
a doctor's appointment from the port city Incheon.
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South Korea reported a record 950 daily coronavirus cases on
Saturday, exceeding the late February peak of 909, with the
president calling the country's third wave of COVID-19 an
"emergency". Emer McCarthy reports.
"I had to take the subway today, which made me worried, because I'm
afraid I might be exposed to the risk of infection. I will try to
return home as soon as possible."
The third wave comes despite tougher social-distancing rules that
took effect on Tuesday, including unprecedented curfews on
restaurants and most other businesses. The country has reported
about 600 cases a day this week.
Greater Seoul is under level 2.5 restrictions. Raising that to 3,
the highest of the five levels, would require schools to switch to
remote learning, allow only essential workers in offices and ban
gatherings of more than 10 people.
Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun said the government will make all-out
efforts to halt the third wave.
"If we don't curb the spread now, escalating social distancing
restriction to Level 3 would be inevitable," Chung told an emergency
meeting.
Authorities urged people to stay home and cancel all face-to-face
meeting as new infections have been spotted from personal meetings.
"While we cannot avoid contact with our family at home, meetings
with your friends and colleagues at work are not safe. Please cancel
them," senior KDCA official Lim Sook-young told a briefing.
(Reporting by Heekyong Yang; Additional reporting by Daewoung Kim;
Editing by Daniel Wallis, Sonya Hepinstall and William Mallard)
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