Home News South Korea traces Presbyterian church members as virus spreads

South Korea traces Presbyterian church members as virus spreads

South Korea reported a three-digit increase in novel coronavirus cases for a fifth day on Aug. 18 as authorities scrambled to trace hundreds of members of a Presbyterian church congregation, and the military locked down bases to stop the spread of the virus.

The Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC) reported 246 new cases as of midnight on Aug. 17, two days after the reimposition of stricter social-distancing curbs in the Seoul metropolitan area.

South Korea has been one of the world’s coronavirus mitigation success stories but it has suffered repeated spikes in infections and its total number of cases is 15,761, with 306 deaths.




At least 457 infections had been linked to the Sarang Jeil Church, 10 of whom were confirmed to have attended anti-government demonstrations over the past two weekends in Seoul, Vice Health Minister Kim Gang-lip told a briefing.

The authorities were trying to trace 500 other members of the congregation to tell them to self-quarantine and get tested as they posed the highest transmission risk, said Kim.

This was the second time a church was at the center of a serious outbreak in South Korea.

In February, authorities struggled with an outbreak that emerged in a secretive Christian movement in the city of Daegu, which turned into the country’s deadliest cluster.

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The KCDC has warned that the new cases posed a greater crisis than the earlier church outbreak and could swamp the health system.

“If we fail to contain the spread in the Seoul metropolitan area of 25 million population this week, it can not only halt the daily routine of everyone but also put the safety of the elderly and the weak at risk,” KCDC deputy director Kwon Jun-wook told a briefing.

A woman wearing a mask walks past members of conservative civic groups who take part in an anti-government protest, as concerns over a fresh wave of COVID-19 cases grow, in central Seoul, South Korea, Aug. 15. (Photo by Kim Hong-Ji/Reuters)

Another cluster has been traced to a Starbucks Corp outlet outside Seoul with seven new cases taking the tally there to 49.

Two new cases were reported in the military, bringing the total number of infections on bases to 88, the defense ministry said.

Some 461 military personnel were in quarantine, and all troops have been confined to base, with leave cancelled and visits halted for the rest of August.

Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun convened an emergency meeting to discuss extending curbs nationwide.

The Seoul metropolitan area is under phase 2 restrictions, limiting indoor gatherings to fewer than 50 people and outdoor gatherings to no more than 100, and with spectators banned from sports.

Health authorities had categorized social distancing rules in three stages -— stage 1 being the least intense and stage 3 the toughest, where schools are shut, businesses are advised to work from home and gatherings limited to 10 people.

Kwon said the effort was at a “grave crossroads”.

“If not controlled and restrained at this level, we can’t avoid an upgraded phase 3 social distancing,” he said.

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