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South Korea Faces New Spike In COVID-19 After Months Of Low Infection Rates
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After keeping the coronavirus under control for roughly five months, South Korea finds itself on the verge of another major outbreak as COVID-19 cases jump to their highest level since March and the capital region retightens social distancing guidelines.
As of Monday, the country has seen four straight days of new cases in the triple digits, for a four-day total of 745 cases. That compares with a peak of about 900 cases per day in late February, after which South Korea managed to keep new daily cases to double digits. As of Monday, South Korea reports a cumulative total of 15,515 cases with 305 deaths.
While the first peak was centered on the country's fourth largest city, Daegu, and a megachurch called the Shincheonji Church of Jesus, this time the peak is centered on the capital and another religious group — the Sarang Jeil Church.
South Korea now appears to be in the "early stage of large-scale community outbreaks," Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC) Director Jeong Un-kyeong told a news briefing Monday.
A resurgence of the coronavirus would mark a dramatic reversal after months during which South Korea garnered international praise for subduing the disease through aggressive testing and contact tracing and without resorting to lockdowns.
In April elections, voters handed the ruling Democratic Party a landslide victory, seen in part as a validation of the government's handling of the pandemic.
KCDC chief Jeong warned that virus clusters linked to religious activities have spread across the nation "at a terrific speed." Authorities believe the cluster in the Sarang Jeil Church began with one follower who attended a service on Aug. 9 and tested positive Aug. 12.
Since then, authorities have obtained lists of 4,000 members, quarantined 3,400 and tested 2,000, and found 312 tested positive....
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