South Korea's new COVID-19 cases stayed above 2,100 for the third straight day on Saturday. Yonhap |
South Korea's new COVID-19 cases stayed above 2,100 for the third straight day Friday, amid concerns of a possible spike as the government is about to relax antivirus measures for a return to normalcy.
The Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) reported 2,104 new coronavirus cases, including 2,089 local ones, raising the total caseload to 362,639.
The virus curve had appeared to be flattening over the past few weeks, dipping to 1,190 for Monday from an upward trend that peaked at 3,272, Sept. 25, amid the fourth wave of the pandemic that began in July. But the tally climbed back this week and surpassed 2,000 for Thursday.
The death toll rose by 13 to 2,830 for a fatality rate of 0.78 percent.
The recent spike adds to concerns over yet another virus resurgence, as the country is set for a transition to "Living with COVID-19" through a package of relaxed antivirus measures set to take effect starting Monday.
The plan is aimed at lifting most of the virus restrictions by the end of January next year, backed by a rising vaccination rate currently standing at over 73 percent.
It also allows for the resumption of in-person classes at kindergarten, elementary, middle and high schools from Nov. 22, with universities and colleges to gradually follow suit.
Under the first of a three-phase plan, rolled out Friday, people will be allowed to gather in groups of up to 10 in the greater Seoul area and up to 12 in non-metropolitan regions, regardless of vaccination, from the current ceilings of eight and 10 maximum. Mask-wearing rules will stay in effect.
Operation hour curfews for businesses will be fully lifted, except for nightlife establishments, although limits on unvaccinated customers at cafes and restaurants will be applied.
The gathering limits will be completely lifted over the next two phases, which will bring back large concerts and parties.
The "vaccine pass" system, which requires visitors to have a vaccination certificate or negative test result, will be introduced for high-risk facilities, such as bars, nightclubs and indoor gyms, with a grace period of one or two weeks.
About 41.09 million people, or 80 percent of the country's 52-million population, had received their first COVID-19 vaccine shots as of Friday. The number of fully vaccinated people came to 38.29 million, or 74.6 percent.
Of the locally transmitted cases reported for Friday, 704 were in Seoul, 713 in the surrounding Gyeonggi Province and 122 in Incheon, west of Seoul.
Fifteen cases came from overseas, putting their cumulative total at 15,084.
The total number of people released from quarantine after making full recoveries came to 334,581, up by 1,586 from a day earlier, the KDCA said. (Yonhap)