New virus cases under 200 for 16th day; untraceable infections at worrisome level

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SEOUL. KAZINFORM South Korea's new coronavirus cases stayed below 200 for the 16th straight day Friday, but health authorities remained alert as sporadic cluster infections continued to rise and untraceable cases hit a fresh record high.

The country added 126 more COVID-19 cases, including 109 local infections, raising the total caseload to 22,783, according to the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA). Five more patients died, raising the death toll to 377, Yonhap reports.

It marked a fall from 153 new cases reported Thursday, but the tally was higher than 113 cases Wednesday. Health authorities are seeking to bring the daily new cases down under 100.

The number of locally transmitted infections remained in the triple digits for the third straight day.

The country's new virus cases have been on a slowing trend on the back of tougher social distancing guidelines, but a marked slowdown appears to be some way off due to cases with unknown infection routes and cluster infections.

Over the past two weeks, the number of cases with unidentified transmission routes reached a fresh record high of 26.8 percent of the total new cases.

The KDCA said the current phase of the virus outbreak is more «dangerous» and uncertain than the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic that gripped the nation early this year.

«We cannot rule out the possibility that infections could sharply increase if cluster infections pop up across the nation,» Kwon Joon-wook, deputy director of the Central Disease Control Headquarters, said in a daily briefing.

«With social distancing guidelines, we are now curbing another wave of the virus outbreak that can spring up (at any time),» he added.

The country's new virus cases have been in the triple digits for over a month, due mainly to cases tied to a church in northern Seoul and a political rally in the capital in mid-August. Daily infections soared to 441 on Aug. 27.

To contain the fast spread of COVID-19, the country adopted an enhanced social distancing scheme, called Level 2.5 guidelines, in the densely populated Seoul metropolitan area on Aug. 30 and applied it for two weeks.

But in the face of slowing virus cases and economic pains for the self-employed, the country began relaxing the tougher virus curbs on Monday for the next two weeks, allowing restaurants and cafes to operate normally.

Health authorities face a tough challenge in tackling a potential rebound in new virus cases during the upcoming Chuseok fall harvest holiday and curbing both COVID-19 and the flu in the winter.

«New virus cases are on a slowdown, but gradually. The number of COVID-19 patients is not markedly falling in the greater Seoul area as untraceable cases and sporadic cluster infections continued,» Yoon Tae-ho, a senior health ministry official, said in a press briefing.

«Infections that are undetected outside the control of quarantine authorities still exist in the Seoul metropolitan area,» he added.

Health authorities warned that the virus outbreak in areas outside Seoul is as serious as in the wider capital region.

Of the newly identified local infections, 46 cases were reported in Seoul and 32 in Gyeonggi Province that surrounds the capital. Incheon, west of Seoul, reported four more cases.

Other municipalities reported new infections, with the southeastern city of Daegu adding two cases and the central city of Daejeon reporting two new cases.

Cases traced to Sarang Jeil Church in northern Seoul, a hotbed of the recent spike in new infections, have stayed unchanged at 1,168 since Friday. Infections tied to the anti-government rally in Seoul on Aug. 15 came to 609 as of noon, up five from the previous day.

Sporadic cluster infections continued to pop up, with cases tied to plants of No. 2 automaker Kia Motors, south of Seoul, rising two to 13. Infections traced to the state tax office in Seoul added one to five.

Health authorities said a total of 56 people have tested positive for the virus at four religious facilities since September.


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