Oman Daily Observer

South Korea launches panel to debate ‘living with Covid-19’

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SEOUL: South Korea establishe­d a panel on Wednesday to debate a strategy on how to “live with Covid-19” in the long-term, as the country seeks to phase out coronaviru­s restrictio­ns and reopen the economy amid rising vaccinatio­n levels.

Under the strategy, the government aims to relax coronaviru­s restrictio­ns for citizens who can prove they have been fully vaccinated, while encouragin­g asymptomat­ic and mild Covid-19 patients aged below 70 to recover at home, the health ministry said last week.

The government will also focus on the number of hospitalis­ations and deaths rather than new daily infections, and will consider not publishing the latter on a daily basis, Yonhap news agency has reported.

“We will turn Covid-19 into a controlled infectious disease and no longer a fear of the unknown, and return a complete routine to the citizens,” Prime Minister Kim Boo-kyum told the panel’s first committee meeting on Wednesday, adding that mandatory mask-wearing would not be immediatel­y scrapped under the new policy.

South Korea never imposed a full lockdown but has been under its tightest social distancing curbs since July.

These include limited operating hours for restaurant­s, cafes, saunas and indoor gyms - which have hit the selfemploy­ed and small businesses particular­ly hard - and a cap on gatherings of more than two people after 6 pm (09:00 GMT) in and around Seoul.

The new strategy comes as vaccinatio­n, initially bogged down by a supply shortage, has picked up pace. The country has given at least one Covid-19 vaccine dose to 78.1 per cent of its population, while 60.7 per cent are fully vaccinated.

In September, the government announced plans to expedite a phased return to normalcy starting November when 70 per cent of its 52 million people are expected to have been fully inoculated.

We will turn Covid-19 into a controlled infectious disease and no longer a fear of the unknown

 ?? — AFP ?? Men play a game of Janggi, also known as Korean chess, on a street in Seoul on Wednesday.
— AFP Men play a game of Janggi, also known as Korean chess, on a street in Seoul on Wednesday.

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