Gulf Times

Seoul city seeks $4mn in damages from church

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The metropolit­an government in South Korea’s capital Seoul said yesterday that it would seek 4.6bn won ($4mn) in damages against a church for causing the spread of the coronaviru­s by disrupting tracing and testing efforts.

The coronaviru­s causes the Covid-19 respirator­y disease.

A fresh wave of infections erupted at a church whose members attended a large protest in downtown Seoul in mid-August, becoming the country’s largest cluster in the greater capital area.

The outbreak has driven triple-digit increases in daily Covid-19 cases for more than a month.

The Seoul city government said it will file a lawsuit against the Sarang Jeil Church and its leader, Reverend Jun Kwanghoon, accusing them of disrupting coronaviru­s tests and providing inaccurate lists of its members which it said aggravated the latest epidemic.

“The city is seeking to hold the church and the pastor responsibl­e for contributi­ng to the nationwide re-spread of Covid-19 by refusing and hindering epidemiolo­gical surveys or aiding and abetting such acts, as well as submitting false materials,” it said in a statement.

Calls to the church seeking comment went unanswered.

Jun, a harsh critic of the government, was re-imprisoned early this month for attending the August 15 rally in violation of his bail in April, when he participat­ed in an illegal political protest ahead the parliament­ary election and was indicted on charges of breaking election laws.

The cluster has inflicted government losses totalling at least 13.1bn won ($11.3mn), including 4.6bn won on Seoul, the city said.

The National Health Insurance Service has also said it will sue the church for indemnity worth 5.5bn won ($4.7mn).

The Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency reported 126 new cases as of midnight on Thursday, which brought the total infections to 22,783, with 377 deaths.

The numbers, which peaked at 441, have fallen to the low 100s after the government imposed unpreceden­ted social distancing curbs last month.

But authoritie­s remained on high alert ahead of a major traditiona­l holiday next week when usually tens of millions of Koreans travel across the country, urging restraint on trips and gatherings.

“The holiday period will be a pivotal moment in our anti-virus campaign,” said Yoon Taeho, director-general for public health policy at the health ministry.

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