Bangkok Post

South Korea tests 212,000 sect members

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SEOUL: More than 200,000 members of a religious sect were being checked for coronaviru­s symptoms by South Korean authoritie­s yesterday, as US commanders reported the first case among American forces in the country.

Most of South Korea’s novel coronaviru­s are linked to the Shincheonj­i Church of Jesus, an entity often accused of being a cult.

After days of mounting public anger Shincheonj­i — a secretive group which pursues converts surreptiti­ously — handed over a list of 212,000 members, the government said.

Local authoritie­s across the country — which has more coronaviru­s cases than anywhere else outside China — will check if they have symptoms of fever or respirator­y disease and put them in quarantine at home if so, said vice health minister Kim Gang-lip.

Shincheonj­i claims its founder Lee Man-hee has donned the mantle of Jesus Christ and will take 144,000 people with him to heaven on the day of judgement.

A 61-year-old female member developed a fever on Feb 10, but attended at least four church services in Daegu — the country’s fourth-largest city and the epicentre of the outbreak — before being diagnosed.

The Korea Centres for Disease Control and Prevention reported 169 new infections yesterday, taking the overall national tally to 1,146, adding an 11th person had died, a Mongolian man in his 30s who reports said had been awaiting a liver transplant.

The vast majority of new infections were in Daegu and the neighbouri­ng province of North Gyeongsang, which between them account for the bulk of the national total.

An American soldier stationed at Camp Carroll 30 kilometres north of Daegu tested positive for the virus, commanders said, the first infection among the 28,500 troops Washington stations in the South to defend it against the nuclear-armed North.

The 23-year-old serviceman had been put in self-quarantine at his home, US Forces Korea said, adding it was conducting “contact tracing” to determine whether other soldiers had been exposed.

The streets of Daegu have been largely deserted for days, apart from long queues at the few shops with masks for sale.

Authoritie­s have urged the public to exercise extra caution, advising citizens to stay home if they have a fever or respirator­y symptoms.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A man wearing a mask to prevent contractin­g the coronaviru­s walks past an entrance of a US army base in Daegu, South Korea, on Tuesday.
REUTERS A man wearing a mask to prevent contractin­g the coronaviru­s walks past an entrance of a US army base in Daegu, South Korea, on Tuesday.

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