Mindanao Times

SouthKor reports 142 more coronaviru­s cases, total 346

-

SOUTH Korea reported 142 more coronaviru­s cases Saturday, the sharpest spike in infections yet, with more than half of the new cases linked to a hospital in a southern city.

The national toll of 346 is now the second-highest outside of China, with the jump in cases at a hospital in Cheongdo following a similar spike among members of a religious sect in the nearby city of Daegu.

Among the new cases, 92 were “related” to patients or staff at Cheongdo Daenam Hospital, the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC) said.

“Most of the hospital’s patients who have been diagnosed are those who had been staying as inpatients for mental illnesses,” Seoul’s vice health minister Kim Gang-lip told reporters.

Authoritie­s reported another death on Saturday, taking the toll to two. Both victims had been inpatients at the hospital.

More than 150 members of the Shincheonj­i Church of

Jesus have now been infected, starting with a 61-yearold woman who developed a fever on February 10 but attended at least four services at the church’s Daegu branch before being diagnosed.

The mayor of Daegu – South Korea’s fourth-biggest city, with a population of over 2.5 million – has advised locals to stay indoors, while access to a major US military base in the area has been restricted.

KCDC said some 9,300 Shincheonj­i members in Daegu have either been quarantine­d at facilities or asked to stay at home. Among them, 544 said they had symptoms, health officials added.

Cheongdo, some 27 kilometers south of Daegu, is the birthplace of Shincheonj­i’s founder Lee Man-hee.

County officials said Friday that a three-day funeral was held for his brother three weeks ago at a hall owned by the hospital.

Shincheonj­i is often accused of being a cult and claims its founder Lee has donned the mantle of Jesus Christ and will take 144,000 people with him to heaven on the day of judgment.

But with more church members than available places in heaven, they are said to have to compete for slots and pursue converts persistent­ly and secretivel­y.

President Moon Jae-in on Friday called for a “thorough investigat­ion” of everyone who attended the funeral and Shincheonj­i services.

The central government on Friday had declared Daegu and Cheongdo “special management zones,” with Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun saying the region would be supported with medical personnel, beds and equipment and the cabinet will meet three times a week to discuss the outbreak.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines