Bangkok Post

Seoul reports 6th Mers death

23 new infections, health ministry says

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SEOUL: South Korea recorded its sixth death and biggest single-day jump in Middle East Respirator­y Syndrome (Mers) infections yesterday, with 23 new cases in the largest outbreak of the potentiall­y deadly virus outside Saudi Arabia.

From just four cases two weeks ago, the total number of infections now stands at 87, including six fatalities.

The latest fatality was an 80-year-old man who died yesterday morning in a hospital in Daejeon, 140km south of Seoul, the health ministry said.

The outbreak has triggered widespread public concern in South Korea, with 2,500 people placed under quarantine orders and nearly 2,000 schools — mostly in Seoul and surroundin­g Gyeonggi province — closed down.

But experts say the likelihood of a serious epidemic is remote, given that the Mers virus is not easily transmitte­d person-to-person.

“The chance of a massive outbreak in South Korea is not high,” said Ho Pak-leung, a microbiolo­gy expert at the University of Hong Kong.

“Rather I think there will be continued transmissi­ons at a low level,” Mr Ho said.

Among the new cases announced yesterday, most were infected at the Samsung Medical Centre in southern Seoul — one of the country’s largest hospitals where nearly 900 patients and staff have now been placed under observatio­n.

A 16-year-old student became the first teenage case, but the education ministry stressed he had contracted the virus while already in hospital, so it was “not possible” that he infected anyone at school.

All the infections so far have been restricted to hospitals.

Criticised for its initial response to the outbreak, the government on Sunday vowed “all-out” efforts to curb the further spread of the virus, including tracking the mobile phones of those under house quarantine to ensure they stay home.

Several have already been caught sneaking out, despite facing possible fines of 3 million won (90,400 baht).

Chung Eun-kyung, a senior official at the Korea Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, said those confined to their homes should stay alone in a room and wear a surgical mask when interactin­g with family members.

Hundreds of public events, school trips and sporting fixtures have been cancelled, with movie theatres, theme parks and shopping malls reporting big drops in the number of customers.

Ticket sales at movie theatres fell to 2.46 million for the first week of June, down from 3.85 million a week earlier, according to the Korea Film Council.

Both E-Mart and Lotte Mart, two of the country’s biggest supermarke­t chains, reported a 12% drop in weekly store sales, coupled with a 50% surge in online sales.

Store customers were greeted by staff who wiped down the handles of the supermarke­t trolleys before and after use.

Schools that remained open screened students arriving for class yesterday morning, checking their temperatur­e with an ear thermomete­r at the gate and sending home anyone with even a mild fever.

Lee Hyun-shil, who was taking her son to a kindergart­en in Seoul, said she was in “utter shock” over the scale of the outbreak.

“I can’t believe this is happening in South Korea,” Ms Lee said.

“I am really worried these days... and wonder if it’s OK to use a subway to go somewhere,” she said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A student has her temperatur­e checked at an elementary school in Seoul yesterday as South Korea stepped up its vigilance against the Mers virus.
REUTERS A student has her temperatur­e checked at an elementary school in Seoul yesterday as South Korea stepped up its vigilance against the Mers virus.

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