South Korea eases some social distancing rules as new Coronavirus cases reduce

The deadly virus outbreak has created a massive stir around the world in recent times claiming the lives of more than 160,000 people globally

South Korea has extended the social distancing rule for another 16 days on Sunday but also offered some relief for the churches and the sporting fixtures, as the nation reported just eight new coronavirus or COVID-19 cases which is the lowest in two months.

The guidelines which are slightly relaxed mean high-risk venues that include churches will face lesser restrictions while in case of sports matches they ca resume without the presence of the audience.

"It is safest to maintain the intensive social distancing, but it isn't easy realistically. We need to find a middle ground," Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun told a televised meeting of government officials. "If we can maintain a stable management at the current level, we will shift to 'routine social distancing' from May 6," Chung said.

South Korea eases social distancing rules

Wuhan Coronavirus
Twitter / Imran Iftikhar

Health authorities have said this would allow a reopening of the economy while maintaining guidelines on disinfection and preventing the spread of the virus in people's daily lives. South Korea in March issued an administrative order that strongly recommended religious, indoor sports and entertainment facilities such as nightclubs suspend operations. The language has now been softened, allowing facilities to restart operations as long as they comply with disinfection guidelines.

"The government will evaluate the degree of risk every two weeks and readjust the level of social distancing when necessary," Health Minister Park Neung-hoo told reporters. The latest figure on new infections was the first time since Feb. 18 that South Korea reported a single digit daily rise. The increase takes its total cases to 10,661.

Of the new cases, five were imported from overseas, the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC) said. The death toll rose to 234. South Korea has largely managed to bring the outbreak under control and has recently been reporting daily new cases hovering around 20. Health authorities called the trend good news but issued a note of caution about overly optimistic predictions.

US President Trump spoke to Moon on Saturday

"We are continuously on the alert to ensure we haven't missed any new infections, or whether the epidemic could be spread by asymptomatic or mildly infected patients," KCDC chief Jeong Eun-kyeong told a briefing.

President Moon Jae-in on Sunday said South Korea's progress gave hope that the COVID-19 is "surmountable" in other parts of the world. Earlier this year, South Korea had Asia's largest number of infections outside China. It has since been overtaken by other countries.

"The government will prepare for new daily lives and the new world order 'post-COVID' with the unified power of the citizens," Moon said. US President Trump spoke to Moon on Saturday and expressed appreciation for South Korea's help in procuring COVID-19 tests for the United States.

(With agency inputs)

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