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S.Korea Covid-19 count spikes amid vacations, spread of new variants
People wait in line for a Covid-19 test at a testing site, temporarily set up at a railway station in Seoul, South Korea July 7, 2021. u00e2u20acu201d Reuters pic

SEOUL, Aug 4 ― South Korea posted a sharp increase in its coronavirus cases today as it struggled to tame its fourth wave of infections amid the spread of new virus variants strains.

The Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) reported 1,725 cases for yesterday, up by more than 500 from a day before, as more tests were conducted after the weekend.

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Total infections rose to 203,926, with 2,106 deaths.

The daily tally hit a new high of 1,895 last week, partly fuelled by the more contagious Delta variant, with the fourth Covid-19 wave showing little signs of subsiding.

Health authorities were concerned that people travelled about 6.4 per cent more last week compared with the week before, or about 34 per cent more than in early January, in the regions beyond the capital Seoul and its neighbouring areas, largely for summer vacations.

"The movements in those regions have been increasing for three consecutive weeks,” senior health official Lee Gi-il told a briefing. "There is fatigue from long periods of distancing, and it's a summer vacation season.”

The government tightened social distancing curbs last week across most of the country for two weeks ahead of the peak summer holiday period.

The KDCA said yesterday it had detected South Korea's first two cases of the new Delta Plus Covid-19 variant, a sub-lineage of the Delta variant first identified in India.

Only a handful of countries, including Britain, Portugal and India, have reported Delta Plus cases so far. Delta Plus is still being studied, but some scientists say it may be more transmissible.

Health authorities have said several major vaccines work against the Delta variant.

South Korea will begin taking reservations for vaccines from about 2 million priority groups among people ages 18-49 late today, including those with disabilities, gyms and private education workers, delivery people, street cleaners and call centre employees.

Some 39.3 per cent of the country's 52 million population have received at least one shot as of today, while 14.2 per cent have been fully vaccinated, KDCA data showed. ― Reuters

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