South Korea coronavirus cases jump by half
15 new coronavirus cases has been confirmed, raising its total from 31 to 46
SEOUL:
South Korea reported 15 new confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus on Wednesday -- increasing its total by nearly 50 per cent -- including a cluster of at least 11 centred on the southern city of Daegu.
The trade-dependent South has been hit by the economic fallout from the virus outbreak in neighbouring China, but until Wednesday's jump, its own case numbers had hardly changed for several days.
The Korea Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC) said in a statement that 15 new coronavirus cases had been confirmed, raising its total from 31 to 46.
Of those, 13 were in Daegu and neighbouring North Gyeongsang province, with 11 of them believed to be linked to a single patient, a 61-year-old woman.
Xi warned officials that efforts to stop virus could hurt economy: sources
Ten of them attend the same church as the woman, the KCDC said.
She had first developed a fever on February 10 but reportedly refused to be tested for coronavirus on the grounds she had not recently travelled abroad.
She was not put into quarantine until a week later and was confirmed as the country's 31st case on Tuesday.
Seoul has blocked entry to foreigners coming from Hubei, the Chinese province that is the epicentre of the outbreak, and suspended visa-free entry to the island of Jeju, popular with Chinese tourists, but has not imposed a general ban on arrivals from China.
South Korea reported 15 new confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus on Wednesday -- increasing its total by nearly 50 per cent -- including a cluster of at least 11 centred on the southern city of Daegu.
The trade-dependent South has been hit by the economic fallout from the virus outbreak in neighbouring China, but until Wednesday's jump, its own case numbers had hardly changed for several days.
The Korea Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC) said in a statement that 15 new coronavirus cases had been confirmed, raising its total from 31 to 46.
Of those, 13 were in Daegu and neighbouring North Gyeongsang province, with 11 of them believed to be linked to a single patient, a 61-year-old woman.
Xi warned officials that efforts to stop virus could hurt economy: sources
Ten of them attend the same church as the woman, the KCDC said.
She had first developed a fever on February 10 but reportedly refused to be tested for coronavirus on the grounds she had not recently travelled abroad.
She was not put into quarantine until a week later and was confirmed as the country's 31st case on Tuesday.
Seoul has blocked entry to foreigners coming from Hubei, the Chinese province that is the epicentre of the outbreak, and suspended visa-free entry to the island of Jeju, popular with Chinese tourists, but has not imposed a general ban on arrivals from China.