South Korea eases COVID-19 restrictions on concerts, sports games

June 14, 2021 - 8:23 PM
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Women wearing masks to avoid contracting the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) take a walk at a park in Seoul, South Korea, June 1, 2021. (Reuters/Kim Hong-Ji)

SEOUL — South Korea began easing restrictions on large concerts and sports events on Monday after announcing last week it would loosen a series of coronavirus curbs as the country pushes ahead with its vaccination drive.

Up to 4,000 people will be allowed to attend K-Pop concerts and other cultural shows from Monday, up massively from a capacity limit of below 100 people since late last year, according to measures announced by health officials on Friday.

Sports stadiums will be able to operate at a 30% to 50% capacity, depending on the districts, up from 10% previously.

While South Korea has fought small clusters of coronavirus infections in recent months, the daily infection number hit a two-month low on Sunday while the government has pushed through with its vaccination drive.

The government has also said it would loosen some quarantine restrictions for fully vaccinated overseas visitors.

From July 1, some of those travelers can apply for exemptions from having to observe South Korea‘s mandatory two-week quarantine if they are visiting family or traveling for the purpose of business, academics or public interest, health authorities said on Sunday.

As the COVID-19 vaccine rollout gains momentum, many countries are planning a gradual return to normal, opening borders and letting people back into restaurants, shops and sports venues after more than a year of on-off lockdowns.

South Korean tour agencies were also preparing new travel packages after the government’s announcement last week that it is accelerating talks aimed at securing “travel bubbles” with a few countries, including Singapore and Thailand, the Korea Association of Travel Agents told Reuters.

South Korea has given a first dose to over 11.8 million people or 23% of the country’s population, the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) director Jeong Eun-kyeong told a briefing.

That is below the vaccination rate seen in many advanced countries, such as 61% in the UK, but higher than 12% in Japan, according to a Reuters tally of state and local government sources. Japan started vaccinating its population in February like South Korea.

While there has been a significant drop in new cases at nursing homes as many elderly have received vaccines, South Korea will only see a full-scale reduction in the number of local transmissions in September when over 70% will have been inoculated, said Jeong. —Reporting by Sangmi Cha; Editing by Ana Nicolaci da Costa