(4th LD) S. Korea dogged by both local, imported cases; new infections at over 1-week high
(ATTN: ADDS details in paras 17-19)
SEOUL, June 28 (Yonhap) -- South Korea's new coronavirus cases spiked again Sunday in the face of a steady rise in locally transmitted infections tied to religious gatherings, further complicating the country's virus fight.
The country added 62 cases of COVID-19 as of midnight, including 40 local infections, raising the total caseload to 12,715, according to the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC).
The tally marked a rise from 51 on Saturday to bounce back to over 60 for the first time since hitting 67, the most in a month, on June 20.

This photo taken on June 28, 2020, shows the main entrance of Wangsung Church in Seoul's southwestern ward of Gwanak closed. A 31-year-old woman from the church in Seoul's southwestern ward of Gwanak was first identified to be infected with the coronavirus on June 26, and 21 other church followers have since tested positive for the virus. (Yonhap)
Of the locally transmitted cases, 13 cases were reported in densely populated Gyeonggi Province surrounding Seoul, 13 in Seoul and six in Daejeon, about 160 kilometers south of Seoul, the KCDC said.
South Korea has been gripped by sporadic cluster infections since it relaxed stricter social distancing on May 6. The greater Seoul area accounted for most of the newly added cases this month.
The continued rise in new local infections in the metropolitan area is due to new cases related to churches that have emerged as sources of cluster infections.
Eight followers of Wangsung Church in Seoul's southwestern ward of Gwanak were newly confirmed to be infected on Sunday, bringing the related cases to 27 since a 31-year-old woman was first identified as infected on Wednesday.
A total of 1,962 people, including some 1,700 church followers and their family members, is undergoing COVID-19 tests, with the results expected in the coming days.
The KCDC said a total of 18 infections, up seven from a day earlier, has been reported in connection with a church in Anyang, a city just south of Seoul.
Three members of a church in Suwon, just south of Seoul, were also newly confirmed on Sunday, the KCDC said. A total of 717 people participated in four different church services with the COVID-19 patients, according to the KCDC.
The southern city of Gwangju, which had reported relatively low numbers of COVID-19 cases, reported four new cases on Sunday for the first time in nearly three months, the KCDC said. All of the new four cases were locally transmitted.
Health authorities are on alert over rising trends in cluster infections, with most traced to door-to-door retailers, churches and day care centers for senior citizens.
The authorities said they have not been able to trace infection routes for 71 out of 631 new patients over the past two weeks, or 11.3 percent.
The portion of infections tied to untraceable transmissions exceeded 10 percent on June 15, for the first time since the authorities began counting such data on April 6.
The ratio is between 10 and 11 percent level this month, they said.

Elementary school students wait in line to take COVID-19 tests at a clinic temporarily set up at a school in Seoul's southwestern ward of Gwanak on June 28, 2020, after new infections related to a nearby church were reported. (Yonhap)
Health officials have warned that they could consider expanding tougher infection preventive measures -- currently in place only in the Seoul metropolitan area -- across the country, if virus situations get worse.
The KCDC said the government will adopt three levels of social distancing and countermeasures, depending on the severity of the COVID-19 virus outbreak.
The country currently recommends the level one social distancing in which the number of virus cases is manageable by the medical system. The government plans to apply level two social distancing measures if daily infections exceed 50 for 14 straight days but remain below 100, and the level three measures if daily infections far exceeds 100, the KCDC said.
Under level two, all private and public indoor meetings of 50 or more and outdoor meetings of over 100 will be banned. Under level three, all meetings of 10 people or more will be banned and all students will be prohibited from going to schools, the health agency said.
The country is also struggling to stem cases coming in from overseas -- once the main source of virus cases here -- as the number of such daily cases has continued to show double-digit increases since mid-June.
A total of 22 additional imported cases were reported on Sunday, with 16 of them detected at quarantine checkpoints, the KCDC said.
Of the total, 18 were from Asia, followed by three from the United States and one from Europe, the KCDC said.
Imported cases, once the main source of virus cases here, fell to a single-digit figure early this month after the country strengthened quarantine measures on all international arrivals in April.
But such cases have bounced back since mid-June, with double-digit numbers reported for a total of 11 days in June, the KCDC said.
South Korea, meanwhile, reported no additional deaths, with the total death toll remaining at 282. The fatality rate was 2.22 percent.
The total number of people released from quarantine after full recoveries stood at 47, bringing total cured patients at 11,364.
The country has carried out 1,251,695 tests since Jan. 3.

People keep distance from one another while waiting in line for Mass at Myeongdong Cathedral in central Seoul on June 28, 2020. (Yonhap)
khj@yna.co.kr
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