Employees from a disinfection service company sanitize the floor of Gimpo International Airport in Seoul, South Korea, June 17, 2015. [Photo/Agencies] |
The country's health ministry reported three more deaths in the virus' outbreak, bringing the total fatality to 23.
Seoul's Health Ministry also confirmed three new cases, taking the total number to 165 that is the largest outside Saudi Arabia, nearly a month after the outbreak originated from a 68-year-old man who had traveled to the Middle East, according to the ministry.
Officials say that the outbreak has already peaked and could be defused by the end of the month. But the continued discovery of new cases among people who managed to slip through the quarantine measures has casted doubts on such optimism and raised questions about the government's ability to control the situation.Critics, including Seoul Mayor Park Won-soon, have blamed government officials for accelerating the spread of the MERS virus by failing to enforce tight control measures at Seoul's Samsung Medical Center, which was belatedly shut down over the weekend after it continued to be the main source of the infections.
Dozens of patients, medical staff and visitors have been infected with the MERS virus at the hospital, one of the country's biggest, and they are believed to have contacted hundreds of other people before their conditions were confirmed. The sheer size of the exposure at the hospital suggests there is a possibility the country could see another large wave of infections, according to Jacob Lee from the infectious disease department at Seoul's Kangnam Sacred Heart Hospital.