South Korea will end the mask mandate for public transportation next week, lifting one of the last-remaining Covid-19 restrictions amid a stable pandemic situation, the government announced on Wednesday.
Vice Interior Minister Han Chang-snob said during a government Covid-19 response meeting that the lifting will go into effect on March 20, reports Yonhap News Agency.
The decision came as South Korea’s daily virus tally continues its downward trend, reaching 11,401 cases on Tuesday.
Currently, wearing a mask is mandatory on public transportation, including buses, subways, and taxis, as well as at hospitals, pharmacies, and other high-risk facilities, such as nursing homes, after the government lifted the indoor mask mandate on January 30 except for those places.
“Since the adjustment of mask-wearing requirements on January 30, the virus situation has been in stable condition, registering a 38 percent fall in the average daily virus infections and a 55 percent fall in new seriously ill patients,” Han noted.
But mask-wearing is “actively recommended for public transportation users during rush hour, high-risk groups, and those having symptoms”, he said.
The mask mandate will remain in place for medical facilities, pharmacies, and other vulnerable facilities, but pharmacies in open public spaces, such as discount stores or train stations, will be exempt from the requirement.
The latest decision comes two years and five months after the government made it mandatory to wear a mask on public transportation in October 2020 at the height of the pandemic.
The Vice Interior Minister also said the government will gradually resume international passenger ferry services between South Korea and China, starting from March 20.
Such services were suspended in January 2020 amid the pandemic’s onset.
With all mask requirements nearly coming to an end, the seven-day self-quarantine mandate for Covid-19 patients remains the country’s last major restriction as the nation heads back to pre-pandemic normalcy.