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Military to begin vaccinating troops under 30 next week

A service member receives a coronavirus test at a makeshift COVID-19 test center near Seoul Station last Monday. (Yonhap)
A service member receives a coronavirus test at a makeshift COVID-19 test center near Seoul Station last Monday. (Yonhap)
The military will begin administering coronavirus vaccines to service members aged under 30 next week, the defense ministry said Monday.

"We plan to begin vaccinating those aged under 30 next week, with Pfizer's vaccines expected to be provided," ministry spokesman Boo Seung-chan said during a regular press briefing.

The military has completed providing the first doses of AstraZeneca's COVID-19 vaccines to some 117,000 service members aged 30 and older who have agreed to be inoculated earlier this month.

Around 414,000 South Korean troops are in their 20s and are eligible to take the vaccines for the upcoming round of inoculations. How many of them will agree to take the shots is yet to be seen. Among troops aged over 30, 88 percent have received their first jabs.

South Korea will also receive the Johnson & Johnson (J&J) vaccine from the United States this week following Washington's pledge to donate vaccines for Korean troops, though they will be mainly administered to reservists and other personnel related to defense affairs due to concerns over blood clotting among those under 30.

On Monday, the military reported two additional coronavirus cases, raising the total caseload to 958.

An Army officer based in the southwestern county of Jangseong was confirmed to have contracted COVID-19 after an off-installation visit, while a soldier in the central city of Cheonan was found to be infected after a family member tested positive earlier, according to the ministry.

Nationwide, South Korea added 430 more COVID-19 cases, bringing the total caseload to 140,340. (Yonhap)







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