Updated On: 23 March, 2022 08:15 AM IST | Seoul | Agencies
The country has been dealing with a massive coronavirus outbreak driven by the fast-moving omicron variant, which has compromised a once robust pandemic response and is driving up hospitalisations and fatalities

A screen shows the number of coronavirus infections nationwide at a subway station in Seoul on Tuesday. Pic/AP
Health officials in South Korea have instructed crematoriums to burn more bodies per day and funeral homes to add more refrigerators to store the dead as families struggle with funeral arrangements amid a rise in COVID-19 deaths.
The country has been dealing with a massive coronavirus outbreak driven by the fast-moving omicron variant, which has compromised a once robust pandemic response and is driving up hospitalisations and fatalities.