South Korean health ministry takes down pandemic dance video after backlash

The ministry apologised, saying the video failed to consider "multiple issues including noise between floors". PHOTO: SCREENGRAB FROM YOUTUBE

SEOUL (THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK) - South Korea's Ministry of Health and Welfare took down a video it had posted on social media encouraging dancing to beat the coronavirus blues.

The video, uploaded on New Year's Day and deleted on Saturday (Jan 2), drew criticism for being out of touch with the people, as most of South Korea's population lives in apartments.

The ministry apologised in a statement on Facebook, saying the video - promoting dancing as a way to cope with the pandemic - failed to consider "multiple issues including noise between floors".

"We apologise to the public. We have now made the video private," the ministry said.

The video is no longer available on Facebook or YouTube.

The video shows five members of a family doing household chores in an apartment before being joined by a TV reporter and breaking into a dance.

Gatherings of five people or more are banned in Seoul and the surrounding area, and the same rule is set to take effect nationwide on Monday. Families living in the same household are an exception.

The dancers jump in unison at one point as the song goes, "Go away, stress. Go away, coronavirus".

According to recent data from Statistics Korea, nearly six in 10 dwellings throughout the country were apartments as at last year.

Remote video URL

The backlash comes as the government had to defend its late entry in the vaccine race in recent weeks as critics accused it of celebrating the country's handling of the pandemic - also known as the K-Quarantine Model - too soon.

In July, the United States signed a deal with Pfizer and BioNTech to buy 100 million doses of their Covid-19 vaccine. Japan also struck a deal to buy their vaccine for 60 million people the same month.

In early December, Korea said it had "secured" Covid-19 vaccines for 44 million people though it had signed an official contract only with AstraZeneca for 10 million people at that time.

The announcements of a deal with Pfizer, Janssen and Moderna came weeks later.

Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.