In South Korea, the Coronarmus exploded because of the sect

With more than 2,900 infected and 17 dead, it has become the main focus of a new choreography outside China, where COVID-19 has begun. Corleone testing centers have been filled in South Korea, where over 2,000 confirmed cases have been reported. It is less known than the spread [...]
Corleone testing centers have been filled in South Korea, where over 2,000 confirmed cases have been reported.
It is less known that the spread of the coronary in South Korea is largely due to a controversial Christian sect called Shincheonji, the Church of Jesus, which has more than 200,000 followers.
Specifically, over half of the infected people in South Korea are linked to a 61-year-old woman, known as Patient 31, who attended a Mass in the town of Daeg. It is not yet known how the woman was infected, since she did not travel abroad.
Now South Korea has decided to test all 200,000 members of the mysterious sect because of the coronary to.
Shincheonji leader Li Manhi has agreed to give authorities the list of members, provided the information remains confidential, writes Business Insiver.
About 80 percent of the infected in South Korea are associated with this sect.
Our church didn't invent this virus. This is just an excuse to shift guilt. Throughout history, minority groups have always been blamed for the bad things that have happened in society. The same is happening to us, “says sect member, 26-year-old Ji-yeon Park, for Guardian.
Founded in 1984, Shincheonji teaches his followers that the end of the world will soon come and that only 144,000 selected ones will be saved. Shincheonji Mayor Li Manhi claims that he is Christ's second incarnation and will take the 144,000 chosen with him to heaven on Judgment Day.
In the meantime, a theory has emerged that Shincheonji is also linked to the original explosion of coronobius in the Chinese city of Wuhan. This sect is widely suspected of having its own branch there, and a recording in which one of the sect's leaders also broadcast on the KBS News, a television station in South Korea.
No Wuhan Shincheonji member has chosen the virus because of their faith,” says the leader of the sect in the video.
After the broadcast census, Shincheonji admitted they had about 300 members in Wuhan, so it is possible that the virus was transmitted from China to South Korea, but this possibility is being explored.












