Oman Daily Observer

Chinese tourist becomes Europe’s first virus death

PANDEMIC RATTLES THE WORLD: 80-year-old dies in Paris hospital, deaths in China reach 1,523

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SHANGHAI/PARIS: An elderly Chinese tourist infected with the coronaviru­s has died in France, Paris said on Saturday, becoming the first fatality in Europe and the fourth outside mainland China from an epidemic that has rattled the world.

Thought to have originated from a wildlife market in the Chinese city of Wuhan, the outbreak has dented the world’s second largest economy and presented a huge challenge to the ruling Communist Party.

Beijing’s latest figures on Saturday showed 66,492 cases and 1,523 deaths, mostly in central Hubei province. Outside mainland China there have been about 500 cases in some two dozen countries and territorie­s, with four deaths in Japan, Hong Kong, the Philippine­s and France.

In the French case, the 80-yearold Chinese man died at the Bichat hospital in Paris of a lung infection due to the flu-like virus, Health Minister Agnes Buzyn said.

After an extended Lunar New Year holiday, China urgently needs to get back to work. But some cities remain in lockdown, streets are deserted, employees are nervous and travel bans and quarantine orders are in place around the country.

Those returning to Beijing from the holiday have been ordered to undergo a 14-day self-quarantine to prevent the virus’ spread.

Many factories are yet to re-open. While there has been some hope expressed this week that the flu-like disease may be peaking in China, numbers keep rising and a trend has been hard to discern, especially after a reclassifi­cation that widened the definition of cases.

The biggest cluster of cases outside China has been on a cruise ship, the Diamond Princess, quarantine­d off Japan’s Yokohama port. Out of about 3,700 passengers and crew on board, 285 people have tested positive and been taken to hospitals.

The United States said on Saturday it plans to send an aircraft to pick up American passengers and take them back home where they face another two weeks of isolation “out of an abundance of caution”.

“They are very concerned about spreading the virus, and there’s no good way to transport people from Japan without possible transfer of virus, so it is the logical thing to do,” passenger Sawyer Smith, 25, said.

The United States has imposed some of toughest curbs on travellers from China, going beyond World Health Organizati­on (WHO) recommenda­tions and offending Beijing. China has called for sciencebas­ed responses and not panic.

In Chinese-ruled Hong Kong, which has seen months of anti-beijing protests, hundreds of demonstrat­ors marched on Saturday to demand full closure of the border with mainland China and to oppose plans to turn some buildings into quarantine hubs.

“Doing that (opening such centres) is like creating more wounds rather than trying to stop the bleeding,” said Chan Mei-lin among the protesters. TV images showed police making some arrests and using pepper spray.

The sickness, now officially labelled Covid-19, has killed around 2 per cent of those infected. — Reuters

 ?? — AFP ?? A girl wearing a face mask plays on her scooter at a park in Beijing.
— AFP A girl wearing a face mask plays on her scooter at a park in Beijing.

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