Daily Mirror

Public safety the top priority, Hancock says

14-day spell in isolation for Hubei evacuees

- BY JEREMY ARMSTRONG BY MARTIN BAGOT martin.bagot@mirror.co.uk @MartinBago­t

Torn apart by the virus

A BRITISH dad trapped in virus-hit Wuhan can fly home, but is being forced to leave his Chinese wife behind.

Jeff Siddle, 54, faces his “worst nightmare” as he prepares to leave with his daughter Jasmine, nine, after a trip to visit relatives.

He told of the youngster’s devastatio­n at having to part with mum Sindy because she has no British passport and China is not allowing its citizens to leave the country.

IT developer Jeff, of Prudhoe, Northumber­land, said: “My daughter is in floods of tears, devastated. My wife is trying to keep strong.”

“We feel isolated. The British government has been slow to react – America, Japan, they have all had plans in place.”

The Foreign Office said: “We have been in close contact with British families. Our priority is to keep them together. We have urgently raised this with the Chinese authoritie­s.”

BRITAIN is the most “at-risk” country in Europe to the spread of the coronaviru­s.

A study found the UK is on the frontline in the battle against the disease, due to the 142,000 Chinese tourists expected in London between January and mid-March.

Experts from Southampto­n University, who measured the potential global spread for the first time, ranked the UK ahead of Italy and Russia in Europe.

Globally it was 17th, after the USA, sixth, and Australia, 10th. Thailand topped the list.

Lead author Dr Shengjie Lai said: “We are closely monitoring the epidemic to provide up-to-date analysis.”

Findings are based on the number of travellers predicted to arrive from affected cities in mainland China.

BRITONS airlifted from China’s coronaviru­s outbreak could be quarantine­d at a UK military base.

Secure facilities are being considered as the Government plans for the arrival of about 200 citizens from Wuhan city.

Even those with no symptoms would be detained for 14 days – thought to be the maximum possible incubation period for the new form of coronaviru­s.

Urgent plans to get the Britons out of Hubei province, where Wuhan is situated, are being finalised with an evacuation thought to be imminent.

Those wanting to leave the area had until 3am on Tuesday to express their wish to the British consulate.

Military bases here could hold the Brits for a fortnight and ensure they are “well looked after”, a source said.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said: “Public safety is the top priority. Anyone returning from Wuhan will be safely isolated for 14 days with all necessary medical attention.”

The number of deaths from the virus jumped to 133 with 6,065 cases worldwide. Wuhan’s streets are almost empty but some locals have ventured out wearing plastic bags and bottles on their heads to protect themselves.

British lecturer Yvonne Griffiths, 71, said she was told early yesterday to be “on stand-by” for a flight from Wuhan – possibly to London Stansted.

She said: “We’ve to be at the airport six to seven hours before and we would have a screening from health people here in Wuhan. If we are not showing any symptoms we’ll be able to board.

“If we were suffering temperatur­e or other symptoms, there seems to be a possibilit­y of quarantini­ng at this end.”

SCARED Family in plastic bags

Nick House, a Brit living in Wuhan with his Indonesian wife and two British kids, said: “We’d like to be out of here.

“The man on the phone said, ‘You are on the list but unfortunat­ely your wife probably won’t be able to get on the plane as she does not have a visa’. I won’t leave without her.”

Australia plans to quarantine evacuees at Christmas Island immigratio­n detention centre. A US charter plane left Wuhan yesterday, believed to be carrying citihad

Drew Bennett

Masks at Heathrow airport

zens and consular staff. Japan has evacuated some of its citizens. The UK Government advised about 1,500 recent arrivals from Wuhan to go home and “self isolate”.

In Birmingham a medic in a hazmat suit was filmed escorting a man who returned from Wuhan with flu-like symptoms. Sales worker Drew Bennett, 39, was isolated in hospital but there have been no confirmed cases here. The World Health Organizati­on may declare an internatio­nal public health emergency today, for just the fifth time in its 72-year history, after Ebola, polio, swine flu and Zika. British Airways has suspended flights to and from China after the Foreign Office warned against “all but essential travel”.

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FLU FEAR

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