Coronavirus update: Xi
Jinping visits Wuhan as China numbers fall, Italy’s soar
- Italian leader puts entire country in lockdown as
cases rise to 9,172
- Wuhan continues to be only site of new domestic
cases on Chinese mainland
Published: 9:22am, 10 Mar,
2020
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Chinese President Xi Jinping
visits residents in Wuhan, the city in Hubei province where the coronavirus
outbreak emerged. Photo: Xinhua
Chinese President Xi Jinping
arrived in Wuhan – epicentre of the coronavirus outbreak – on Tuesday morning,
as the number of new infections in mainland China continued its downward trend
on Monday, with just 19 cases of Covid-19, the disease caused by the virus.
Italy is in lockdown, after
a climb in the number of infections there to 9,172, overtaking South Korea as
the worst affected country outside China. South Korea reported 7,513 infections
as of midnight on Tuesday, while Iran has confirmed more than 7,000 cases.
“Now that the virus has a
foothold in so many countries, the threat of a pandemic has become very real,”
WHO director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on Monday.
Stock markets in Hong Kong
and Shanghai bounced back in early trading on Tuesday, after stocks fell more
than 7 per cent in the US, the Dow’s single-day biggest point drop ever.
A man was pulled alive from
the rubble of the Xinjia Express Hotel in Quanzhou in eastern China on Tuesday,
three days after the building collapsed, according to state media.
Xinhua reported that the man
was rescued and sent to hospital just after 4.30pm.
The hotel had been converted
into a coronavirus quarantine facility for visitors from other outbreak
hotspots, and collapsed on Saturday night, killing at least 20 people.
More than 40 people were
injured and about 10 remain missing, according to the Ministry of Emergency
Management.
Last converted hospital in
Wuhan closes
Wuhan’s last remaining
converted hospital to treat Covid-19 patients with mild symptoms, closed on
Tuesday in a sign the epidemic there is now largely under control.
The closure of the Wuchang
Fangcang Hospital was reported by Chinese online news portal ThePaper.cn, and
coincided with Xi’s visit to the city. At least 14 buildings, including sports
stadiums and convention centres, had been converted into makeshift hospitals,
adding more than 20,000 beds to treat patients and prevent the spread of the
virus.
All but two of China’s
latest cases are in Wuhan
China’s National Health
Commission said 17 of the new patients with Covid-19 – the disease caused by the coronavirus – were
from Wuhan, where the epidemic originated in December. The remaining two cases,
in Beijing and eastern Guangdong province, had been imported from overseas,
with the Beijing case originating in Britain, the commission said.
The Guangdong case related
to a Chinese student who took Cathay Pacific flight CX320 from Spain to Hong
Kong on March 8, and then transited to Guangdong through the Shenzhen Bay
checkpoint.
There were a further 17
deaths in China, all from Hubei province, bringing the national death toll from
the disease to 3,136. China has now recorded a total of 80,754 confirmed cases
of Covid-10. It is the third consecutive day that China has reported new
domestic cases only in Wuhan.
Hubei prepares to go back to
work
Officials in Hubei should
prepare for business to return to normal, the local party chief Ying Yong told
a provincial coronavirus containment strategy meeting on Monday.
“[We should] fully support
companies that have global export chains, flagship engineering projects and
agricultural-related corporations to return to work, and [we should] assist
other companies to gradually resume business at safe and suitable times,” said
Ying, who was appointed last month, according to provincial newspaper Hubei
Daily on Tuesday.
Hubei to launch app tracking
residents’ health
Authorities in Hubei
province announced the launch of a mobile app to identify residents’ health
status as the provincial government prepares for business to return to normal.
The system will identify
residents according to three categories: green, yellow and red. “Green”
residents can travel freely in low- and medium-risk areas in the province,
which has been on lockdown since January 23.
Similar QR code systems to
track the health of people in China have been used in at least 15 provinces and
cities during the coronavirus outbreak. Conditions are assigned based largely
on online questionnaires, but some apps tracking users’ movements have sparked
concerns over data privacy.
Pope tells priests to help
the sick
Pope Francis urged Catholic
priests on Tuesday to “have the courage” to go out and help those with the
coronavirus, hours after Italy was placed on a nationwide lockdown.
“Let us pray to the Lord
also for our priests, that they may have the courage to go out and visit the
sick … and to accompany the medical staff and volunteers in the work they do,”
the pontiff said during a mass in Vatican City.
St Peter’s Square in the
Vatican – in the centre of Italy’s capital Rome – was almost empty on Tuesday
with only a few dozen people walking around, most of them without masks.
Italy’s Patient No 1 leaves
intensive care
Italian doctors celebrated a
small victory in their battle against the coronavirus after a 38-year-old man
was moved out of intensive care for the first time since he tested positive on
February 21 and became known as the country’s Patient No. 1.
Mattia, a Unilever employee,
was initially sent home when he went to hospital on February 18 complaining of
flu-like symptoms. He returned the next day after his condition worsened
dramatically. He had not been to China and was only tested after doctors
learned he had been in contact with a man who had visited the country in early
February.
Coronavirus containment
measures spark prison protests across Italy as nation goes into lockdown
By then, however, he had
infected his wife and several doctors, nurses and patients at the Codogno
hospital, creating what was thought initially to have been Italy’s main
cluster. Mattia’s China contact tested negative, prompting experts to believe
the virus had been circulating widely and quietly in northern Italy since at
least the second half of January.
Mattia began breathing on
his own on Monday, with just a small amount of oxygen assistance, and was moved
to a sub-ICU unit and was speaking with doctors, according to Francesco Mojoli,
head of intensive care at the San Matteo hospital in Pavia.
Italy in lockdown
In Italy overnight the entire country was placed in
lockdown as
the country’s total number of infections climbed to 9,172. South Korea reported
7,513 infections as of midnight on Tuesday, while Iran has confirmed more than
7,000 cases.
Italian Premier Giuseppe
Conte urged all 60 million Italians to stay at home – extending the measures
imposed on a quarter of the country two days’ earlier. The only travel
permitted in Italy will be for proven work reasons, health conditions or other
cases of necessity. The nationwide restrictions will be in place until April 3
and include closures of schools and universities. Pubs, eateries and cafes will
close at dusk.
Hong Kong orders quarantine
for Italy arrivals
All arrivals into Hong Kong
from Italy, as well as parts of France, Germany and Japan, will be put under mandatory
quarantine for 14 days
starting on Friday midnight to help contain the coronavirus epidemic,
government sources said.
The restrictions cover all
of Italy as well as the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté and Grand Est regions in
France, North Rhine-Westphalia state in Germany, and Hokkaido in Japan.
The Hong Kong government was
also monitoring the situation in Spain and India, the sources said, though
travellers from these countries would not have to undergo quarantine for now.
Russia cancels key economic
forum
Russia’s flagship St
Petersburg International Economic Forum has been cancelled over coronavirus
concerns, its organiser confirmed.
The annual forum, which was
expected to run from June 3 to 6, has been postponed until 2021 after the WHO’s
decision to declare the coronavirus outbreak a global emergency, Roscongress
Foundation, the organiser, said on Tuesday.
Last week, Russia’s First
Deputy Prime Minister Andrei Belousov said the forum, one of the key events on
President Vladimir Putin’s economic agenda, would be cancelled as a precaution
against the coronavirus.
China announced earlier it
would postpone the Davos-like annual Boao Forum for Asia, originally expected
to start on March 24.
French culture minister
contracts coronavirus
French Culture Minister
Franck Riester has contracted the novel coronavirus and is staying in his Paris
home but is “doing fine”, his office said on Monday.
“The minister tested
positive today” after displaying symptoms, the ministry said.
It reported Riester spent
several days last week at the country’s lower house National Assembly in Paris,
where five virus cases were confirmed earlier.
The prime minister’s office
said the rules for ministers with the virus “are the same for all French
people”, including acting with caution and taking measures to minimise the
chance of the disease spreading.
Taiwanese generals in
quarantine
Taiwanese Defence Minister
Yen Te-fa confirmed on Tuesday that more than 2,000 military personnel,
including two generals, had been in quarantine at home for 14 days since late
January after either visiting or transiting through coronavirus hotspots.
But so far no infections had
been reported, Yen said.
He said personnel had
disinfected military compounds and drafted contingency plans to deal with
infections.
On Tuesday, Taiwan also
confirmed two new cases, bringing the total number of infections to 47,
including one death.
Passengers leave stricken
cruise ship
The long process of
offloading passengers from the Grand Princess is underway at an unused Port of
Oakland dock in California, after the ship spent days circling waters off San
Francisco. At least 21 people on board tested positive for the virus, all but two
are members of the crew.
A California man who sailed
on an earlier voyage by the ship, which is owned by the same operators as the
Diamond Princess, died in his home state last week from the virus, prompting
state and federal officials to hold the vessel offshore until a suitable
landing point could be identified.
Most of the more than 3,500
people on board will be taken to military bases in California and elsewhere for
testing and quarantine after disembarking, which is expected to take two days.
The crew will remain on board and return to the Pacific Ocean for the
quarantine period.
Early rise for Hong Kong
stocks
Markets in Hong Kong stocks
rose in early trading on Tuesday, one day after their biggest fall in two
years. The Hang Seng rose 0.9 per cent to 25,268.28 at opening on Tuesday,
after closing down 4.23 per cent the previous day. Tech giants Tencent and
Alibaba were among those advancing on the Hong Kong market.
The Shanghai Composite Index
opened 0.6 per cent up at 2,961.07, then began see-sawing between small gains
and losses.
A few hours earlier, US stocks plunged, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average closing down
2,013 points, or 7.8 per cent, in its single-day biggest point drop ever, on
crashing oil prices and coronavirus pandemic fears.
First deaths in Canada,
Germany
Canada reported its first fatality from the new coronavirus on Monday, a man in his 80s
who had a number of underlying medical conditions. British Columbia’s chief
health officer Bonnie Henry said the man was one of two residents at a North
Vancouver nursing home who had been infected, despite having no recent travel
history.
Meanwhile, Germany reported
its first two deaths, with the initial fatality occurring in the far western
county of Heinsberg, which has seen the highest concentration of infections in
the country so far. The second death, an 89-year-old woman, occurred in the
city of Essen.
Also on Monday, Britain
reported two fatalities – one in Woverhampton and the other in Surrey –
bringing its death toll from the disease to five. Both were in their 70s with
underlying health conditions. San Marino reported its second fatality on Monday
while in Spain the number of confirmed cases has now surpassed 1,000, with at
least 28 deaths.
In Iran, the judiciary’s
Mizan news agency said authorities had temporarily released some 70,000
prisoners over concerns about the virus spreading in the country’s prisons, up
from the 54,000 previously announced.
Death toll rises at
collapsed quarantine facility
A dozen people were still
missing on Tuesday morning in the ruins of the quarantine facility which collapsed on Saturday in Quanzhou, in the southeastern province of Fujian. Communist
Party mouthpiece People’s Daily said the death toll had risen to 18, while 59
people had been rescued from the rubble of the Xinjia Express Hotel.
‘Coronavirus quarantine
hotel’ collapses in China
Mongolian cities in lockdown
Mongolia on Tuesday barred
anyone from entering or leaving its cities for six days after the country
reported its first coronavirus case – a French energy company employee who flew
in from Moscow.
“The capital Ulan Bator and
all provincial centres are quarantined until March 16 to curb the outbreak,”
deputy prime minister Enkhtuvshin Ulziisaikhan said.
Has Trump been exposed to
virus?
There were concerns in the
US that President Donald Trump may have been exposed to the coronavirus as US
stocks plummeted on Tuesday, feeding a growing national anxiety. Two Republican
lawmakers had been in contact with Trump after meeting a person last month – at
a conservative conference – who later tested positive for the disease.
One of them, Matt Gaetz,
travelled with Trump aboard Air Force One on Monday while the other, Doug
Collins, was with the president on Friday during a briefing at the Centres for
Disease Control and Prevention headquarters. Congressman Paul Gosar and Senator
Ted Cruz had also been in contact with the individual.
The White House later
confirmed that Trump had not been tested for the coronavirus.
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