Regina Leader-Post

WORKERS IN PROTECTIVE GEAR SPRAY DISINFECTA­NT AT A MARKET IN DAEGU, SOUTH KOREA, ON SUNDAY.

CONCERNS ABOUT CORONAVIRU­S ARE ON THE RISE OUTSIDE CHINA.

- JANE CHUNG AND EMILY CHOW

Internatio­nal concern about the spread of coronaviru­s outside China grew on Sunday with sharp rises in infections in South Korea, Italy and Iran.

The government in Seoul put the country on high alert after the number of infections surged over 600 with six deaths. A focal point was a church in the southeaste­rn city of Daegu, where a 61-year-old member of the congregati­on with no recent record of overseas travel tested positive for the virus.

In Italy, the number of cases jumped to above 130 from just three before Friday. Authoritie­s sealed off the worst affected towns and banned public gatherings in much of the north, including halting the carnival in Venice, where there were two cases, to try to contain the biggest outbreak in Europe.

Italian health authoritie­s were struggling to find out how the virus started. “If we cannot find ‘patient zero’ then it means the virus is even more ubiquitous than we thought,” said Luca Zaia, the regional governor of the wealthy Veneto region.

Iran, which announced its first two cases on Wednesday, said it had confirmed 43 cases and eight deaths, with most of the infections in the Shi’ite Muslim holy city of Qom.

China, which has seen the vast majority of cases, reported 648 new infections. But only 18 were outside of Hubei province, the lowest number outside the epicentre since authoritie­s began publishing data a month ago and locked down large parts of the country.

“At present, the epidemic situation is still severe and complex, and prevention and control work is in the most difficult and critical stage,” President Xi Jinping said.

State run television urged people to avoid complacenc­y, drawing attention to people gathering in public areas and tourist spots without wearing masks.

The virus has killed 2,442 people in China, which has reported 76,936 cases, and has slammed the brakes on the world’s second largest economy. It has spread to some 26 other countries and territorie­s, with a death toll of around two dozen, according to a Reuters tally.

“Despite the continuing decline in reported cases from China, the last two days have seen extremely concerning developmen­ts elsewhere in the world,” said Paul Hunter, professor of medicine at Britain’s University of East Anglia.

The coronaviru­s has been fatal in two per cent of reported cases, with the elderly and ill the most vulnerable, according to the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), which said on Saturday it was worried by the detection of infections without a clear link to China.

 ?? YONHAP/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ??
YONHAP/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES

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