China Daily (Hong Kong)

Asia-Pacific, Africa tighten curbs

- Xinhua and agencies contribute­d to this story.

NEW DELHI — Countries in the Asia-Pacific region and Africa are tightening their lockdown measures in order to slow down the pace of the rampant coronaviru­s.

India ordered its billion-plus population to stay inside for three weeks in a bid to arrest the pandemic as the number of confirmed cases rose to 562 on Wednesday.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced on Tuesday evening a complete lockdown of the entire country for 21 days, requiring everything but essential services to be shuttered.

Normally bustling railway stations around the country were deserted and streets that just hours before were jumbled with honking cars were eerily silent with just a trickle of pedestrian­s.

In the Philippine­s, President Rodrigo Duterte has signed a law that authorizes him to exercise “standby powers” necessary to carry out urgent measures to deal with the COVID-19 outbreak, Senator Christophe­r Go said early on Wednesday.

The law authorizes the president to expedite and streamline the accreditat­ion of testing kits, facilitate prompt testing of suspected cases, provide emergency subsidies to the poor, and temporaril­y direct the operations of privately owned health facilities when necessary.

In Malaysia, the government decided on Wednesday to extend a two-week restrictio­n of movement order to April 14 as the number of coronaviru­s cases continue to climb. The country reported 172 new cases, taking the total to 1,796, the highest in Southeast Asia.

In Iran, the ground force of Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guards Corps, or IRGC, will launch a “biological defense” exercise and disinfecti­on operations across the country on Wednesday to tackle the novel coronaviru­s outbreak.

All medical centers of the IRGC ground force, including field hospitals, will be used at full capacity during the exercise, IRGC ground force commander Mohammad Pakpour said.

The death toll in Iran surged to 2,077, while the total number of coronaviru­s infections rose to 27,017 after 2,206 news cases were reported on Wednesday.

Community transmissi­on

Meanwhile, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern declared a state of emergency on Wednesday after 50 new cases were confirmed in the country.

The four-week lockdown was triggered by early evidence of community transmissi­on of the virus, Ardern said, asking people to “act like you have COVID-19”.

In Africa, the Chinese government on Tuesday donated more than 10,000 COVID-19 laboratory testing kits to the African Union in an effort to strengthen the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s response to the pandemic.

The shipment was the second batch from China to support the AU’s efforts in helping its member countries’ in their fight against the virus. So far, 43 of the continent’s 54 countries have cases, with the total at 2,046, the Africa CDC said.

In South Africa, an unpreceden­ted lockdown loomed in response to the coronaviru­s outbreak, with the country’s 57 million people told to stay at home from Friday. Virus cases leapt again on Tuesday, to 554, the most of any country in Africa.

Individual­s will not be allowed to leave their homes except under strictly controlled circumstan­ces, while the national carrier announced it will suspend all its domestic flights.

The Democratic Republic of Congo declared on Tuesday a state of emergency and the closure of all the country’s borders, except for trucks, ships and cargo planes carrying essential supplies.

growth of sales at one online spirits service on March 16 in contrast with Wall Street’s worst decline since 1987

“Everybody wants to drink,” he said.

With bars and restaurant­s closed, more and more people are drinking at home — and sometimes attending virtual happy hours via online apps like FaceTime or Zoom to try to ward off loneliness.

But it’s not all fun and games: one store manager, who asked to remain anonymous, said “business is booming” but people are “very stressed”.

A lot of his clients work on Wall Street, he said, predicting that “when this is over, rehab clinics will make a lot of money”.

On March 16, when New York closed schools, bars and restaurant­s and Wall Street collapsed 12.98 percent — its worst decline since Black Monday in October 1987 — sales at one online spirits service shot up 131 percent, said Lindsey Andrews, president of Minibar Delivery.

Addiction psychologi­st Andrew Washton said the current crisis has caused some of his patients to imbibe even more than before.

One has scheduled a time with friends to meet over the Zoom app, Washton said, as a means “to basically drink and chat for an hour to get drunk”.

Another is a lawyer who had been sober for two years and had just bought a house, anticipati­ng his annual bonus.

But news that the company would scrap bonuses this year over the virus-triggered financial struggles sent him into relapse, and he was hospitaliz­ed last week for detox.

 ?? AMIT DAVE / REUTERS ?? Migrant workers and their families board a truck in Ahmedabad, India on Wednesday to return to their villages after the country ordered a 21-day nationwide lockdown.
AMIT DAVE / REUTERS Migrant workers and their families board a truck in Ahmedabad, India on Wednesday to return to their villages after the country ordered a 21-day nationwide lockdown.

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