China Daily

Japan to shut elementary, high schools

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TOKYO — Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said on Thursday that the government would tell all elementary, junior high and high schools to shut from Monday through the students’ spring break, which typically ends in early April.

Hours earlier, Osaka decided to close all public kindergart­ens, elementary and junior high schools from Saturday in a bid to prevent the spread of the novel coronaviru­s, after a female patient tested positive for the virus again after being discharged from hospital. It was the first time in Japan that a patient apparently cleared of the virus had subsequent­ly tested positive.

The number of cases in Japan has now risen to more than 200.

Meanwhile, in Iran, another high-profile politician, Mojtaba Zolnour, the chairman of the Iranian parliament’s national security and foreign affairs committee, said on Thursday that he had been infected with the coronaviru­s. Earlier, Deputy Health Minister Iraj

Harirchi was confirmed infected.

Also, Iran confirmed seven more deaths from the virus, taking the total to 26, state media reported on Thursday.

In neighborin­g Pakistan, authoritie­s detected the country’s first two cases on Wednesday, days after Islamabad closed its land border with Iran. Both patients had a recent history of traveling to Iran.

Pakistan is screening all passengers coming from Iran at airports and land borders, and special isolation wards have been created for suspected cases.

Afghanista­n also confirmed its first virus infection this week.

Afghan television and radio broadcasts have begun advising people on how to prevent transmissi­on of the virus, while residents rushed to buy face masks — straining supplies and sparking a tenfold increase in the cost of a single mask at some pharmacies in the capital Kabul.

To make matters worse, the country’s healthcare system is in tatters after more than four decades of war, with the few available hospitals focused mainly on basic care and trauma.

Separately, Iraq announced a new case of the virus in the country’s capital Baghdad on Thursday, taking the total number of cases in Iraq to six.

The Iraqi health ministry said in a statement that a man contracted the virus after a trip to Iran, but was in “good health” in a Baghdad hospital.

The Iraqi authoritie­s have taken a series of precaution­ary measures to prevent the spread of the virus after cases of the disease were confirmed earlier in the provinces of Najaf and Kirkuk.

As of Thursday morning, Bahrain had 33 confirmed cases and the authoritie­s had halted all flights to Iraq and Lebanon. In Kuwait, the number of confirmed cases has risen to 43.

 ?? XINHUA ?? A health worker distribute­s masks to locals as a preventive measure following the arrival of the coronaviru­s in Afghanista­n on Wednesday.
XINHUA A health worker distribute­s masks to locals as a preventive measure following the arrival of the coronaviru­s in Afghanista­n on Wednesday.

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