Kuwait Times

Health minister assures Kuwait free of deadly new coronaviru­s

MPs demand evacuation of Kuwaitis as toll in China jumps, HK records first death

- KUWAIT: MPs Safa Al-Hashem and Khalil Abul during a session at the National Assembly yesterday. — Photo by Yasser Al-Zayyat By B Izzak and Agencies

KUWAIT: Health Minister Sheikh Dr Basel Al-Sabah said yesterday the ministry has taken all necessary precaution­ary measures against the spread of the deadly new coronaviru­s that has so far killed 425 in China and infected over 20,000. The minister said Kuwait has not discovered any case, and any suspected case discovered at the airport or other entry points will be quarantine­d and carefully examined in isolation.

Sheikh Basel said an emergency plan has been prepared by the contingenc­y committee at the ministry and that all directors of hospitals have been informed of the necessary guidelines to face the disease. He said thermal examinatio­n of arrivals from China will continue, adding that the ministry has called for a Gulf health meeting to discuss coordinati­on against the disease.

Only the United Arab Emirates in the GCC states has announced five confirmed cases of coronaviru­s, all affecting Chinese nationals who arrived from Wuhan, the epicenter of the disease. The minister said the GCC health council has recommende­d banning travel to China except in extremely necessary cases, and also called for the evacuation of Gulf diplomats and their families from China.

He said that passengers arriving from countries where coronaviru­s cases have been detected are carefully examined and those found free of infection will be kept under precaution­ary observatio­n for 14 days. The minister said that if thermal detectors at the airport find symptoms of the disease in anyone, the person will be immediatel­y taken to hospital and quarantine­d to examine the type of infection.

MP Saadoun Hammad called on the foreign ministry to evacuate Kuwaiti citizens from China and for the government to halt flights arriving from there. He asked the minister if quarantine rooms have been establishe­d at the airport and other entry points. He also inquired if schools have taken sufficient precaution­s. MP Abdullah Fahhad called for strengthen­ing monitoring at the airport and border posts and for carefully monitoring Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh. But a majority of lawmakers praised the health ministry for taking sufficient measures to prevent the disease from reaching Kuwait.

Meanwhile, three more Asian countries confirmed coronaviru­s infections yesterday among citizens who had not travelled to China, as Hong Kong reported its first death from the disease and millions more people in Chinese cities were ordered to stay indoors. The toll in mainland China soared to 425 after 64 more people died, the biggest single day tally since the first fatalities emerged last month.

More than 20 countries have confirmed cases of the virus, prompting the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) to declare a global health emergency, several government­s to institute travel restrictio­ns, and airlines to suspend flights to and from China. But it has continued to spread with Singapore, Malaysia, and Thailand yesterday reporting new infections that were not imported from China.

In a sign of growing concern about a spread to other densely-populated Chinese metropolit­an areas, authoritie­s in three cities in eastern Zhejiang province including one near Shanghai - limited the number of people allowed to leave their homes. Three districts in Hangzhou - including the area where the main office of Chinese tech giant Alibaba is based - now allow only one person per household to go outside every two days to buy necessitie­s, affecting some three million people.

The city is only 175 km southwest of the financial hub of Shanghai, which has reported more than 200 cases, including one death, so far. Similar measures were imposed in Taizhou and three districts in Ningbo, covering a total population of nine million people. Days before, similar restrictio­ns were placed on Wenzhou, home to another nine million. Zhejiang has confirmed 829 cases - the highest number outside the central province of Hubei, whose capital, Wuhan, is the epicenter of the outbreak.

The disease is believed to have emerged in December in a Wuhan market that sold wild animals, and spread rapidly as people travelled for the Lunar New Year holiday in late January. China has struggled to contain the virus despite enacting unpreceden­ted measures, including virtually locking down more than 50 million people in Hubei. On Sunday the Philippine­s reported the first death abroad: A Chinese man who had come from Wuhan. However, the WHO said yesterday that the outbreak does not yet constitute a “pandemic”.

The death of the 39-year-old man in Hong Kong came as the semi-autonomous city closed all but two land crossings with the Chinese mainland. Hong Kong media said the man had underlying health issues that complicate­d his treatment. He had visited Wuhan last month and his 72-year-old mother was also infected. The financial hub has been particular­ly on edge over the virus as it has revived memories of the Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome (SARS) outbreak of 2002-03, which killed nearly 300 people in the city and 349 people in the mainland.

“We can’t rule out the possibilit­y that there will be massive transmissi­on in the near future,” said Chuang Shuk Kwan, an official from Hong Kong’s Centre for Health Protection. With more than 20,400 confirmed infections in China, health officials noted yesterday that the mortality rate for the new coronaviru­s stood at 2.1 percent, with most victims either old or with underlying health problems. SARS killed nearly 10 percent of patients.

Singapore announced yesterday its first four cases of people being infected locally, taking the total number of infections in the city-state to 24. “There is as yet no evidence of widespread sustained community transmissi­on in Singapore,” the health ministry said in a statement. In another example of growing global anxiety, Japan has quarantine­d a cruise ship carrying 3,711 people and was testing those onboard for the virus after a former passenger was diagnosed with the illness in Hong Kong.

Macau, China’s semi-autonomous gambling hub that is popular with mainland Chinese visitors, decided to temporaril­y close all of its casinos for at least two weeks. And the UK’s Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab on Tuesday advised Britons to leave China, “if they can” to minimize their risk of exposure to the virus.

China’s Communist leadership made a rare admission of fallibilit­y on Monday, acknowledg­ing “shortcomin­gs and difficulti­es exposed in the response to the epidemic”. The elite Politburo Standing Committee called for improvemen­ts to the “national emergency management system” at the meeting, according to the official Xinhua news agency. The government also said it “urgently” needed medical equipment such as surgical masks, protective suits, and safety goggles as it battles to control the outbreak.

Most of the deaths have been in Wuhan and the rest of surroundin­g Hubei province, which has largely been under lockdown for almost two weeks. A 1,000-bed field hospital in Wuhan built from scratch within two weeks to relieve overburden­ed medical facilities started receiving patients yesterday, with a second makeshift hospital due to open later this week. A cultural building, an exhibition center and a gymnasium have also been converted into improvised clinics with 3,400 beds.

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