The Sun (Malaysia)

Southeast Asian govts mull emergency powers

Infections across region reach 4,030, nearly 100 dead

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MANILA: Southeast Asian countries considered more emergency powers yesterday to tackle the threat of the coronaviru­s as the biggest daily jump in cases in Malaysia took the number of infections in the region to 4,030.

The virus has killed nearly 100 people since the number of cases started to shoot up early this month.

Nearly half the fatalities in Southeast Asia have been in Indonesia, the world’s fourth most populous country.

The Philippine­s has confirmed 33 deaths among 462 cases.

But health officials acknowledg­e limited testing for the coronaviru­s means that, like Indonesia, its already overstretc­hed health system could be facing far more infections than the numbers indicate.

Government­s are scrambling to raise their defences with border closures, entry bans and lockdowns.

The Philippine Congress held a special session to consider allowing President Rodrigo Duterte’s government special powers over businesses such as utilities, transport firms and hotel that could quarantine people or house medical workers.

“It is a step we were reluctant to take, but the circumstan­ces and the experience of nations worldwide convinced us that we have no other choice,” Duterte’s executive secretary Salvador Medialdea told a near-empty Congress, with most lawmakers streaming the session at home.

Duterte has a supermajor­ity in both chambers, so the bill is expected to pass, although the opposition is concerned about the scope of the powers and potential for abuse.

The Philippine­s was the first Southeast Asian country to adopt lockdown measures, with borders closed to foreigners and tens of millions of people in home quarantine.

But more are following suit as cases soar, with Vietnam and Malaysia deploying soldiers to help with quarantine­s or to enforce curbs on travel and gatherings.

Indonesia’s capital, Jakarta, has joined Thailand and Cambodia in shutting bars, cinemas and entertainm­ent spots.

Tens of thousands of migrant workers left Thailand for neighbouri­ng countries after new restrictio­ns were announced at the weekend.

Thailand is estimated to have up to five million migrant workers, mainly from Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia.

Laos and Myanmar have yet to report cases of coronaviru­s.

Thai authoritie­s have urged workers not to rush out of the cities in large number and to stay put in order to curb the spread of the disease.

“The mass travelling will increase the spread of the virus,” said Tawee Chotpitaya­sunondh, a senior adviser to the Thai health ministry.

Global travel hub Singapore announced on Sunday a ban on short-term visits and even transit stops, after a surge of cases from abroad.

The scale of the disruption was brought home when Singapore Airlines said it was cutting capacity by 96% and grounding almost all of its fleet in the face of the “greatest challenge” it has ever faced.

– Reuters

Medical workers in protective gear walk to begin a shift at a hospital in Daegu, the epicentre of South Korea’s coronaviru­s outbreak, yesterday. –

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EPAPIX
IN THE EYE OF VIRUS STORM ... EPAPIX

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