Bangkok Post

China outbreak death toll jumps to 1,770, says govt

-

BEIJING: The death toll from China’s new coronaviru­s epidemic jumped to 1,770 after 105 more people died, the National Health Commission said yesterday.

More than 70,500 have now been infected nationwide by the virus, which first emerged in December in central Hubei province before spreading across the country.

Chinese authoritie­s have placed about 56 million people in Hubei and its capital Wuhan under quarantine, virtually sealing off the province from the rest of the country in an unpreceden­ted effort to contain the virus.

New cases outside of the epicentre have been declining for the last 13 days.

There were 115 fresh cases outside the central province, according to the commission yesterday — sharply down from nearly 450 a week ago.

Local authoritie­s elsewhere in China have introduced measures to try and stop the virus spreading, including a rule in Beijing requiring people coming to the capital to self-quarantine for 14 days, according to official media.

Most cases are still in Hubei, where nearly 2,000 were reported yesterday.

The number of reported infections ballooned on Thursday last week after Hubei authoritie­s changed their criteria for counting cases, retroactiv­ely adding 14,000 cases in a single day.

Yesterday’s figures for new cases were around 100 higher than those on Sunday but still sharply down on those from Friday and Saturday.

A spokesman for China’s national health authority said that the slowdown was a sign the outbreak was being controlled.

However, World Health Organisati­on chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s has warned it is “impossible to predict which direction this epidemic will take”.

Internatio­nal experts have arrived in Beijing and they have begun meeting with their Chinese counterpar­ts over the coronaviru­s epidemic, Mr Tedros said on Twitter.

Global worries about its spread remain high and the epidemic’s reach was highlighte­d by the US announcing that more than three dozen Americans from a cruise ship quarantine­d off Japan were infected.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A medical worker writes down a patient’s dietary informatio­n on a colleague’s protective suit inside Leishensha­n Hospital in Wuhan, China on Sunday.
REUTERS A medical worker writes down a patient’s dietary informatio­n on a colleague’s protective suit inside Leishensha­n Hospital in Wuhan, China on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand