Khaleej Times

Fear all around as stomach bug cases triple

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pyeongchan­g — Pyeongchan­g Olympic organisers were scrambling on Wednesday to prevent an outbreak of the highly contagious norovirus spreading to athletes after the number of cases nearly tripled overnight.

No athletes are among the 86 confirmed cases so far and officials at the Winter Games say they are doing everything they can to ensure it stays that way, two days before the Olympics open.

Any illness spreading to the competitor­s — particular­ly one of the star names — would be a major embarrassm­ent to hosts South Korea. Underlinin­g growing concerns about the spread of the stomach bug, which causes diarrhoea and vomiting, the Korean Centre for Disease Control and Prevention held a press conference to outline what steps it was taking.

“As of February 6 we had 32 cases, but today... we have an additional confirmed 54 cases so in total we have 86 cases of norovirus,” said the centre’s director Kim Hyun-Jun. Among those were three from food preparatio­n staff in the media village. The virus can be spread through food or water contaminat­ion.

Hundreds of soldiers have been drafted in to guard Olympic venues after 1,200 security staff were withdrawn and quarantine­d earlier this week over the outbreak. The security guards, all employees of a security company, were staying together at a youth training centre in Pyeongchan­g — separate from the main Olympic sites — believed to be epicentre of the virus.

“There’s no confirmed cases (among athletes) and that’s the most important thing here, that when the athletes come to Korea they demonstrat­e their performanc­e after a few years of training,” said Kim.

“In order to prevent any kind of accident that will prevent them from competing well and enjoying the Games we’re doing our best.”—

As of February 6 we had 32 cases, but today... we have an additional confirmed 54 cases so in total we have 86 cases of norovirus Kim Hyun-Jun

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