Evening Telegraph (First Edition)
Virus toll rises as 50m quarantined
THE death toll from the coronavirus has risen to 106, China’s National Health Commission has said.
Authorities reported 25 deaths today, with all but one in Hubei province where the virus is believed to have originated.
The number of total cases has now reached more than 4,500.
China has locked down cities across the province, isolating some 50 million people in a sweeping antidisease effort.
The US Consulate in Wuhan, where authorities cut off most access last Wednesday in an effort to contain the disease, was preparing to fly its diplomats and some other Americans out of the city.
A number of other governments including Japan, France and Mongolia are also preparing evacuations.
China had expanded its already sweeping disease-control efforts by extending the end of this week’s Lunar New Year holiday, the country’s busiest travel season, by three days to Sunday to keep the public at home and reduce the risk that infection will spread.
US health officials expanded their recommendation for people to avoid non-essential travel to any part of China, rather than just Wuhan and other areas most affected by the outbreak.
Tests for students, i ncluding English proficiency, which are needed to apply to foreign universities, have also been cancelled.
China has confirmed more than 2,700 cases of the new virus, most in Wuhan, while more than 40 cases have been confirmed elsewhere in the world.
Almost all involve Chinese tourists or people who visited Wuhan.
Meanwhile, Germany has confirmed its first case of the new virus that has infected thousands of people in China.
The health ministry in the southern state of Bavaria said late on Monday that the man from Starnberg, south of Munich, is “in a clinically good condition”.
Officials said the man is being medically isolated, and people who were in close contact with him are being informed about possible symptoms and hygiene measures.