The Daily Telegraph

China says ‘victory is near’ as infections fall

WHO experts hail Beijing’s ‘aggressive’ quarantine measures as number of new cases hits six-week low

- By Sarah Newey and Nicola Smith

CHINA’S ambassador to the United Nations has declared that “victory” against coronaviru­s within the country is in sight as the number of new cases hit a six-week low.

Just 125 infections were confirmed on Tuesday in China, down from a peak of more than 15,000 cases a day at the start of February.

Zhang Jun, the ambassador to the UN, said that the decline demonstrat­ed that “we are not far from the coming of the victory”.

The World Health Organisati­on (WHO) said the “decline is real” – at the early stages of the outbreak there were concerns that figures provided by Chinese authoritie­s were inconsiste­nt.

“We have seen a decline in cases since the end of January… we scrutinise­d this data and we believe this decline is real,” Dr Maria Van Kerkhove, a WHO outbreak expert and a member of the investigat­ive team who travelled to China last month, said yesterday.

The drop was as a result of the “comprehens­ive

measures” China took to stem the spread of coronaviru­s, including unpreceden­ted quarantine­s and rigorous contact tracing, she added.

“We have no reason to believe this is not possible in other countries with an aggressive approach… including in Italy, in Iran, in South Korea,” Dr Van Kerkhove added.

While China’s outbreak – which has already infected 80,150 people and killed 2,800 – appears to be waning, coronaviru­s infections are rapidly escalating elsewhere.

Some 1,900 cases were confirmed outside the country yesterday, with Argentina, Ukraine and Gibraltar among the nations to detect the virus for the first time.

More than 70 countries worldwide – in every continent bar Antarctica – have now diagnosed infections.

But the worst hit Asian country is now South Korea, where the president declared war on the disease as infection numbers spiked by nearly 1,000 in just 48 hours.

Almost 5,200 people have been diagnosed with Covid-19, resulting in 31 fatalities.

Moon Jae-in, the South Korean president, ordered additional hospital beds and more face masks to be made available as reports emerged of medical staff collapsing from exhaustion.

“The entire country has entered war against the infectious disease as the crisis in Daegu and Gyeongbuk province has reached the highest point,” he told a Cabinet meeting, referring to the two hardest-hit parts of the country.

“I am very sorry to the people that we are not able to supply masks swiftly and sufficient­ly, and have caused inconvenie­nce,” the president said.

The majority of confirmed cases have been linked to the Shincheonj­i Church of Jesus, a secretive movement that reveres its messiah-like founder, Lee Man-hee, 88, and boasts hundreds of thousands of followers.

The government of Seoul has asked for a murder investigat­ion into the church, alleging that it was liable for its refusal to co-operate with efforts to stop the disease.

Park Won-soon, the mayor of the capital Seoul, claimed that if Mr Lee and other leaders of the church had cooperated with the authoritie­s, effective preventive measures could have saved those who later died of the virus.

At a news conference on Monday, Mr Lee bowed and apologised on his knees for the outbreak.

“Although it was not intentiona­l, many people have been infected,” he said. “We put our utmost efforts, but were unable to prevent it all.”

Nearby Japan has also been badly affected by the outbreak, with its own infection rate boosted by the docking of the Diamond Princess cruise ship in Yokohama, where more than 700 passengers

‘We have no reason to believe this is not possible in other countries with an aggressive approach’

were diagnosed with coronaviru­s during a two-week quarantine. Six passengers have died.

Seiko Hashimoto, the minister for the 2020 Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games, said the games “could be postponed until later this year”.

The minister told a parliament­ary meeting that the contract signed by the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee with the city stated that it had the right to cancel the games – which are due to open on July 24 – only if they could not be held in 2020.

 ??  ?? Soldiers in hazmat suits disinfect shacks in Guryong village in Seoul, South Korea
Soldiers in hazmat suits disinfect shacks in Guryong village in Seoul, South Korea

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