Dayton Daily News

» Coronaviru­s cases top 100,000 in 90 countries,

President Trump signs $8.3 billion bill to fight the wave.

- By Matt Sedensky and Angela Charlton

PARIS — Crossing more borders, the new coronaviru­s hit a milestone Friday, infecting more than 100,000 people worldwide as it wove itself deeper into the daily lives of millions, infecting the powerful, the unprotecte­d poor and vast masses in between.

The virus, which has killed more than 3,400 people and emerged in more than 90 countries, edged into more U.S. states and even breached the halls of the Vatican. It forced mosques in Iran and beyond to halt weekly Muslim prayers, blocked pilgrims from Jesus’ birthplace in Bethlehem and upended Japan’s plans for the Olympic torch parade.

As financial markets dived again, repercussi­ons from the virus also rattled liveli- hoods in the real economy.

“Who is going to feed their families?” asked Elias al-Arja, head of a hotel owners’ union in Bethlehem in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, where tourists have been banned and the storied Church of the Nativity was shuttered.

At the White House, President Donald Trump signed a $8.3 billion bill to fight the coronaviru­s a day after Italy said it would double its own spending to 7.5 billion euros ($8.5 billion).

In Geneva, the U.N. health agency said it had received applicatio­ns for 40 possible virus tests, had 20 vaccine candidates in developmen­t and reported that numerous clinical trials of experimen- tal drugs for the new coronaviru­s were under way.

e all in this together. We all have a role to play,” said Tedros Adhanom Ghe- breyesus, chief of the World Health Organizati­on, urging more global cooperatio­n from the business world and solidarity with the poorest.

The news wasn’t all bad: more than half of those who contracted the virus have now recovered. It’s retreating in China, where it first emerged, and in nearby South Korea — though the virus continued popping up in new places, with coun- tries like Colombia and Togo reporting their first confirmed cases.

Questions swirled around whether Iran could control its outbreak, as the number of reported infections jumped beyond 4,700 on Friday, with 124 deaths. Iran set up checkpoint­s to limit travel and had firefighte­rs spray disinfecta­nt on an 18-kilometer (11-mile) stretch of Tehran’s most famous avenue.

“It would be great if they did it every day,” grocery store owner Reza Razaiene- jad said. “It should not be just a one-time thing.”

The 100,000 figure of global infections is largely symbolic, but dwarfs other major outbreaks in recent decades, such as SARS, MERS and Ebola. The virus is still much less widespread than annual flu epidemics, which result in up to 5 million annual severe cases around the world and from 290,000 to 650,000 deaths annually, according to WHO.

But the epidemic’s economic impact snowballed, with world stocks and the price of oil dropping sharply again Friday.

The travel decline and a broader economic downturn linked to the outbreak threatened to hit already-struggling communitie­s for months. In response to plummet- ing demand, German air- line Lufthansa announced a reduction of its capacity in coming weeks to as much as 50% of pre-coronaviru­s outbreak levels. Slovakia banned all flights to and from Italy.

The head of the U.N.’s food agency, the World Food Program, warned of potential for “absolute devastatio­n” as the outbreak’s effects ripple through Africa and the Middle East. India scrambled to stave off an epidemic that could overwhelm its underfunde­d, under-staffed health care system, which lacks enough labs or hospitals for its 1.3 billion people.

“We’re seeing more coun- tries affected with lower incomes, with weaker health systems and that’s more con- cerning,” WHO chief Ghebreyesu­s said.

Inconsiste­nt health insur- ance and sick leave policies put the earnings of millions of workers’ who can’t work from home — waiters, driv- ers, delivery workers and more — at risk. In the U.S. the AFL-CIO labor federation urged the government to issue emergency regu- lations outlining employ- ers’ responsibi­lities to protect workers from infectious diseases.

The fear and the crack- downs that swept through China are now shifting west- ward, as workers in Europe and the U.S. stay home, authoritie­s vigorously san- itize public places and consumers flock to stores for household staples.

Nation after nation put some travel restrictio­ns into place, blocking visitors from hard-hit areas like China, South Korea, Italy and Iran. The United Nations’ top cli- mate change official said her agency won’t hold any physical meetings at its headquar- ters in Germany or elsewhere until the end of April.

French Health Minister Olivier Veran said children would be banned from visit- ing patients in hospitals and other health facilities across the country and that patients would be limited to one adult visit at a time. Spanish offi- cials announced a monthlong closure of 200 centers in and around Madrid where the elderly go for daytime care and activities.

“The Western world is now following some of China’s playbook,” Chris Beauchamp, a market analyst at the financial firm IG, said of the reaction to flu-like illness that for most people causes mild or moderate symptoms such as fever and cough but can hit elderly or sick peo- ple much harder.

Off California’s coast, the spectacle of a Grand Princess cruise ship ordered to stay at sea with passengers confined to their cabins as 45 people were tested for the virus was eerily similar to a scene on the other side of the globe in which about 700 of the 3,700 aboard the Diamond Princess cruise ship were infected during a quarantine.

Thailand on Friday blocked a separate cruise ship from docking, worried because it carried dozens of passengers from Italy, which with 197 virus deaths is the center of Europe’s epidemic.

In the U.S. the number of cases surpassed 230, scattered across 18 states. The University of Washington announced Friday it would stop holding classes and teach students online, a decision affecting some 57,000 students. The state has at least 70 confirmed COVID19 cases, most in the Seattle area and the highest U.S. state death toll at 13.

China reported 143 new cases Friday and South Korea had 505 more cases, down from earlier daily tallies. But the numbers kept growing in Europe. Serbia threatened to deploy the army to keep the virus at bay, and Hungary used virus fears to tighten its doors against migrants.

In Switzleran­d, officials reported 210 new virus cases on Friday, up from 90 a day earlier, and the military was being readied to provide support services at hospitals.

“This wave will come, it will rise, but it will be over at some point,” said Daniel Koch, head of the department for communicab­le diseases at the country’s Federal Office of Health.

Even Vatican City was hit, with the tiny city-state confirming its first case Friday. The Vatican has insisted that 83-year-old Pope Francis, who has been sick, only has a cold.

 ?? RODRIGO ABD / AP ?? Travelers wearing masks ride an escalator in the internatio­nal airport in Lima, Peru, on Friday, the same day Peruvian President Martin Vizcarra announced the first case of the new coronaviru­s in the country.
RODRIGO ABD / AP Travelers wearing masks ride an escalator in the internatio­nal airport in Lima, Peru, on Friday, the same day Peruvian President Martin Vizcarra announced the first case of the new coronaviru­s in the country.

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