Imperial Valley Press

Virus worries force cancellati­on of major tech show in Spain

- BY KELVIN CHAN AND MAE ANDERSON AP Business Writers

LONDON — Organizers of the world’s biggest mobile technology fair are pulling the plug over worries about the viral outbreak from China.

The annual Mobile World Congress will no longer be held as planned in Barcelona, Spain, on Feb. 24-27.

“Global concern regarding the coronaviru­s outbreak, travel concern and other circumstan­ces, make it impossible for the GSMA to hold the event,” John Hoffman, head of the GSMA organizing body, said in a statement Wednesday.

The decision comes after dozens of tech companies and wireless carriers dropped out, with the latest cancelatio­ns by Nokia, Vodafone, Deutsche Telekom and Britain’s BT on Wednesday. Other companies that dropped out earlier include Ericsson, Nokia, Sony, Amazon, Intel and LG. The companies cited concerns for the safety of staff and visitors.

Organizers and government officials had sought to hold out against growing pressure to cancel the annual tech extravagan­za, which had been expected to draw more than 100,000 visitors from about 200 countries, including 5,000 to 6,000 from China. The show normally represents a huge source of revenue for hotels, restaurant­s and taxi companies. Authoritie­s have estimated the show was to generate 473 million euros ($516 million) and more than 14,000 part-time jobs for the local economy.

Spain’s vice president, Carmen Calvo, said there was “no public health reason” to call off the show. She said Spain had a good health response system and was following all of the recommenda­tions from the World Health Organizati­on.

Dr. Mike Ryan, the WHO’s emergencie­s chief, said before the cancellati­on that the show could have gone on.

He said that while no mass gathering is ever risk-free, with the potential for food poisoning, injuries or building collapse, most events “can continue if the proper measures can be applied.”

Spanish labor unions said that the show was called off due to the panic of the major technologi­cal companies. The CCOO union’s regional leader, Javier Pacheco, denounced “the alarmist attitude of the technologi­cal companies that from their position of global supremacy don’t care about the local impact.”

But Tim Bajarin, president of consultanc­y Creative Strategies, said cancellati­on was prudent with all the unknowns surroundin­g how the new virus is spread and the fact that many companies had already pulled out.

These days, most big companies hold their own product launch events anyway, as Samsung did Tuesday in San Francisco. But Bajarin said Mobile World Congress was still an opportunit­y for many people in the mobile industry to meet in one place.

“It allowed for a lot of networking and business dealings, so in that context, it was a significan­t loss,” he said.

The GSMA, the wireless trade body that organizes the fair, had said it was meeting regularly with global and Spanish health experts and its partners to ensure the well-being of attendees. It had already urged participan­ts to avoid handshakes and planned to step up cleaning and disinfecti­ng and make sure speakers don’t use the same microphone.

 ?? PHOTO/EMILIO MORENATTI AP ?? In this Feb. 25, 2019, photo, attendees walk to enter at the Mobile World Congress wireless show, in Barcelona, Spain.
PHOTO/EMILIO MORENATTI AP In this Feb. 25, 2019, photo, attendees walk to enter at the Mobile World Congress wireless show, in Barcelona, Spain.

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