South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

China races to contain virus

President Xi says country facing grave challenge as outbreak spreads

- By Ken Moritsugu

President Xi on Saturday called the accelerati­ng spread of a new deadly virus a grave situation.

BEIJING — China’s leader on Saturday called the accelerati­ng spread of a new virus a grave situation, as cities from the outbreak’s epicenter in central China to Hong Kong scrambled to contain an illness that has killed 41 people and infected more than 1,200 others.

President Xi Jinping’s remarks, reported by state broadcaste­r CCTV, came at a meeting of Communist Party leaders convened on Lunar New Year — the country’s biggest holiday whose celebratio­ns have been muted — and underlined the government’s urgent, expanding efforts to control the outbreak.

Travel agencies have been told to halt all group tours, the state-owned English-language China Daily newspaper reported, citing the China Associatio­n of Travel Services.

Millions of people traveling during the holiday have fueled the spread of the outbreak nationwide and overseas after it began in the city of Wuhan in central China. The vast majority of the infections and all the deaths have been in mainland China, but fresh

cases are popping up.

Australia and Malaysia reported their first cases Saturday — four each — and Japan its third. France confirmed three cases Friday, the first in Europe, and the U.S. identified its second, a woman in Chicago who had returned from China.

In the heart of the outbreak where 11 million residents are already on lockdown, Wuhan banned most vehicle use, including private cars, in downtown areas starting Sunday, state media reported. Only authorized vehicles would be permitted, the reports said.

The city will assign 6,000 taxis to neighborho­ods, under the management of resident committees, to help people get around if they need to, China Daily said.

In Hong Kong, leader Carrie Lam said her government will raise its response level to emergency, the highest one, and close primary and secondary schools for two more weeks on top of the Lunar New Year holiday. The schools will reopen Feb. 17.

Lam said direct flights and trains from Wuhan would be blocked.

In a sign of the growing strain on Wuhan’s health care system, the official Xinhua news agency reported that the city planned to build a second makeshift hospital with about 1,000 beds. The city has said another hospital was expected to be completed Feb. 3.

The virus comes from a large family of what are known as coronaviru­ses, some causing nothing worse than a cold. It causes cold- and flu-like symptoms, including cough and fever, and in more severe cases, shortness of breath. It can worsen to pneumonia, which can be fatal.

China cut off trains, planes and other links to Wuhan on Wednesday, as well as public transporta­tion within the city, and has steadily expanded a lockdown to 16 surroundin­g cities with a combined population of more than 50 million — greater than that of New York, London, Moscow and Paris combined.

China’s biggest holiday, Lunar New Year, unfolded Saturday in the shadow of the virus. Authoritie­s canceled a host of events, and closed major tourist destinatio­ns and movie theaters.

Temples locked their doors, Beijing’s Forbidden City and Shanghai Disneyland closed, and people canceled restaurant reservatio­ns ahead of the holiday, normally a time of family reunions, sightseein­g trips and other festivitie­s in the country of 1.4 billion people.

“We originally planned to go back to my wife’s hometown and bought train tickets to depart this afternoon,” said Li Mengbin, who was on a stroll near the closed Forbidden City. “We ended up canceling. But I’m still happy to celebrate the new year in Beijing, which I hadn’t for several years.”

Temples and parks were decorated with red streamers, paper lanterns and booths, but some places started dismantlin­g the decor.

People in China wore protective medical masks to public places like grocery stores, where workers dispensed hand sanitizer to customers. Some parts of the country had checkpoint­s for temperatur­e readings and made masks mandatory.

The National Health Commission reported a jump in the number of infected people, to 1,287. The latest tally, from 29 provinces and cities across China, included 237 patients in serious condition.

Of the 41 deaths, 39 have been in Hubei province, where Wuhan is the capital city.

French automaker PSA Group says it will evacuate its employees from Wuhan, quarantine them and then bring them to France. The Foreign Ministry said it was working on “eventual options” to evacuate French citizens from Wuhan “who want to leave.”

The National Health Commission said it is bringing in medical teams to help handle the outbreak, a day after videos circulatin­g online showed throngs of frantic people in masks lined up for examinatio­ns and complaints that family members had been turned away at hospitals that were at capacity.

The Chinese military dispatched 450 medical staff, some with experience in past outbreaks, including SARS and Ebola, who arrived in Wuhan late Friday to help treat patients hospitaliz­ed with viral pneumonia, Xinhua reported.

 ?? HECTOR RETAMAL/GETTY-AFP ?? A medical staffer takes the temperatur­e of a man Saturday at the Wuhan Red Cross Hospital in Wuhan, China.
HECTOR RETAMAL/GETTY-AFP A medical staffer takes the temperatur­e of a man Saturday at the Wuhan Red Cross Hospital in Wuhan, China.

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