The Mercury News Weekend

World: Nations harshen response as epidemic worsens.

- By Matt Sedensky and Jon Gambrell

BANGKOK » Saudi Arabia cut travel to Islam’s holiest sites, South Korea toughened penalties for those breaking quarantine­s and airports across Latin America looked for signs of sick passengers Thursday as the new virus troubled a mushroomin­g swath of the globe.

With the illness pushing its way into a sixth continent and the number of sick and dead rising, the crisis gave way to political and diplomatic rows, concern that bordered on panic in some quarters, and a sense that no part of the world was immune to the disease’s spread.

“Viruses don’t know borders and they don’t stop at them,” said Roberto Speranza, the health minister in Italy, where northern towns were on army-guarded lockdowns and supermarke­t shelves were bare.

As growing parts of Europe and the Middle East saw infections and a first case was found in South America, air routes were halted and border control toughened. But for an illness transmitte­d so easily, with its tentacles reaching into so many parts of the world, leaders puzzled over how to keep the virus from proliferat­ing seemed willing to try anything to keep their people — and economies — safe.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe called for schools across the country to close for weeks, a decision that impacted 12.8 million students.

“The most important thing is to prevent infections,” said Norinobu Sawada, vice principal of Koizumi primary school, “so there aren’t many other options.”

In South Korea, the hardest- hit country outside China, four Busan markets known for colorful silks and a dizzying array of other wares were shuttered while the country’s military sent hundreds of its doctors and soldiers to aid in treatment and quarantine­s.

In Iran, the front line of Mideast infections, officials loosened rules barring the import of many foreign-made items to allow in sanitizers, face masks and other necessitie­s, and removed overhead handles on Tehran’s subways to eliminate another source of germs. Peru put specialist­s on round-the- clock shifts at its biggest airport, Argentina took the temperatur­e of some new arrivals and El Salvador added bans for travelers from Italy and South Korea.

The Dominican Republic turned back a cruise ship carrying 1,500 people because eight of those aboard showed potential symptoms of the COVID-19 virus. And in Africa, South Africa’s president ordered the evacuation of citizens from the Chinese city of Wuhan, where the virus outbreak began.

The holy city of Mecca, which able- bodied Muslims are called to visit at least once in their lives, and the Prophet Muhammad’s mosque in Medina were cut off to potentiall­y millions of pilgrims, with Saudi Arabia making the extraordin­ary decision to stop the spread of the virus.

With the monarchy offering no firm date for the lifting of the restrictio­ns, it posed the possibilit­y of affecting those planning to make their hajj, a ritual beginning at the end of July this year.

“We ask God Almighty to spare all humanity from all harm,” the country said in announcing the decision.

Disease has been a constant concern surroundin­g the hajj, with cholera outbreaks in the 19th century killing tens of thousands making the trip. More recently, another coronaviru­s that caused Middle East respirator­y syndrome, or MERS, prompted increased public health measures, but no outbreak resulted.

It wasn’t just government­s that were taking action: Cologne Cathedral, one of Germany’s main religious sites, was emptying its basins of holy water to prevent the spread of infection. And in the United States, Facebook said it was canceling its annual conference for developers.

COVID-19’s westward creep — including a case in Solano County in Northern California that does not appear linked to overseas travel — had some countries warning their people to obey measures intended to keep a single case from blossoming into a cluster that could paralyze a community.

A man originally from Wuhan, the Chinese city at the center of the global outbreak, who contracted the virus was charged alongside his wife in Singapore for allegedly lying about their whereabout­s as officials tried to stem further infections. In Colombia, which has yet to report any cases, officials reminded residents they could be jailed for up to eight years if they violate containmen­t measures. And in South Korea, the National Assembly passed a law strengthen­ing the punishment for those violating self-isolation, more than tripling the fine and adding the possibilit­y of a year in prison.

“It came later than it should have,” said Lee Haeshik, spokesman for the ruling Democratic Party, calling for further non-partisan cooperatio­n to address the outbreak.

Countries’ efforts to contain the virus opened up diplomatic scuffles. South Korea fought prohibitio­ns keeping its citizens out of 40 countries, calling them excessive and unnecessar­y. China warned Russia to stop discrimina­tory measures against its people, including monitoring on public transit. Iran used the crisis to rail against the U.S., which it accused of “a conspiracy” that was sowing fear.

The global count of those sickened by the virus hovered around 82,000, with 433 new cases reported Thursday in China and another 505 in South Korea, where the military called off joint drills planned with American troops. Iran’s caseload surged by more than 100 cases.

 ?? AHN YOUNG-JOON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Workers wearing protective gear spray disinfecta­nt as a precaution against the coronaviru­s at a shopping street in Seoul, South Korea, Thursday. South Korea is the hardest-hit country outside China, where the virus originated.
AHN YOUNG-JOON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Workers wearing protective gear spray disinfecta­nt as a precaution against the coronaviru­s at a shopping street in Seoul, South Korea, Thursday. South Korea is the hardest-hit country outside China, where the virus originated.

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