The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Virus spreads to more than 60 countries; France closes the Louvre

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Coronaviru­s cases surged in Italy, and France closed the worldfamou­s Louvre Museum on Sunday as the deadly outbreak that began in China sent fear rising across Western Europe, threatenin­g its tourism industry. The number of countries hit by the virus climbed past 60, and the death toll worldwide reached at least 3,000.

New fronts in the battle opened rapidly over the weekend, deepening the sense of crisis that has already sent financial markets plummeting, emptied the streets in many cities and rewritten the routines of millions of people. More than 88,000 around the globe have been infected, with the virus popping up on every continent but Antarctica.

Australia and Thailand reported their first deaths Sunday, while the Dominican Republic and the Czech Republic recorded their first infections.

Italian authoritie­s announced that the number of people infected in the country soared 50 percent to 1,694 in just 24 hours, and five more had died, bringing the death toll there to 34. France raised its number of reported cases to 130, an increase of 30 from the day before, and said it has seen two deaths.

Italian health authoritie­s said the increases were expected, since it takes as long as two weeks for containmen­t measures to take effect, and because Italy has a large number of elderly people. Still, the numbers highlighte­d the rapid impact the virus is having on Italy, the epicenter of the outbreak in Europe.

”This accelerati­on was expected, unfortunat­ely,” said Giovanni Rezza, director of the infective illness department at the National Health Institute. He said it would be another week or 10 days until the spread of the virus slowed down in the country.

With numerous cases in other

European countries traced back to Italy, many countries have issued travel warnings for the 11 Italian towns that have been on lockdown since the virus exploded there on Feb. 21. But none have gone as far as the U.S. government, which on Sunday urged Americans not to travel to the regions of Lombardy and Veneto, raising the warning to the highest level. It is one step shy of the U.S. travel advisory for China, which urged Americans to leave the country.

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