Gulf Today

Japan third country outside China to suffer virus fatality

Japan confirms its first coronaviru­s death — a woman in her 80s living in Kanagawa prefecture near Tokyo — adding to two previous fatalities in Hong Kong and the Philippine­s

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The Chinese province at the centre of the coronaviru­s outbreak reported a record rise in deaths and thousands more infections using a broader case definition on Thursday, while Japan became the third place outside mainland China to suffer a fatality.

The epidemic has given Beijing’s communist leaders one of their biggest tests in years, constraine­d the world’s second largest economy and brought a purge of provincial bureaucrat­s. It has spread to around two dozen places beyond mainland China.

With China’s streets, restaurant­s and flower markets bare, a miserable Valentine’s Day was expected on Friday.

Japan confirmed its first coronaviru­s death — a woman in her 80s living in Kanagawa prefecture near Tokyo — adding to two previous fatalities in Hong Kong and the Philippine­s.

In Hubei province, in central China, officials said 242 people died on Wednesday, the biggest daily rise since the flu-like virus emerged in the provincial capital Wuhan in December. Total deaths in China are 1,367.

The rise, following a forecast earlier this week by China’s senior medical adviser that the epidemic may end there by April, halted a global stocks rally.

But it appeared in large part to be due to methodolog­y.

Hubei had previously only allowed infections to be confirmed by RNA tests, which can take days. RNA, or ribonuclei­c acid, carries genetic informatio­n allowing identifica­tion of viruses.

But it has also begun using computeris­ed tomography (CT) scans, which give images of the lungs, the Hubei health commission said, to identify cases and isolate them faster.

As a result, another 14,840 new cases were reported in the province on Thursday, from 2,015 new cases nationwide a day earlier. But excluding cases confirmed using the new methods, the number of new cases rose by only 1,508.

“It is our current understand­ing that the new case definition widens the net, and includes not only lab-confirmed cases but also clinically diagnosed cases based on symptoms and exposure,” World Health Organisati­on ( WHO) spokesman Tarik Jasarevic told reporters.

The new method is only being used in Hubei. About 60,000 people have been infected in total, the vast majority of them in China.

Consultanc­y Capital Economics said the surge in deaths did not necessaril­y point to an accelerati­on in the spread of the outbreak but rather to a previous understate­ment of its spread.

“For now, the latest figures don’t appear to undermine the recent tentative signs that the spread of the virus may be slowing,” it said.

The outbreak, believed to have emerged from a market in Wuhan where wildlife was traded illegally, has brought a backlash against local leaders.

Provincial­communistp­artybossji­angchaolia­ng was sacked as secretary of the Hubei Provincial Committee, and Ma Guoqiang removed as party chief in Wuhan city, state media said. They were the two highest-profile officials to be axed since the outbreak began.

The new provincial chief, former Shanghai mayor Ying Yong, told state media the situation in Hubei remained very severe, but pledged to contain the outbreak.

Chinese scientists are testing two antiviral drugs and preliminar­y clinical trial results are weeks away, though WHO chiefs have cautioned a vaccine could take 18 months to develop.

Hundreds of infections have been reported in more than two dozen other countries and territorie­s.

Tiny Singapore, an Asian travel hub, also reported its biggest daily jump in the number of confirmed cases, eight newly infected patients bringing its total to 58.

The biggest cluster outside China is on a cruise ship quarantine­d off the Japanese port of Yokohama, where a further 44 cases were reported on Thursday, taking the total to 219, though authoritie­s said some elderly people would finally to be allowed to disembark on Friday.

There was a happy ending for another cruise ship, the MS Westerdam, which docked in Cambodia after being barred from Guam, Japan, the Philippine­s, Taiwan and Thailand over fears that one of its 1,455 passengers and 802 crew might have the virus, even though none had tested positive.

Passengers clapped and cheered on arrival in the sunset.

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Military officials and medical staff are seen near the quarantine­d cruise ship in Yokohama on Thursday.
Agence France-presse ↑ Military officials and medical staff are seen near the quarantine­d cruise ship in Yokohama on Thursday.

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