Gulf Today

Italians urged to stay calm as virus death toll mounts

We need to stay alert, but do not panic. We must keep our heads, says PM; civil protection agency says over 220 people have now tested positive in Italy, which has the most confirmed cases in Europe

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A seventh person has died in the coronaviru­s outbreak in northern Italy, news agency ANSA said on Monday, while the number of confirmed cases rose to more than 220.

ANSA said the latest person to die was an 80-year-old man who had been taken to hospital last week in Lodi after suffering a heart attack. Doctors believe he caught the virus there from another patient.

Italy reported deaths from the new coronaviru­s, as the number of people contractin­g the disease continued to mount and officials called for calm.

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte has said that residents could face weeks in lockdown in an effort to sit out the virus. “We need to stay alert, but do not panic! We must keep our heads,” said Attilio Fontana, Lombardy’s president.

The civil protection agency said more than 220 people had now tested positive in Italy, which has the most confirmed cases in Europe.

Eleven towns — 10 in Lombardy and one in neighbouri­ng Veneto — are under lockdown, with some 50,000 residents prohibited from leaving.

Regional authoritie­s have ordered gathering spots, such as schools, bars, restaurant­s, cinemas and discos to close.

The measures imposed in the country’s north affect some 30 million inhabitant­s, the Repubblica daily said.

The spread of the virus has disrupted highprofil­e events including Milan Fashion Week and the Venice Carnival, while football matches have been postponed. Operas have also had to be cancelled at Milan’s famed La Scala.

Masses in churches across the affected regions have been cancelled and funerals limited to immediate relatives only.

Forty passengers on an Alitalia flight from Rome to Mauritius were held on landing on Monday and refused permission to disembark, unless they consented to being placed in quarantine.

Alitalia said it was arranging for their immediate repatriati­on instead, despite none of the passengers showing any symptoms.

The stock market in Milan was down over 5.0 per cent on Monday in a broad-based sell-off over virus fears.

Most of the cases in Italy are in Lombardy, a prosperous region in the country’s north where Milan is located, and which borders Switzerlan­d.

They can be traced back to a 38-year-old man in the town of Codogno whom authoritie­s have called “patient one.” He has not travelled to China and doctors failed to treat him with the necessary precaution­s.

But the man initially believed to have given him the virus after returning from Shanghai later tested negative.

“We still do not know who brought the coronaviru­s to Codogno,” Galli said.

Investigat­ors are reconstruc­ting minute by minute the man’s movements over the past few weeks — where he slept, ate, walked — in a bid to trace everyone he could have come into contact with.

“We had the most unfortunat­e situation possible; the outbreak of an epidemic in a hospital,” infectious disease expert Massimo Galli told the Corriere della Sera daily.

“In these cases, a hospital can turn into a frightenin­g amplifier of contagion,” he said.

The virus may have spread to the Veneto region via a 60-year old farmer from Albettone. He had recently travelled to Codogno and is known to frequent bars in Vo’ Euganeo — where the region’s only victim so far lived.

A stretch of the Veneto region borders Austria. Milan mayor Beppe Sala urged people to stay calm and refrain from “dashing to the supermarke­ts to grab food.”

“We should spend time looking after the most vulnerable, such as old people, who are particular­ly at risk,” he said. According to Italy’s national statistics institute, there are over seven million people in the country over the age of 75.

Italy has proposed a meeting of the health ministers of its border countries to determine “common lines of action” in the face of the coronaviru­s epidemic, the civil protection agency said.

France has said there is no need to close borders in response to the spread of virus in Italy.

Hungarian authoritie­s issued a warning to citizens travelling to northern Italy, asking them to postpone their trip if possible, while incoming passengers will be screened at Budapest and Debrecen airports for fever symptoms.

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Tourists, wearing masks, visit the Piazza San Marco in Venice on Monday.
Agence France-presse ↑ Tourists, wearing masks, visit the Piazza San Marco in Venice on Monday.

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