The Fiji Times

Lockdowns, entry bans put in place

- ■ REUTERS

WASHINGTON - France and Spain joined Italy in imposing lockdowns on tens of millions of people, Australia ordered selfisolat­ion of arriving foreigners and other countries extended entry bans as the world sought to contain the spreading coronaviru­s.

Panic buying in Australia, the United States and Britain saw leaders appeal for calm over the virus that has infected over 156,000 people globally and killed more than 5800.

Several countries imposed bans on mass gathering, shuttered sporting, cultural and religious events, while medical experts urged people to practice “social distancing” to curb the spread.

Austria’s chancellor urged people to self-isolate and announced bans on gatherings of more than five people and further limits on who can enter the country.

All of Pope Francis’ Easter services next month will be held without the faithful attending, the Vatican said on Sunday, in a step believed to be unpreceden­ted in modern times.

The services, four days of major events from Holy Thursday to Easter Sunday, usually draw tens of thousands of people to sites in Rome and in the Vatican.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said from midnight Sunday internatio­nal travellers arriving in the country would need to isolate themselves for 14 days, and foreign cruise ships would be banned for 30 days, given a rise in imported cases.

Australia’s latest restrictio­ns mirror those announced by neighbouri­ng New Zealand on Saturday.

Donald Trump tested negative for the coronaviru­s, his doctor said on Saturday, as the US president extended his country’s travel ban to Britain and Ireland.

Last week, Mr Trump had met a Brazilian delegation in which at least one member has since been tested positive.

Travel restrictio­ns and bans, and a plunge in global air travel, saw further airline cutbacks, with American Airlines Inc planning to cut 75 per cent of internatio­nal flights through May 6 and ground nearly all its

widebody fleet.

China tightened checks on internatio­nal travellers arriving at Beijing airport on Sunday, after the number of imported new coronaviru­s infections surpassed locally transmitte­d cases for a second day in a row.

Anyone arriving to Beijing from abroad will be transferre­d directly to a central quarantine facility for 14 days for observatio­n starting March 16, a city government official said.

China, where the epidemic began in December, appears to now face a greater threat of new infections from outside its borders as it continues to slow the spread of the virus domestical­ly.

China has reported 80,984 cases and 3203 deaths. The country imposed draconian containmen­t policies from January, locking down several major cities.

Spain put its 47 million inhabitant­s under partial lockdown on Saturday as part of a 15-day state of emergency to combat the epidemic in Europe’s second worstaffec­ted country after Italy.

Streets in Madrid and Barcelona were deserted on Sunday. All major newspapers carried a front-page wrapper emblazoned with a government-promoted slogan: “Together we’ll stop this virus.”

Spain has had 193 deaths from the virus and 6250 cases so far, public broadcaste­r TVE said on Sunday.

France will shut shops, restaurant­s and entertainm­ent facilities from Sunday with its 67 million people were told to stay home after confirmed infections doubled in 72 hours.

French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said the government had no other option after the public health authority said 91 people had died in France and almost 4500 were now infected.

“We must absolutely limit our movements,” he said.

However, French local elections went ahead.

“I am going to vote and keep living my life no matter what. I am not scared of the virus,” said a 60-year-old voter, who asked to be identified only as Martine, at a Paris polling station.

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