Business Standard

UK claims breakthrou­gh, WHO snubs it as death toll nears 500

Outbreak won't impact China-india trade ties, says Chinese ambassador

- With inputs from agencies

World Health Organizati­on officials have damped down expectatio­ns of imminent breakthrou­ghs in the developmen­t of vaccines or treatments for the outbreak. “There are no proven, effective therapeuti­cs” for the novel coronaviru­s, Mike Ryan, executive director of the WHO’S Health Emergencie­s Program, said on Wednesday at a press conference in Geneva.

The UN agency plans a systematic review of all therapeuti­cs, Ryan said. The organizati­on will share clinical trial protocols around the world, he said.

An antiviral drug from Gilead Sciences is expected to start testing in China in the coming days. A Chinese TV report said researcher­s at Zhejiang University had found an effective drug for the virus, while Britain’s Sky News said researcher­s had made a “significan­t breakthrou­gh” in developing a vaccine. Oil prices jumped on the reports.

Trade relations with India

In an interview to PTI, Chinese Ambassador Sun Weidong said China's foreign ministry and local government­s are working hard to ensure the safety of Indians and people working in Indian diplomatic missions in China.

Admitting that there could be a short-term impact of the epidemic on China's economy, he said the country's internal resilience is growing and it has ample resources and policy tools to cope with economic volatility. “I am confident that it should not and will not be hindered by short-term difficulti­es. We should not suspend but expand the economic and trade cooperatio­n between the two countries,” he said.

No sign of a slowdown

The death toll from the monthlong coronaviru­s outbreak has continued to climb in China, rising to 490. New cases have surged by double-digit percentage­s in the past 11 days. More people have now died in this epidemic than in the SARS outbreak of 2002-3 in mainland China. During that outbreak, 349 people died in the mainland.

The new figures from China’s Health Commission on Wednesday showed that 65 people died on Tuesday and that 3,887 more people had been infected. So far, 24,324 people are known to have been infected. Health experts say the death toll is likely to rise because of the large number of infections.

More American evacuees arrived in California, and were quarantine­d

Hundreds of Americans who had been in Wuhan as the outbreak worsened arrived in California on Wednesday on two evacuation flights arranged by the United States government. It was a second wave of American evacuation­s; an earlier flight arrived last week.

US President Donald Trump has pledged to work

with China on the outbreak, while cruise ships get new scrutiny after infections are found on two.

Cruise ships in Japan and Hong Kong being scrutinise­d after infections

Nine passengers and one crew member on a cruise ship quarantine­d in Yokohama, Japan, have tested positive for the coronaviru­s, the cruise line, Princess Cruises, said on Wednesday. The ship, carrying 2,666 passengers and 1,045 crew members, arrived in Yokohama on Tuesday, but the authoritie­s did not allow anyone off. In all, 273 passengers were tested for

the virus after everyone on board underwent an initial health screening. Twenty-one people were cleared, and officials were awaiting the other results.

Hong Kong imposes 14-day quarantine

Hong Kong said that it will begin requiring people who arrive from mainland China to undergo a mandatory 14-day quarantine, as it tries to reduce the potential for imported cases of the coronaviru­s.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Officers spray Indonesian­s with antiseptic at Hang Nadim Airport in Batam (Indonesia) as they arrive from Wuhan, before transferri­ng them to the Natuna Islands military base to be quarantine­d
PHOTO: REUTERS Officers spray Indonesian­s with antiseptic at Hang Nadim Airport in Batam (Indonesia) as they arrive from Wuhan, before transferri­ng them to the Natuna Islands military base to be quarantine­d

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