The Manila Times

Japan ship yields 41 more virus patients

- AFP

YOKOHAMA: At least 61 people aboard a cruise ship off Japan have tested positive for the new coronaviru­s, the government said Friday, as thousands of passengers and crew face a two-week quarantine.

An additional 41 passengers were found to have contracted the virus, which has killed hundreds of people, most of them in China, and infected more than 30,000 on the mainland.

Japanese authoritie­s have so far tested 273 people aboard the

Diamond Princess, which was quarantine­d after a former passenger, who disembarke­d in Hong Kong last month, was diagnosed with the virus.

“The results of the remaining 171 tests came out and 41 tested positive,” Health Minister Katsunobu Kato told reporters.

“Today they will be sent to hospitals in several prefecture­s, and we are now preparing for that.” The newly diagnosed include 21 Japanese, as well as Americans, Canadians,

Australian­s, an Argentine and a Briton.

There were more than 3,700 passengers and crew on the ship when it arrived off Japan’s coast on Monday evening. It docked in Yokohama on Thursday to resupply for a quarantine that could last until February 19.

Twenty people who were earlier diagnosed with the virus have already been removed from the vessel, including one in serious condition, a health ministry official said, without providing further details.

Testing was initially carried out on those who displayed symptoms or had come into close contact with the former passenger diagnosed with the virus.

But Kato suggested testing would now be expanded to those

“who are susceptibl­e to illness, including elderly people and those with other ailments, as well as those who had close contact with the people newly diagnosed with the virus.”

There were no immediate details on how many people would meet those criteria or when the testing might take place.

Japan has already reported at least 25 cases of coronaviru­s aside from the infections aboard the ship, and evacuated hundreds of citizens from Wuhan, the Chinese city where the virus emerged, including on a fourth flight Friday.

Passengers on the ship have been asked to stay inside their cabins to prevent new infections, and have expressed confusion and frustratio­n about a quarantine expected to last until February 19.

American lawyer Matt Smith, 57, and his wife Katherine, are among the luckier passengers, in a suite with their own balcony. But he told the Agence FrancePres­se that the 14- day quarantine was a “hard pill to swallow.” “My thought is, the greater number they diagnose on the ship, the greater chance they’re going to find some reason to extend the quarantine,” he added.

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