The Herald (South Africa)

Ten dead, 23 missing after quarantine hotel collapses

- Josh Horwitz, Huizhong Wu and Kevin Yao

Ten people have died and 23 remain trapped after the collapse of a hotel used to quarantine people under observatio­n for the coronaviru­s in the Chinese city of Quanzhou, authoritie­s said yesterday.

More than 70 people were believed to have been initially trapped in the seven-storey building, which collapsed on Saturday evening.

By 4pm yesterday, authoritie­s had retrieved 48 individual­s from the site of the collapse, with 38 of them sent to hospitals, the ministry of emergency management said.

Pictures from the site showed rescue workers clad in hard hats, goggles and face masks carrying injured people away to waiting medical staff in white overalls and surgical masks.

A rescue force of over 1,000 people, including firefighte­rs, police forces, and other emergency responders, arrived at the site on Saturday night, authoritie­s told a media conference organised by the Quanzhou government on Sunday.

Of the 71 people inside the hotel at the time of the collapse, 58 had been under quarantine, they said. According to state media outlet Xinhua, the owner of the building, a man surnamed Yang, has been summoned by police.

The building’s first floor had been under renovation at the time of the collapse, the news agency said.

News of the collapse comes as the spread of Covid-19 continues to slow in China.

According to data from China’s National Health Commission (NHC), cases fell by about a half on Saturday from the previous day.

The agency confirmed 44 new cases of the Covid-19 disease caused by the new coronaviru­s as at the end of Saturday, a decline from 99 the previous day.

Chinese cities are gradually relaxing quarantine measures put in place more than a month ago, while authoritie­s keep a close watch on the virus’s spread overseas.

Of the 44 new confirmed cases, 41 were discovered in Wuhan, the origin of the virus’s outbreak and its hotbed.

The remaining three were cases imported from outside mainland China.

This marks the second consecutiv­e day in which all of China’s newly confirmed cases outside the city of Wuhan originated from overseas. The three cases bring China’s total imported case count to 63.

According to the Beijing Municipal Health Commission, two of the cases found in Beijing originated in Italy and Spain.

As the virus slows its spread in Wuhan, authoritie­s have reacted by closing hospitals built specifical­ly to house its patients.

After the first such closure last week, CCTV reported on Sunday that operations at a second hospital had been suspended, with its 25 remaining patients now discharged and declared cured.

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