China inspects food imports over virus fears
BEIJING AFP, 19 JUNE, 2020China has launched a nationwide campaign to inspect food imports after a new coronavirus outbreak emerged at a wholesale market in Beijing, with experts suggesting it shares similarities to European strains.
Authorities have been testing hundreds of thousands of people for the contagion while neighbourhoods have been locked down and schools closed to prevent a second wave of the epidemic that China had largely brought under control.
Another 25 cases were confirmed in Beijing on Friday, taking the total number of infections since last week to 183.
Chinese authorities shared the genome data of the latest outbreak with the World Health Organization and international scientific community on Thursday.
Initial findings suggest it “came from Europe”, but differs from what is currently spreading there, said Zhang Yong of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention.
“It is older than the virus currently circulating in Europe,” Zhang said in a report published by the Communist Party’s anticorruption watchdog on Friday.
Zhang raised the possibility of the virus lurking in imported frozen food or in the wholesale market itself, resulting in similarities to older strains.
The virus was detected on chopping boards used to handle imported salmon at the market, and Beijing officials on Friday advised citizens to dispose of frozen seafood and bean products bought from Xinfadi.
Xinfadi supplies more than 70 percent of Beijing’s fresh produce and has been temporarily closed due to the cluster.
The virus is believed to have first appeared at a market that sold live animals in the central city of Wuhan.
Song Yueqian, an official at the General Administration of Customs, said the agency had launched a nationwide drive to inspect all fresh products kept in cold temperatures coming “high-risk countries”.