Bangkok Post

China closes cities:

Respirator­y disease sparks global panic

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BEIJING: China locked down two major cities in a province at the centre of a deadly virus outbreak yesterday, banning planes and trains from leaving in an unpreceden­ted move aimed at containing the disease which has already spread to other countries.

The respirator­y virus has claimed 17 lives since emerging from a seafood and animal market in Wuhan, infected hundreds of other people nationwide and been detected as far away as the United States.

Residents in Wuhan, a major port city in central Hubei province with a population of 11 million people, were told yesterday not to leave “without a special reason”, and the order was backed by a transport shutdown.

Trains and planes out of Wuhan were indefinite­ly suspended, tollways on roads out the city were closed, leading to fear and panic for those who were trapped.

Hours later, authoritie­s in neighbouri­ng Huanggang announced that public transport and train services would be suspended at midnight, while people were told to not leave the city of 7.5 million.

All of Huanggang’s cinemas, internet cafes, and the central market will close.

A third city, 1.1 million-population Ezhou, announced the train station had been temporaril­y closed earlier in the day.

“We are feeling as though it is the end of the world,” said one Wuhan resident on China’s Twitter-like Weibo platform, voicing concerns about shortages of food and disinfecta­nt.

“We really need everyone’s help.” Another described being on the “verge of tears” when the de facto quarantine was announced, with the misery compounded by it coming on the eve of the Lunar New Year holiday.

Wuhan’s train station and airport, which should have been packed with people coming travelling for holiday family reunions, were almost empty except for workers on Thursday afternoon.

Few people were seen in the streets of the city and all were wearing masks. Taxis in Wuhan tripled their fares, a driver said.

“It’s very dangerous to be outside at this moment but we need to earn money,” the driver told AFP.

More than 570 people have been infected with the virus across China — with most cases found in Wuhan, where a seafood market that illegally sold wild animals has been identified as the epicentre of the outbreak.

The coronaviru­s has caused alarm because of its similarity to Sars (Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome), which killed nearly 650 people across mainland China and Hong Kong in 2002-2003.

The first case of the new virus was confirmed on December 31, and it has since been detected in Japan, Hong Kong, Macau, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand and the United States.

The 17 people who died in China were aged from 48 to 89, and had preexistin­g health conditions, Chinese health authoritie­s said yesterday.

The World Health Organisati­on on Wednesday delayed a decision on whether to declare a global health emergency — a rare instrument used only for the worst outbreaks.

The emergency committee was to meet again yesterday, after its chair, Didier Houssin, said experts were split over declaring a public health emergency.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said “more informatio­n” was needed but he also praised China’s “very, very strong measures” that will help control the epidemic and “minimise the chances of this outbreak spreading internatio­nally”.

With hundreds of millions of people travelling across China this week for the Lunar New Year holiday, the National Health Commission announced measures to curb the disease nationwide — including sterilisat­ion and ventilatio­n at airports and bus stations.

Animals are suspected to be the primary source of the outbreak, with Chinese health officials saying the virus originated from the market where wild animals were illegally sold.

 ?? AFP ?? A woman holds a child wearing a facemask as they queue at the West Kowloon rail station in Hong Kong, China yesterday.
AFP A woman holds a child wearing a facemask as they queue at the West Kowloon rail station in Hong Kong, China yesterday.

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