The Herald

No new coronaviru­s deaths in China for first time since January

All 32 new cases reported yesterday involve people returning from overseas, reports Martha Vaughan

- Beijing

CHINA said it has recorded no deaths from the coronaviru­s in the last 24 hours.

The country gave rise to the global pandemic and has suffered 3,331 deaths and 81,740 cases of Covid-19.

Authoritie­s said in their daily update yesterday that there were 32 new cases, all of which were from people who had returned to China from overseas.

Another 12 suspected cases – also all imported – were being kept under observatio­n, along with an additional 30 asymptomat­ic cases.

China now has 1,242 confirmed cases in treatment and 1,033 asymptomat­ic cases under isolation and monitoring.

Numbers of daily new deaths have been hovering in the single digits for weeks, hitting just one on several occasions.

Yesterday marked the first day of no deaths since January when China first started publishing figures. Beijing continues to take strong measures in a bid to keep the virus at bay.

China and Russia have closed their land border and river port near Vladivosto­k following the discovery of 59 confirmed cases of new Covid-19 among Chinese citizens returning home via the crossing.

All Chinese citizens who arrive in the border region aboard Russian domestic flights will be forced to undergo a 14-day quarantine, according to a notice posted on the website of the Chinese consulate in Vladivosto­k.

Internatio­nal flights have been reduced with both Chinese and foreign airlines only allowed to operate one internatio­nal flight a week.

Flights must not be more than

75 per cent full.

Only those holding special passes will then be permitted to travel on the Russian side of the border area, the notice said.

It was not clear whether pass holders would be able to cross into China.

In addition, all guesthouse­s, nursing homes, on the Russian side of the border area will also be closed to outsiders through June 1, the notice said.“here, the consulate general strongly recommends and reminds relevant Chinese citizens to fully take into considerat­ion the above situation” and not seek to return to China through the border crossing, the notice said.

Hong Kong will continue to be closed to foreigners, extending the initial two-week entry restrictio­ns on non-residents indefinite­ly.

Non-residents coming from overseas to Hong Kong by plane will be denied entry, and those coming from mainland China, Macao and

Taiwan will be barred from entering if they have been overseas in the past 14 days.

The move to continue shutting out foreigners was announced by the government, and comes as the number of Covid-19 cases in Hong Kong rose to 915.

Meanwhile, more than 160 current and former global leaders are urging the world’s 20 major industrial­ised nations to approve $8 billion (£6.5bn) in emergency global health funding to hasten the search for a vaccine, cure and treatment for Covid-19 and prevent a second wave of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In an open letter to government­s of the Group of 20 nations, the leaders, ministers, top executives and

China and Russia have closed their land border and river port near Vladivosto­k following the discovery of 59 confirmed cases of the new Covid-19

scientists also called for $35bn (£285 bn) to support countries with weaker health systems and especially vulnerable population­s, and at least $150bn (£120bn) for developing countries to fight the medical and economic crisis.

They also urged the internatio­nal community to waive this year’s debt repayments from poorer countries, including $44bn (£36bn) due from Africa.

While a communique from the G20 leaders’ summit on March 26 recognised the gravity and urgency of the health and economic crisis sparked by the pandemic, the letter said “we now require urgent specific measures that can be agreed on with speed and at scale”.

The group called for a global pledging conference, coordinate­d by a G20 task force, to commit resources to meet the emergency needs to tackle the coronaviru­s.

The 165 signatorie­s included former UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon, 92 former presidents and prime ministers, the current prime ministers of Ethiopia and Bangladesh, Sierra Leone’s president, philanthro­pist George Soros, former Irish president Mary Robinson who chairs

The Elders, and Graca Machel, the group’s deputy chair.

 ??  ?? Members of the public continue to wear protective masks amid the Beijing spring. Officially the number of coronaviru­s cases in China is dwindling, ever since the government imposed sweeping measures to keep the disease from spreading
Members of the public continue to wear protective masks amid the Beijing spring. Officially the number of coronaviru­s cases in China is dwindling, ever since the government imposed sweeping measures to keep the disease from spreading
 ??  ?? A medical worker takes a break at a special coronaviru­s intake area at Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, NYC
A medical worker takes a break at a special coronaviru­s intake area at Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, NYC
 ??  ?? Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe has declared a state of emergency in the country due to the spread of Covid-19
Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe has declared a state of emergency in the country due to the spread of Covid-19

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