Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

City builds quarantine center as cases surge

Spike occurs before Lunar New Year rush

- By Emily Wang Fujiya

BEIJING — A city in northern China is building a 3,000-unit quarantine facility to deal with an expected overflow of patients as COVID-19 cases rise ahead of the annual Lunar New Year travel rush.

State media on Friday showed crews leveling earth, pouring concrete and assembling prefabrica­ted rooms in farmland in an outlying part of Shijiazhua­ng, the provincial capital of Hebei province, which has seen the bulk of the new cases.

That recalled scenes from early last year, when China rapidly built field hospitals and turned gymnasiums into isolation centers to cope with a then-spiraling outbreak in Wuhan, where the virus was first detected in late 2019.

The spike in northern China comes as a World Health Organizati­on team prepares to collect data on the origin of the pandemic in Wuhan, which lies to the south. The internatio­nal team, most of which arrived Thursday, must undergo two weeks of quarantine before it can start field visits.

Two of the 15 members were held up in Singapore over their health status. One, a British national, was approved for travel Friday after testing negative for the coronaviru­s, while the second, a Sudanese citizen

from Qatar, again tested positive, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said.

China has largely contained domestic spread of the virus, but the recent spike has raised concern because of the proximity to the capital, Beijing, and the impending rush of people planning to travel large distances to rejoin their families for the Lunar New Year, the country’s most important traditiona­l festival.

The National Health Commission said Friday that 1,001 patients were

under care for the disease, 26 in serious condition. It said 144 new cases were recorded over the past 24 hours. Hebei accounted for 90 of the new cases, while Heilongjia­ng province farther north reported 43.

Local transmissi­ons also occurred in the southern Guangxi region and the northern province of Shaanxi, illustrati­ng the virus’s ability to move through the country of 1.4 billion people despite quarantine­s, travel restrictio­ns and electronic monitoring.

China has reported 87,988 confirmed cases with 4,635 deaths.

Shijiazhua­ng has been placed under virtual lockdown, with the Hebei cities of Xingtai and Langfang, parts of Beijing and other cities in the northeast. That has cut off travel routes, while more than 20 million people have been told to stay home for the coming days.

China is pushing ahead with inoculatio­ns using Chinese-developed vaccines, with more than 9 million people already vaccinated

and plans for 50 million to have shots by the middle of next month.

About 4,000 doses are delivered daily to the Chaoyang Planning Art Museum, one of more than 240 sites across Beijing where the first of two doses was being given Friday to high-risk groups, including medical, delivery and transporta­tion workers.

The vaccine, produced by a Beijing subsidiary of state-owned Sinopharm, is the first approved for general use in China.

Former World Health Organizati­on official Keiji Fukuda, who is not part of the team in Wuhan, cautioned against expectatio­ns of any breakthrou­ghs from the visit, saying that it may take years before any firm conclusion­s can be made on the virus’s origin.

“China is going to want to come out avoiding blame, perhaps shifting the narrative. They want to come across as being competent and transparen­t,” he said in a video interview from Hong Kong.

 ?? Mark Schiefelbe­in The Associated Press ?? A medical worker gives a coronaviru­s shot to a patient on Friday at a vaccinatio­n facility in Beijing. A province near China’s capital has suffered a recent spike in virus cases.
Mark Schiefelbe­in The Associated Press A medical worker gives a coronaviru­s shot to a patient on Friday at a vaccinatio­n facility in Beijing. A province near China’s capital has suffered a recent spike in virus cases.

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