Sentinel & Enterprise

Chinese city stops outbound flights, trains

- By Ken Moritsugu

A Chinese city of more than 11 million people planned to shut down outbound flights and trains Thursday as the world’s most populous country battled the spread of a new virus that has sickened hundreds of people and killed 17, state media reported.

Everyone in the city of Wuhan was to be restricted to some degree. The state-owned People’s Daily newspaper said no one would be allowed to leave. The official Xinhua News Agency said no one would be permitted to leave without a specific reason.

Train stations and the airport were to shut down at 10 a.m. Buses, subways, ferries and long-distance shuttle buses would also be temporaril­y closed.

Most of the cases are in Wuhan and surroundin­g Hubei province, but dozens of infections have popped up this week around the country as millions travel for the Lunar New Year, one of the world’s largest annual migrations of people. A handful of infected people who came from Wuhan have also been found overseas.

In Geneva, the World Health Organizati­on put off deciding whether to declare the outbreak a global health emergency and asked an expert committee to continue meeting for a second day Thursday.

“We need more informatio­n,” WHO DirectorGe­neral Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said.

WHO defines a global emergency as an “extraordin­ary event” that constitute­s a risk to other countries and requires a coordinate­d internatio­nal response.

When asked about Wuhan’s public transport shutdown, WHO chief Tedros said authoritie­s were likely acting to prevent transmissi­on and mass gatherings.

“We cannot say they have done something unusual,” he said.

The number of new cases has risen sharply in China, the center of the outbreak. The 17 deaths were all in Hubei province, where the outbreak emerged in the provincial capital of Wuhan late last month. Wuhan authoritie­s said the province has confirmed 444 cases, which would bring the national total to more than 500.

The illness comes from a newly identified type of coronaviru­s, a family of viruses that can cause the common cold as well as more serious illnesses, such as the SARS outbreak that spread from China to more than a dozen countries in 2002-2003 and killed about 800 people. Some experts have drawn parallels between the new coronaviru­s and Middle Eastern respirator­y syndrome, another coronaviru­s that does not spread easily among humans and is thought to be carried by camels.

“There has already been human-to-human transmissi­on and infection of medical workers,” Li Bin, deputy director of the National Health Commission, said at a news conference Wednesday. “Evidence has shown that the disease has been transmitte­d through the respirator­y tract, and there is the possibilit­y of viral mutation.”

A tweet from WHO’s Asia office this week raised the possibilit­y that the epidemic is spreading more easily and may no longer require an animal source to spark infections, as officials initially reported.

Authoritie­s in Thailand on Wednesday confirmed four cases — a Thai national and three Chinese visitors. Japan, South Korea, the United States, Taiwan and Macao, a former Portuguese colony that is a semi-autonomous Chinese city, have all reported one case each. All of the illnesses were of people from Wuhan or who recently traveled there. “The situation is under control here,” Thai Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirak­ul told reporters, saying there are no reports of the infection spreading to others. “We checked all of them: taxi drivers, people who wheeled the wheelchair­s for the patients, doctors and nurses who worked around them.”

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