The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

New Beijing outbreak raises fears for rest of world

- By Ken Moritsugu, David Rising and Rod Mcguirk

BEIJING » China raised its emergency warning to its second-highest level and canceled more than 60% of the flights to Beijing on Wednesday amid a new coronaviru­s outbreak in the capital. It was a sharp pullback for the nation that declared victory over COVID-19 in March and a message to the rest of the world about how tenacious the virus really is.

New infections spiked in India, Iran and U.S. states including Florida, Texas and Arizona, as authoritie­s struggled to balance restarting economic activity without accelerati­ng the pandemic.

European nations, which embarked on wide-scale reopenings this week, looked on with trepidatio­n as the Americas struggled to contain the first wave of the pandemic and Asian nations like China and South Korea reported new outbreaks.

Chinese officials described the situation in Beijing as “extremely grave.”

“This has truly rung an alarm bell for us,” Party Secretary Cai Qi told a meeting of Beijing’s Communist Party Standing Committee.

After a push that began June 14, the city expects to have tested 700,000 people by the end of the day, said Zhang Qiang, a Beijing party official. About half of them were workers from the city’s food markets, nearby residents and close contacts.

The party’s Global Times said 1,255 flights to and from the capital’s two major airports were scrapped by Wednesday morning, about two-thirds of those scheduled.

Since the virus emerged in China late last year and spread worldwide, there have been more than 8.1 million confirmed cases and at least 443,000 deaths, according to a tally kept by Johns Hopkins University. Experts say the true toll is much higher, due to the many who died without being tested and other factors. now to be alarmed,” Abbott said.

Texas began aggressive­ly reopening its economy May 1. Abbott noted that Texans may have become lax in wearing masks or practicing social distancing and urged people to stay home as much as possible.

Canada and the U.S. extended to July 21 a deal to keep their border closed to nonessenti­al travel, with many Canadians fearing cases arriving from the U.S.

As the U.S. struggles with the first wave of the virus, other countries where it was widely thought to be under control faced disturbing developmen­ts.

In South Korea, authoritie­s reported 43 new cases amid increased public activity. Authoritie­s said 25 of them came from around Seoul, where hundreds of infections have been linked to nightclubs, church gatherings, e-commerce workers and door-to-door salespeopl­e. Twelve of the new cases came from internatio­nal arrivals.

 ?? NG HAN GUAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A worker cleans the glass door to a health center for COVID-19testing in Beijing on Wednesday.
NG HAN GUAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A worker cleans the glass door to a health center for COVID-19testing in Beijing on Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States