Trump downplays epidemic fears as virus spreads around world
Published: 02:02 PM,Feb 27,2020 | EDITED : 03:04 AM,Apr 28,2024
Infections outside China - Trump said the US was considering travel restrictions on Italy and South Korea, which has almost 1,600 cases, the highest number outside China. The US already restricts arrivals from China. Even China -- which sealed off an entire province and shut down cities across the country to contain the virus -- is now worried about importing cases and ordered people arriving in Beijing from virus-hit countries to go into 14-day self-quarantine. The virus is believed to have originated in a market in the central Chinese city of Wuhan, where it is suspected of having hopped from animal to human before spreading across the country and proliferating abroad. China reported 29 more deaths Thursday -- its lowest daily tally since January -- and 433 new cases, most of them in hard-hit Hubei province and well below massive increases from just a week ago. Zhong Nanshan, a respected scientist who advises the government, said the country would have had much fewer cases if action had been taken as early as December -- a rare critique from a prominent insider. Hubei officials have been accused of initially covering up the outbreak and silencing a whistleblowing doctor who later died from the disease. Nevertheless, Zhong said he expected China to bring the epidemic under control by late April. But other countries have now become sources of concern. In Latin America's first case, the 61-year-old patient had travelled to Italy's Lombardy region. In Romania, a man was infected after coming in contact with a visiting Italian. Countries from Denmark to Spain and Algeria have also reported infections linked to Italy. The first cases in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Estonia involved people who had been in Iran. Iran has emerged as a major hotspot in the region, where 22 people have succumbed to the disease -- the biggest death toll outside China. The Islamic Republic imposed domestic travel restrictions for people with confirmed or suspected cases and slapped curbs on visits to major Muslim pilgrimage sites, but it said it was not quarantining cities.
'No panic' - Fears over the epidemic's spread have rocked global markets in recent days, while sports matches and festivals across Europe have been cancelled. The US and South Korea's militaries on Thursday postponed forthcoming joint exercises because of the outbreak. A Six Nations rugby match between Italy and Ireland in Dublin on March 7 has been called off, and next month's alpine skiing World Cup Finals in Italy will be held without fans on the slopes. The WHO has urged countries to prepare for a potential pandemic, though it stopped short of declaring one. Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, however, said his government was 'effectively operating now on the basis that there is one -- a pandemic'. But EU Health Commissioner Stella Kyriakides appealed for calm. AFP