But there were no new domestic transmissions for the first day since
the virus took hold late last year in Wuhan, capital of the central
province of Hubei.
China's recent efforts to fight the epidemic have increasingly
focused on inbound travellers, as the virus spread rapidly
worldwide, raising the prospect of a second wave of infections from
overseas.
"A single spark can start a prairie fire," state-backed China Daily
wrote in an editorial.
On Wednesday, Beijing recorded 21 new infections from abroad, mostly
in travellers from Britain and Spain, for the bulk of the mainland's
34 new imported cases.
Since last week, the capital's airport has set aside a special zone
for international flights, with health checks required for all
disembarking passengers. Non-transit travellers are sent to
designated sites for a compulsory 14-day quarantine.
Beijing has halted self-quarantine for overseas arrivals, even if
the person has a place to stay alone in isolation, which had been
allowed earlier, state media said on Thursday.
Some international flights to Beijing operated by Chinese carriers
will be diverted to nearby cities such as Tianjin, Shijiazhuang,
Taiyuan and Hohhot, financial news outlet Caixin said on Wednesday,
citing unidentified sources.
Such reports suggest the capital may have reached its limit in
screening incoming visitors, the China Daily editorial said.
The southern province of Guangdong reported nine new imported cases,
while Shanghai saw two new infections from overseas, taking the
tally of imported cases to 189.
From Thursday, those entering Guangdong after visiting countries
with high infection rates will be quarantined for 14 days at home or
at a centralized medical centre, the official Xinhua news agency
said.
The nations include Britain, Denmark, Malaysia, the Netherlands,
Thailand, and the United States, apart from hard-hit Iran, Italy,
and South Korea.
The far western region of Xinjiang adopted similar measures, Xinhua
added.
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China's eastern provinces of Shandong and Anhui, its southwestern city of
Chongqing and Wuhan earlier said they would require all overseas arrivals to
spend 14 days in quarantine in designated locations or homes.
Shanghai also widened quarantine measures this week to include recent visitors
to Austria, Belgium, Britain, Denmark, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and
Switzerland.
NO NEW INFECTIONS IN WUHAN
The outbreak epicentre of Wuhan reported no new infections for the first time,
the National Health Commission said.
If no new case is reported for a gap of 14 consecutive days after the last, the
lockdown could gradually be lifted, China Daily said, citing an epidemiologist.
"We expect new cases will cease to appear in mid or late March," said Li Lanjuan,
director of China's State Key Laboratory for Diagnosis and Treatment of
Infectious Diseases.
Wuhan, locked down since Jan. 23, remains Hubei's only city still designated
"high-risk" and subject to strict travel bans.
It eased quarantine rules slightly, allowing people to walk in their compounds,
rather than staying confined to living quarters, state-run CCTV said on
Thursday.
No new infections have been reported for 14 days in the rest of Hubei, where
authorities said on Thursday they would allow entry on certain conditions to
people from other provinces, a post on a government site showed.
China tentatively plans to hold late in April or early in May its annual
gathering of parliament, two people involved in preparations told Reuters, after
a delay, caused by the outbreak, from an initial date of early March.
Total infections in mainland China stood at 80,928, with the tally of deaths at
3,245 by Wednesday, up eight from a day before. Wuhan accounted for six of the
eight new deaths in Hubei.
(Reporting by Ryan Woo, Huizhong Wu, Stella Qiu, Sophie Yu, Brenda Goh, Emily
Chow and Yawen Chen; Writing by Engen Tham; Editing by Lincoln Feast and
Clarence Fernandez)
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