China's new imported coronavirus cases at record; no domestic transfers
for second day
Send a link to a friend
[March 20, 2020]
BEIJING/ SHANGHAI (Reuters) -
China's imported coronavirus cases have risen to a record 228, data
showed on Friday, as infected travellers spread to ever more provinces,
adding pressure on authorities to toughen entry rules and health
protocols.
For a second day in a row, China found no domestically transmitted cases
of the virus that emerged in its central province of Hubei late last
year, according to new daily figures registered on Thursday.
Fears of a second wave of infections are growing just as China brings
its epidemic under control, with the spread of the virus in Europe and
North America spurring a rush homewards by Chinese expatriates, many of
them students.
"The number of imported cases in China has further increased, and so the
pressure to be on guard has also increased," Wang Bin, an official of
the National Health Commission, told a news conference in Beijing on
Friday.
Mainland China had 39 new imported infections on Thursday, the
commission said. Fourteen of these were in the southern province of
Guangdong, eight in the commercial hub of Shanghai and six in the
capital, Beijing, it said in a statement.
The main entrypoints for infected travellers have been key transport
hubs such as Beijing, Shanghai and Guangdong, including the city of
Shenzhen, near Hong Kong.
A smattering of imported cases were also reported in the city of Tianjin
and the provinces of Liaoning, Heilongjiang, Shandong and Gansu in the
north, as well as in the provinces of Zhejiang, Fujian, Sichuan, and the
region of Guangxi further south, taking China's total imported
infections to 228.
The commission did not say where the cases were believed to have
originated, but provincial authorities said some of the travellers had
been in Britain, Spain and the United States.
"Everyone is being very vigilant about those coming back from abroad. We
must absolutely not let our guard down," Cao, a Beijing resident who
gave only his surname, told Reuters.
"We cannot relax this vigilance so much that we see a rebound."
In Gansu, five officials were punished for picking up travellers
returning from overseas without permission, including two who have
tested positive, the official Xinhua news agency said.
[to top of second column]
|
March 17, 2020 picture of staff in protective suits accompanying a
passenger outside a centralized facility for screening and
registration near the Beijing Capital International Airport in
Beijing as the country tries to contain imported cases of the
coronavirus. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
As concern grows over infected arrivals from overseas, the foreign
ministers of China, Japan and South Korea held a video conference on
Friday to discuss cooperation to rein in the pandemic.
NO SYMPTOMS
The new imported case in Tianjin, a city of 11 million, was a
23-year-old woman studying in London who came home via Zurich, Tokyo
and Beijing, Xinhua said.
The northeastern city of Shenyang said its first imported case was a
traveller arriving from London via Seoul, who displayed no fever or
respiratory tract symptoms at the airport on March 16.
Many outbreaks overseas were caused by travellers from China who
were pre-symptomatic and so had not been screened or isolated, the
Yale School of Public Health said in a study.
China has long recommended self-isolation by returning travellers,
but authorities in some regions now enforce 14 days in quarantine in
a medical facility for people returning from any of 24 badly-hit
nations, to limit the risk of spread by those not yet showing
symptoms.
For a second day, there were no new cases in the outbreak epicentre
of Wuhan, the capital of Hubei, the National Health Commission said.
Mainland China's tally of infections stands at 80,967, with the
death toll at 3,248 by Thursday, an increase of three from the
previous day.
Globally, 245,000 people have been infected and more than 10,000
have died.
(Reporting by Ryan Woo, Gao Liangping, Brenda Goh, David Stanway,
Thomas Suen, Zhang Yan, and Gabriel Crossley; Editing by Stephen
Coates and Clarence Fernandez)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|