China’s Hubei province, the epicentre of a coronavirus epidemic, reported 56 new deaths from the outbreak yesterday, bringing the total to 350, the local health commission said today.
The province has also confirmed 2,103 new cases of infection on Feb. 2, with the total reaching 11,177 by the end of the day.
According to reports in AFP, the total death toll is now 350 with an estimated 16,400 people infected. This surpasses the 349 victims who succumbed to the SARS virus in 2003.
The first death from the coronavirus outside of China was reported yesterday and the Beijing government took steps to shore up an economy hit by travel curbs and business shut-downs because of the epidemic.
A 44-year-old Chinese man from the city of Wuhan in Hubei province, the epicentre of the epidemic, travelled to the Philippines and died there on Saturday, the Philippines’ Department of Health said.
The vice-governor of China’s Hubei province, Xiao Juhua, said the virus outbreak was still “severe and complicated”.
At least another 171 cases have been reported in more than two dozen other countries and regions, including the United States, Japan, Thailand, Hong Kong and Britain.
Beijing is facing mounting isolation as countries introduce travel restrictions, airlines suspend flights and governments evacuate their citizens, risking worsening a slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy.
China’s central bank said it would inject a hefty 1.2 trillion yuan (RM711.59 billion) worth of liquidity into the markets via reverse repo operations today as the country prepares to reopen its stock markets after an extended Lunar New Year holiday.
The government also said it would help firms that produce vital goods resume work as soon as possible, state broadcaster CCTV reported, citing a meeting chaired by Chinese Premier Li Keqiang (below).
Hong Kong Financial Secretary Paul Chan said the risk of further contraction in the region’s economy, which was buffeted by anti-government protests last year, has increased due to the epidemic.
Catering, retail, tourism and consumer sectors, which have been hit in the last six months, would “fall into a deeper winter”, Chan said.
In Beijing, some malls stayed open during the extended holiday but staff wearing surgical masks stood outside shops offering to take customers’ temperatures. Many other stores and cafes in the capital and other cities chose to close.
“We can’t work and have no income. I would rather work than stay at home and do nothing,” said 32-year-old restaurant worker Wu Caixia in Beijing.
Some meal deliveries in Shanghai and Beijing have started to arrive with a note showing the temperatures of the workers that prepared, packaged and delivered the food - to reassure customers they are not sick - according to residents and social media postings.
China Evergrande Group, the nation’s third-largest property developer, said in an internal note it would extend its Lunar New Year holiday to Feb 16, and suspend construction work at all of its 1,246 sites until Feb 20.
Opec and non-Opec’s Joint Technical Committee (JTC) has scheduled a meeting for tomorrow and Wednesday in Vienna to assess the impact of the virus on oil demand, OPEC+ sources told Reuters.
Travel bans, evacuations
Authorities have effectively quarantined Wuhan, sealing off roads and shutting down public transport.
The city - where the virus is thought to have emerged late last year in a market illegally trading wildlife - was about to open two new hospitals for virus patients, state broadcaster CCTV and Xinhua news agency reported. One of the facilities was built in eight days.
The virus has disrupted a string of sporting events across China. Organisers of the all-electric Formula E series said yesterday that they had abandoned plans for a race in the city of Sanya next month.
The Chinese data on the numbers of infections and deaths suggests the new coronavirus is less deadly than the 2002-03 outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), which killed nearly 800 people of the some 8,000 it infected, although such numbers can evolve rapidly.
The World Health Organization has declared the outbreak a public health emergency of international concern, but said global trade and travel restrictions are not needed.
However, a string of countries has ramped up border controls. Singapore and the United States last Friday announced measures to ban foreign nationals who have recently been to China from entering their territories, and Australia followed suit the next day.
Russia will start evacuating Russian citizens on Monday and Tuesday, Interfax and TASS news agencies reported.
The Philippines expanded its travel ban to include all foreigners coming from China, widening an earlier restriction that covered only those from Hubei province. Indonesia also barred visitors who have been in China for 14 days.
More than 100 Germans and family members landed in Frankfurt on Saturday after being evacuated from Wuhan. Two of them had the virus, adding to the eight cases in Germany already in quarantine.
About 250 Indonesians were also evacuated from Hubei.
Japan plans to send another chartered plane, mid-week or later, to bring back Japanese nationals who are still in Hubei, it’s Foreign Ministry said yesterday.
Japan has barred foreigners who have been in Hubei from entering the country. South Korea will impose a similar entry ban from Tuesday, Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun said.
In Washington, national security adviser Robert O’Brien said the United States has offered to send US medical and other health professionals but Beijing had not yet accepted.
- Reuters