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China puts multiple cities on lockdown as global alarm mounts over virus spread

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BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Deaths from China’s new flu-like virus rose to 17 on Wednesday, with more than 540 cases confirmed, leading the city at the center of the outbreak to close transportation networks and urge citizens not to leave as fears rose of the contagion spreading.

The previously unknown coronavirus strain is believed to have emerged from illegally traded wildlife at an animal market in the central city of Wuhan. Cases have been detected as far away as the United States.

Contrasting with its secrecy over the 2002-03 Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), which killed nearly 800 people, China’s communist government has this time given regular updates to try to avoid panic as millions travel for the Lunar New Year.

RELATED COVERAGE

After a meeting at its Geneva headquarters on Wednesday, the World Health Organization (WHO) said it would decide on Thursday whether to declare the outbreak a global health emergency, which would step up the international response.

If it does so, it will be the sixth international public health emergency to be declared in the last decade.

“This is an evolving and complex situation,” said WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.


As it seeks to stop the spread of the virus, Wuhan’s local government said it would close all urban transport networks and suspend outgoing flights from the city as of 10 a.m. on Thursday (0200 GMT), state media reported, adding that the government said citizens should not leave the city unless there were special circumstances.

The measure was intended to “effectively cut off the transmission of the virus, resolutely curb the spread of the epidemic, and ensure the health and safety of the people,” state media cited Wuhan’s virus task-force as saying.

Wuhan’s move was praised by Ghebreyesus as a “very strong” measure that could minimize the risk of contagion.

“If Wuhan is taking such drastic measures, we must assume widespread community transmission in this central China megacity & transport hub,” Lawrence Gostin, a public health expert at Georgetown University Law School in Washington, wrote in a tweet.



Director-General of World Health Organization (WHO) Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus takes part in a news conference after a meeting of the International Health Regulations (IHR) Emergency Committee for Pneumonia due to the Novel Coronavirus 2019-nCoV in Geneva, Switzerland, January 22, 2020. Christopher Black/WHO/Handout via REUTERS


With more than 11 million people, Wuhan is central China’s main industrial and commercial center, home to the country’s largest inland port and gateway to its Three Gorges hydroelectric dam.

The latest death toll in Hubei province, of which Wuhan is the capital, rose to 17 by midday on Wednesday, state television quoted the provincial government as saying.

However, the virus has already spread beyond the city to population centers including Beijing, Shanghai, Macau and Hong Kong.

The official China Daily newspaper said 544 cases had now been confirmed in the country. Thailand has confirmed four cases, while the United States, Taiwan, South Korea and Japan have each reported one.

Britain advised its citizens against all but essential travel to Wuhan.

Many Chinese were canceling trips, buying face masks, avoiding public places such as cinemas and shopping centers, and even turning to an online plague simulation game as a way to cope.

“The best way to conquer fear is to confront fear,” said one commentator on China’s Twitter-like Weibo.


Slideshow (16 Images)

RESPIRATORY THREAT
China’s National Health Commission Vice Minister Li Bin said the virus, which can cause pneumonia and has no effective vaccine, was being spread via breathing. Symptoms include fever, coughing and difficulty breathing.

“I feel fearful, because there’s no cure for the virus,” said Fu Ning, a 36-year-old woman in Beijing. “You have to rely on your immunity if you get an infection. It sounds very scary.”

The WHO’s head of emergencies program, Mike Ryan, said the priority was to find the roots of how the virus was passing between people.

Fears of a pandemic initially spooked markets but they regained their footing on Wednesday, with investors citing the robust response from authorities as reassuring.


But companies with operations in China, from Foxconn (2317.TW) to Huawei Technologies [HWT.UL] and HSBC Holdings (HSBA.L), warned staff to avoid Wuhan and handed out masks.

The European Center for Disease Control and Prevention (ECDC) said in a risk assessment that further global spread of the virus was likely. “The likelihood of case importation is highest in countries with the greatest volume of people traveling to and from Wuhan,” the ECDC’s director Andrea Ammon said in a statement.

Airports globally stepped up screening from China.

Russia strengthened its sanitary and quarantine controls, and Singapore and Saudi Arabia started screening all passengers from China.

The Chinese-ruled gambling hub of Macau confirmed its first case of pneumonia linked to the coronavirus and tightened body-temperature screening measures.

A first case emerged in Chinese-ruled Hong Kong, media reported, with the patient arriving via high-speed railway from the mainland, and Mexico was investigating a potential case.

North Korea banned foreign tourists, several foreign tour operators said. Some qualifying boxing matches for the 2020 Olympics set for Wuhan were canceled and women’s football qualifiers were shifted to Nanjing.

Reporting by Cate Cadell, Lusha Zhang, Yawen Chen and Jiang Xihao in Beijing, David Stanway in Shanghai, Anne Marie Roantree in Hong Kong, Ben Blanchard in Taipei, Josh Smith in Seoul, Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva, Kate Kelland in London, Alexandra Alper in Davos, Shreyashi Sanyal in Bangalore, Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Writing by Andrew Cawthorne, Timothy Heritage and Rosalba O'Brien; Editing by Nick Macfie, Cynthia Osterman and Jonathan Oatis


HJS1DO FMC34KAIA https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-alarm-mounts-over-virus-spread-idUSKBN1ZL07C





 
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Our incompetent government should immediately start screening the travelers from China.
 
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Wuhan is an important university city and is home to students from many countries around the world. It also has important cultural heritage and tourism values. One of the most important economic centers of Central China. Also, as far as I know, it is one of the Hub points in the trade of goods to Europe and the Middle East region. So this quarantine protocol also concerns a large number of foreigners.

I hope the Chinese government can start controlling this Coronavirus without repeating the same mistakes as in 2002 SARS-CoV .

Btw, some parts of China are actually very bad gastronomically. A legal regulation of the Chinese government is required, especially on rodents and canines. The world population now makes it impossible to sustain habits 100 years ago. No country is isolated in today's world. An outbreak from bat consumption in China can cost the life of a vegetarian on the other end of the Pacific. The concept of germ warfare is not a regional but a global threat and we need to be in solidarity together.
 
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Wuhan is an important university city and is home to students from many countries around the world. It also has important cultural heritage and tourism values. One of the most important economic centers of Central China. Also, as far as I know, it is one of the Hub points in the trade of goods to Europe and the Middle East region. So this quarantine protocol also concerns a large number of foreigners.

I hope the Chinese government can start controlling this Coronavirus without repeating the same mistakes as in 2002 SARS-CoV .

Btw, some parts of China are actually very bad gastronomically. A legal regulation of the Chinese government is required, especially on rodents and canines. The world population now makes it impossible to sustain habits 100 years ago. No country is isolated in today's world. An outbreak from bat consumption in China can cost the life of a vegetarian on the other end of the Pacific. The concept of germ warfare is not a regional but a global threat and we need to be in solidarity together.
I totally agree.
It should indeed ban these things.
 
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BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Deaths from China’s new flu-like virus rose to 17 on Wednesday, with more than 540 cases confirmed, leading the city at the center of the outbreak to close transportation networks and urge citizens not to leave as fears rose of the contagion spreading.

The previously unknown coronavirus strain is believed to have emerged from illegally traded wildlife at an animal market in the central city of Wuhan. Cases have been detected as far away as the United States.

Contrasting with its secrecy over the 2002-03 Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), which killed nearly 800 people, China’s communist government has this time given regular updates to try to avoid panic as millions travel for the Lunar New Year.

RELATED COVERAGE

After a meeting at its Geneva headquarters on Wednesday, the World Health Organization (WHO) said it would decide on Thursday whether to declare the outbreak a global health emergency, which would step up the international response.

If it does so, it will be the sixth international public health emergency to be declared in the last decade.

“This is an evolving and complex situation,” said WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.


As it seeks to stop the spread of the virus, Wuhan’s local government said it would close all urban transport networks and suspend outgoing flights from the city as of 10 a.m. on Thursday (0200 GMT), state media reported, adding that the government said citizens should not leave the city unless there were special circumstances.

The measure was intended to “effectively cut off the transmission of the virus, resolutely curb the spread of the epidemic, and ensure the health and safety of the people,” state media cited Wuhan’s virus task-force as saying.

Wuhan’s move was praised by Ghebreyesus as a “very strong” measure that could minimize the risk of contagion.

“If Wuhan is taking such drastic measures, we must assume widespread community transmission in this central China megacity & transport hub,” Lawrence Gostin, a public health expert at Georgetown University Law School in Washington, wrote in a tweet.



Director-General of World Health Organization (WHO) Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus takes part in a news conference after a meeting of the International Health Regulations (IHR) Emergency Committee for Pneumonia due to the Novel Coronavirus 2019-nCoV in Geneva, Switzerland, January 22, 2020. Christopher Black/WHO/Handout via REUTERS


With more than 11 million people, Wuhan is central China’s main industrial and commercial center, home to the country’s largest inland port and gateway to its Three Gorges hydroelectric dam.

The latest death toll in Hubei province, of which Wuhan is the capital, rose to 17 by midday on Wednesday, state television quoted the provincial government as saying.

However, the virus has already spread beyond the city to population centers including Beijing, Shanghai, Macau and Hong Kong.

The official China Daily newspaper said 544 cases had now been confirmed in the country. Thailand has confirmed four cases, while the United States, Taiwan, South Korea and Japan have each reported one.

Britain advised its citizens against all but essential travel to Wuhan.

Many Chinese were canceling trips, buying face masks, avoiding public places such as cinemas and shopping centers, and even turning to an online plague simulation game as a way to cope.

“The best way to conquer fear is to confront fear,” said one commentator on China’s Twitter-like Weibo.


Slideshow (16 Images)

RESPIRATORY THREAT
China’s National Health Commission Vice Minister Li Bin said the virus, which can cause pneumonia and has no effective vaccine, was being spread via breathing. Symptoms include fever, coughing and difficulty breathing.

“I feel fearful, because there’s no cure for the virus,” said Fu Ning, a 36-year-old woman in Beijing. “You have to rely on your immunity if you get an infection. It sounds very scary.”

The WHO’s head of emergencies program, Mike Ryan, said the priority was to find the roots of how the virus was passing between people.

Fears of a pandemic initially spooked markets but they regained their footing on Wednesday, with investors citing the robust response from authorities as reassuring.


But companies with operations in China, from Foxconn (2317.TW) to Huawei Technologies [HWT.UL] and HSBC Holdings (HSBA.L), warned staff to avoid Wuhan and handed out masks.

The European Center for Disease Control and Prevention (ECDC) said in a risk assessment that further global spread of the virus was likely. “The likelihood of case importation is highest in countries with the greatest volume of people traveling to and from Wuhan,” the ECDC’s director Andrea Ammon said in a statement.

Airports globally stepped up screening from China.

Russia strengthened its sanitary and quarantine controls, and Singapore and Saudi Arabia started screening all passengers from China.

The Chinese-ruled gambling hub of Macau confirmed its first case of pneumonia linked to the coronavirus and tightened body-temperature screening measures.

A first case emerged in Chinese-ruled Hong Kong, media reported, with the patient arriving via high-speed railway from the mainland, and Mexico was investigating a potential case.

North Korea banned foreign tourists, several foreign tour operators said. Some qualifying boxing matches for the 2020 Olympics set for Wuhan were canceled and women’s football qualifiers were shifted to Nanjing.

Reporting by Cate Cadell, Lusha Zhang, Yawen Chen and Jiang Xihao in Beijing, David Stanway in Shanghai, Anne Marie Roantree in Hong Kong, Ben Blanchard in Taipei, Josh Smith in Seoul, Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva, Kate Kelland in London, Alexandra Alper in Davos, Shreyashi Sanyal in Bangalore, Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Writing by Andrew Cawthorne, Timothy Heritage and Rosalba O'Brien; Editing by Nick Macfie, Cynthia Osterman and Jonathan Oatis


HJS1DO FMC34KAIA https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-alarm-mounts-over-virus-spread-idUSKBN1ZL07C










Raccoon City? :what::what::what:
 
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17 dead already is tragic and China has quite an advance medical system, this virus could cause millions of deaths globally and needs to be taken extremely seriously. The source and cause of this outbreak needs to be found urgently to prevent outbreak again. Is it natural or from a lab?
 
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17 dead already is tragic and China has quite an advance medical system, this virus could cause millions of deaths globally and needs to be taken extremely seriously. The source and cause of this outbreak needs to be found urgently to prevent outbreak again. Is it natural or from a lab?
China experienced something much worse than this one in 2003 during SARS, that was in Beijing,China's capital city which all Chinese government office are located, Beijing was locked down and cut off, it lasted for over a month. This kind of virus all go vanish when it gets warm in May. It didn't have noticeable impact on Beijiing's economy that year.
 
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China virus: five cities locked down and Beijing festivities scrapped


Residents in cities affected by coronavirus hoard supplies and isolate themselves at home

Lily Kuo in Beijing and agencies

Thu 23 Jan 2020 16.58 GMTFirst published on Thu 23 Jan 2020 11.47 GMT

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Wuhan in lockdown as residents barred from leaving Chinese city stricken by coronavirus – video
Chinese authorities have imposed lockdown measures on five cities in an unprecedented effort to contain the outbreak of the deadly new virus that has made hundreds of people ill and spread to other parts of the world during the busy lunar new year travel period.

Authorities banned transport links from Wuhan, the capital of Hubei province, on Thursday morning, suspending buses, subways, ferries, and shutting the airport and train stations to outgoing passengers. Later in the day, the nearby central Chinese cities of Huanggang and Ezhou announced similar measures. Travel restrictions were also placed on the smaller cities of Chibi and Zhijiang.

Starting at midnight, long-distance buses, the rapid transit system, and the train station in Huanggang would be shut, according to a notice from the local government. Cinemas, internet cafes and other entertainment venues would all stop operating. Residents should not leave the city, except for “special reasons”.

A government notice in Ezhou said the city’s railway would stop operating on Thursday evening. In nearby Chibi, authorities said buses and rural transport links would be halted. Officials also ordered tour operators to cancel operations and said no more large-scale cultural events were to be held.

There have been 633 confirmed cases of the coronavirus, from the same family of viruses that gave rise to Sars. Chinese authorities say 95 patients remain in a critical condition.

On Thursday, Hebei’s provincial health authority said an infected patient had died, marking the first confirmed death outside Hubei province, where the outbreak began, and taking the overall toll to 18.

Cases have also been confirmed in the US, Taiwan, South Korea, Thailand, Japan, Hong Kong, Vietnam and Singapore.

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Officials worry the weeklong lunar new year holiday, which begins on Saturday and usually sees hundreds of millions of Chinese crisscross the country, will exacerbate an outbreak that has reached almost all of China’s provinces.

The state-run Beijing News said the capital had cancelled events including two well-known lunar new year temple fairs. The Forbidden City, the palace complex in Beijing that is now a museum, announced it will close indefinitely on Saturday.

The country’s railway operator, China State Railway Group, said passengers would be able to receive full refunds on tickets nationwide starting on Friday.

While sweeping measures are typical of China’s communist government, large-scale quarantines are rare around the world, even in deadly epidemics, because of concerns about infringing on people’s liberties, and the effectiveness of such measures is unclear.


“To my knowledge, trying to contain a city of 11 million people is new to science,” Gauden Galea, the World Health Organization’s representative in China, told the Associated Press. “It has not been tried before as a public health measure. We cannot at this stage say it will or it will not work.”

Late on Thursday Wuhan city authorities said that limits on car travel would be introduced for the first time at noon on Friday.

In Wuhan, supermarket shelves were empty and local markets sold out of produce as residents hoarded supplies and isolated themselves at home. Petrol stations were overwhelmed as drivers stocked up on fuel, exacerbated by rumours that reserves had run out. Local residents said pharmacies had sold out of face masks.

“When I saw the news when I woke up, I felt like I was going to go crazy. This is a little too late now. The government’s measures are not enough,” said Xiao, 26, a primary schoolteacher in Wuhan, who asked not to give her full name.



Barricades block access to the closed Hankou railway station in Wuhan. Photograph: AP
Anxiety in Wuhan has been exacerbated by reports that hospitals are turning patients away because they do not have enough room. A hospital contacted by the Guardian on Thursday said it had between 500 and 600 patients and recommended patients go to a community health centre instead. Eight hospitals in Wuhan put out calls for donations of protective equipment, according to Chinese media.

Officials said they would build a new hospital in six days to accommodate patients, modelled after an isolation facility constructed in Beijing during the Sars outbreak.

Hubei officials said schools, on break for the spring festival holiday, would delay the beginning of the spring term.

The illnesses from the newly identified coronavirus appeared last month in Wuhan, an industrial and transportation hub in central China. The vast majority of cases in the mainland have been in the city.


Analysts have predicted the reported cases will continue to multiply. “Even if [the number of cases] are in the thousands, this would not surprise us,” Galea said. The number of cases was not an indicator of the outbreak’s severity, so long as the mortality rate remained low, he added.

The coronavirus family includes the common cold as well as viruses that cause more serious illnesses, such as the Sars outbreak that spread from China to more than a dozen countries in 2002-03 and killed about 800 people, and Middle Eastern respiratory syndrome, which developed from camels.

China is keen to avoid repeating mistakes with its handling of Sars. For months, even after the illness had spread around the world, China parked patients in hotels and drove them around in ambulances to conceal the true number of cases and avoid WHO experts.

In the current outbreak, China has been credited with sharing information rapidly, and President Xi Jinping has emphasised that as a priority.

The WHO is holding a second meeting of scientific experts on Thursday, who will recommend whether to declare the outbreak a global health emergency.

Associated Press contributed to this report - https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...preads-in-china-with-three-cities-in-lockdown
 
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China can send all of it's virus ridden people to Pakistan. We welcome all sort of Chinese, they can have Pakistani nationality, if China don't want them back!
 
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Millions of people are in lockdown in two Chinese cities at the epicentre of a coronavirus outbreak that has killed 17 people and infected more than 630.

Singapore has confirmed its first case, a Wuhan man who arrived in the Asian hub on January 20 and is currently in isolation in hospital.

One of his travelling companions has also been hospitalised as a suspect case.

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Large-scale Chinese New Year celebrations in Beijing have been scrapped in a bid to try control the coronavirus epidemic. (Getty)

Vietnam's health ministry said yesterday that two Chinese citizens in the south-east Asian country had tested positive for coronavirus, but were in "good condition".

Health officials fear the transmission rate will accelerate as hundreds of millions of Chinese travel at home and abroad during week-long holidays for the Lunar New Year, which begins on Saturday.

The previously unknown virus strain is believed to have emerged late last year from illegally traded wildlife at an animal market in Wuhan, a city of 11 million people in central China.

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Beijing's tourism authorities have said the move to scrap large-scale events was made in a bid to reduce any possible spread of the virus among thousands of people. (AP)

Most transport in Wuhan was suspended yesterday and people were told not to leave.

Hours later, neighbouring Huanggang, a city of about seven million people, announced a similar lockdown.

The World Health Organisation's representative in Beijing, Gauden Galea, said the lockdown of 11 million people was unprecedented in public health history.

Other cities were also taking steps to restrict movement and contact.

Nearby Ezhou shut train stations. China's Education Ministry said schools should not hold large events or exams.

https%3A%2F%2Fprod.static9.net.au%2Ffs%2F7476fc75-b0a8-4149-8499-90e40fbcc4e2

Public disinfectants have been sprayed in multiple cities as control efforts begin to span multiple nations. (AP)

The capital cancelled major public events, including two Lunar New Year temple fairs, the state-run Beijing News said.

Airports worldwide were screening passengers arriving from China.

Hong Kong, which has two confirmed cases, is turning two holiday camps into quarantine stations as a precaution. Taiwan has banned anyone from Wuhan from going to the island.

Symptoms include fever, difficulty in breathing and cough, similar to many other respiratory illnesses.

https%3A%2F%2Fprod.static9.net.au%2Ffs%2F628e61b3-19ce-40e4-85c9-c2f0fd1ce817

Airport screenings of patients arriving from China have also started across the continent. (Supplied)

Preliminary research suggested it was passed on to humans from snakes, but government medical adviser Zhong Nanshan has also identified badgers and rats as possible sources.

The WHO will decide whether to declare the outbreak a global health emergency, which would step up the international response.

If it does so, it will be the sixth international public health emergency to be declared in the last decade.

The WHO's Emergency Committee meeting is under way in Geneva and a news conference is expected afterwards.

Some experts, including Australia's chief medical officer, believe the virus is not as dangerous as previous coronaviruses such as Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) and Middle East Respiratory Syndrome.

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Millions of people are in lockdown after two cities shut themselves down in an attempt to limit the spread of the virus. (AP)

"The early evidence at this stage would suggest it's not as severe," Australia's Chief Medical Officer Brendan Murphy said.

Giving the latest details on infections in China, state television said 634 cases had been confirmed. By the end of Wednesday, China's National Health Commission confirmed 17 dead.

Of the known cases worldwide, Thailand has confirmed four, Vietnam has reported two, while Singapore, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and the United States have reported one each.

Beijing scraps Chinese New Year celebrations


Authorities in Beijing have cancelled all large-scale Chinese New Year celebrations in an effort to contain the growing spread of the coronavirus.

"In order to control the epidemic, protect people's lives and health, reduce the mass gathering and ensure people to have a harmonious and peaceful Spring Festival, it is decided to cancel all the large-scale events, including temple fairs, in Beijing as of today," a statement from the governmental Beijing Culture and Tourism Bureau. said today.

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Travellers passing through airport screenings have been subjected to health checks. (AP)

"Citizens shall strengthen the preventative measures and support the decision.

"We will notify the policy changes with the epidemic development... And wish all citizens a happy Spring Festival."

Chinese New Year 2020 runs from Saturday 25 through February 8.

Research teams working on vaccines


Three separate research teams are to start work on developing potential vaccines against the coronavirus epidemic, a global coalition set up to fight diseases says.

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Research work has begun on a possible vaccine strain to combat the coronavirus. (AP)

The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), which is co-funding the emergency projects, said the plan was to have at least one potential vaccine in clinical trials by June.

The research will be conducted by the drug and vaccine developer Moderna working with the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the US firm Inovio Pharma, and a team at the University of Queensland, Australia.

Each of the three projects will test a distinct scientific approach to developing a preventative vaccine against the China virus, known as nCoV-2019.

"Our aspiration with these technologies is to bring a new pathogen from gene sequence to clinical testing in 16 weeks," CEPI's chief executive Richard Hatchett said.

"There are no guarantees of success, but we hope this work could provide a significant and important step forward in developing a vaccine for this disease."</p>

https://www.9news.com.au/world/chin...l-health/10ec1063-b7b6-4f3f-a927-339e082afd99
 
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Virus in Asia continent likely easy to spread. Hope this measure minimize virus contamination
 
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