China coronavirus: Stricter measures start Lunar New Year

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Media captionWhat’s life like in quarantined Wuhan?

China is introducing stricter measures as it tries to contain the spread of a new virus from city to city.

The coronavirus has killed at least 41 people and infected almost 1,300 since its discovery in the city of Wuhan.

Travel restrictions are already in place, but from Sunday private vehicles will also be banned from the city’s central districts.

A second emergency hospital is to be built within weeks to handle 1,300 new patients, officials say.

State newspaper the People’s Daily said the hospital would be finished in half a month. It is the second such rapid construction project: work on another 1,000-bed hospital has already begun.

Specialist military medial teams have also arrived in Hubei province, the epicentre of the outbreak, by plane.

The urgency reflects concern both within China and elsewhere about the spread of the virus which first appeared in December.

  • How can China build a hospital so quickly?
  • Coronavirus sparks anxiety among Chinese overseas

Lunar New Year celebrations for the year of the rat, which began on Saturday, have been cancelled in many Chinese cities.

Across mainland China, travellers are having their temperatures checked for signs of fever, and train stations have been shut in several cities.

In Hong Kong, the highest level of emergency has been declared and school holidays extended.

Several other nations are each dealing with a handful of cases, with patients being treated in isolation.

What is the coronavirus, and what does it do?

This virus has never been seen before, so it’s been called 2019-nCov, for “novel coronavirus”.

A coronavirus is a family of viruses that usually affect animals, but can sometimes jump to humans – for example, in the Sars outbreak of 2003.

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In Hong Kong’s Wong Tai Sin temple, people welcome the new year, some wearing masks

The new infection causes severe acute respiratory infection.

Symptoms seem to start with a fever, followed by a dry cough and then, after a week, lead to shortness of breath and some patients needing hospital treatment.

There is no specific cure or vaccine.

Coronavirus: How worried should we be?

Based on early information, it is believed that only a quarter of infected cases are “severe”, and the dead are mostly – though not exclusively – older people, some of whom have pre-existing conditions.

What’s happening at the source?

The city of Wuhan is effectively on lockdown, with heavy restrictions on travel in and out, and public transport options from buses to planes cancelled.

It is a major population centre with up to 11 million inhabitants – comparable in size to London.

Pharmacies in the city have begun to run out of supplies and hospitals have been filled with nervous members of the public.

But even for those free of infection, there has been an impact on daily life, as officials have urged people to avoid crowds and gatherings.

“The whole transport system has been shut down,” Kathleen Bell, who is is originally from the UK and works in Wuhan, told the BBC. “From midnight tonight private cars are not allowed on the road. And taxis aren’t running.”

“You have queues of people lining up to be seen, some may not have the virus, and some may, and they’re all in the same space,” she said.

  • Wuhan: The London-sized city where the virus began
  • How do you quarantine a city – and does it work?

Major Western brands such as McDonald’s and Starbucks have closed in the city and in others nearby.

“The streets are pretty much empty,” said Mustafa Siddiqui, a businessman in Wuhan. “No-one’s going outside.”

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Media captionThe WHO’s regional director gives some measured advice on the outbreak

“There’s no real panic. There is calm. There is nothing really happening.”

The surrounding Hubei province is also deeply affected, with nearly a dozen cities enduring some sort of travel restriction.

Where has it spread?

There are now nearly 1,300 confirmed cases all across China, though most concentrated in those closest to Hubei.

But it has also spread abroad – in isolated cases affecting small numbers of patients.

On Saturday, Australia confirmed its first four cases – first in Melbourne, and then three more in Sydney.

It has also spread to Europe, with three cases confirmed in France. The UK is investigating a number of suspected cases, with officials trying to trace around 2,000 people who have recently flown to the UK from Hubei province.

  • Wuhan woman who ‘cheated’ checks found in France
  • Fourteen people in UK tested for new strain

The cases largely involve people who had recently travelled from the affected region in China.

China’s neighbours in the Asia region are on high alert, however, with cases reported in Thailand, Singapore, Japan, Taiwan, Malaysia, Vietnam, South Korea and Nepal.

There are also cases in the United States.

The World Health Organization has not classed the virus as an “international emergency”, partly because of the low number of overseas cases.

What is the impact on new year celebrations?

The Lunar New Year is one of the most important dates in the calendar in China, where millions of people travel home – something that is a problem for preventing the spread of a virus.

Authorities have shut major tourist sites including the Forbidden City in Beijing and a section of the Great Wall, and cancelled major public events in other parts of the country, including:

  • Traditional temple fairs in Beijing
  • An international carnival in Hong Kong
  • Hong Kong’s annual football tournament
  • All public Lunar New Year celebrations in Macau

Shanghai’s Disney Resort is temporarily closing.

In the capital, Beijing, and also in Shanghai, officials have asked residents who return from affected areas to stay at home for 14 days to prevent the spread of the virus, local media report.

  • China’s travel industry counts cost of coronavirus
  • How is China coping with the coronavirus outbreak?

Learn more about the new virus

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source: bbc.com