Source:
Press TV
UN
chief says declaration of coronavirus pandemic is call to action
United
Nations (UN) Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has called on governments to
immediately “scale up” their efforts to confront the new coronavirus in an
attempt to stop the now-global pandemic.
“Today’s
declaration of a pandemic is a call to action — for everyone, everywhere,”
Guterres said in a statement released on Wednesday, referring to the
announcement earlier in the day by the World Health Organization (WHO) that the
coronavirus outbreak is now a global pandemic.
“As
we fight the virus, we cannot let fear go viral,” Guterres added. “Together, we
can still change the course of this pandemic — but that means addressing
inaction. I call on every government to step up and scale up their efforts
now.”
He
said the transmission of the virus could be much curtailed if countries tracked
and isolated confirmed and suspected cases.
The
WHO earlier on Wednesday described the deadly virus outbreak as a pandemic and
blamed its spread on “alarming levels of inaction.”
The
coronavirus, which emerged in China in December last year, has spread around the
world, halting industries, bringing travel to a standstill, closing schools,
and forcing the cancellation of public events.
More
than 126,000 people have been infected by the coronavirus across the world and
4,630 have died, the vast majority of them in China, according to a Reuters
tally.
China’s
Hubei sees single-digit increase for first time
China’s
National Health Commission announced on Wednesday that Hubei Province, the
epicenter of the Chinese outbreak, had for the first time recorded a
single-digit increase in the number of new coronavirus infections in its daily
tally.
The
commission said only eight cases had been recorded, all of them in Wuhan, the
capital of Hubei.
The
development comes as more businesses reopened in the Chinese province, with
local authorities cautiously easing strict containment measures that have been
implemented to contain the outbreak.
Moreover,
seven new cases were reported in mainland China on Wednesday, bringing the
total daily tally combined with those in Hubei to 15, which showed a drop from
24 cases a day earlier.
The
total number of confirmed cases recorded in mainland China now stands at
80,793, and the death toll has reached 3,169 people. As of Tuesday, 62,793
people have recovered and been discharged from hospital — nearly 80% of the
overall infections.
While
COVID-19 is spreading quickly across the globe, its progress in China has
slowed markedly over the past seven days as a result of weeks of strict
measures imposed to curb its outbreak, including the lockdown on Wuhan.
Peak
of coronavirus epidemic has passed: China
China’s
National Health Commission announced on Thursday that the country’s coronavirus
epidemic had now passed its peak.
“Broadly
speaking, the peak of the epidemic has passed for China,” said Mi Feng, a
spokesman for the National Health Commission. “The increase of new cases is
falling.”
New
coronavirus cases slow in South Korea, too
Meanwhile,
South Korea reported 114 new cases of the coronavirus and six more deaths on
Thursday, resuming a relative decline in new cases after a spike the day
before.
The
new cases bring the country’s total to 7,869, with 66 deaths.
The
numbers are far lower than the peak of the deadly virus outbreak in South Korea
on February 29, when 909 confirmed cases were reported.
Italy
shuts stores across country
In
Italy, which has been the hardest hit by the virus after China, Prime Minister
Giuseppe Conte on Wednesday announced the closure of all “shops, bars, pubs,
and restaurants” across the country to curb the spread of the coronavirus.
The
closure order will not apply to pharmacies and food shops.
Conte’s
announcement came hours after his government promised to spend up to 28 billion
dollars to shore up the economy amid the outbreak.
The
coronavirus has killed 827 people in Italy over the past two weeks. The death
toll accounts for nearly 60 percent of the deaths recorded outside China since
the epidemic first started in central Hubei.
In
a surprise move at the weekend, the Italian government responded to the
outbreak by imposing a lockdown on Lombardy, Italy’s rich, northern region, as
well as 14 provinces in four other regions out of the country’s 19 areas.
The
measures included the closure of all museums, cultural centers, cinemas,
theaters, and other public venues and events in the affected areas, impacting a
total of 16 million people in the country of 60 million.
Philippines’
president to be tested for virus over potential exposure
In
a related development on Thursday, a Philippine official said the country’s
President Rodrigo Duterte was to be tested for the new coronavirus as part of
“precautionary measures” because he had been in regular contact with other
officials who for their part had been at risk of exposure.
Two
key government buildings in the capital, Manila, namely the Senate building and
the Central Bank, were being disinfected over the exposure scare.
Lawmakers
and other government officials had earlier attended a series of public events
along with local people. The official, named Senator Christopher “Bong” Go,
said Duterte, who at 74 is in a vulnerable age group for the virus, will be
tested because he had been in regular contact with some of those officials.
The
number of COVID-19 cases in the Philippines surged to 49 as of Wednesday, up
more than eight times compared to the past four days. The Philippine Health
authorities also announced the Southeast Asian country’s second death, the
first since an infected Chinese tourist died last month.
Corona
Virus Updates 2020
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