South Korea on high alert after sharp jump in virus cases

Published February 24, 2020
DAEGU (South Korea): Workers wearing protective gear spray disinfectants in a market on Sunday as a precautionary measure against the deadly outbreak of coronavirus.—AFP
DAEGU (South Korea): Workers wearing protective gear spray disinfectants in a market on Sunday as a precautionary measure against the deadly outbreak of coronavirus.—AFP

CODOGNO/ SHANGHAI: South Korea went on high alert on Sunday following a sharp jump in coronavirus cases, while Italy and Iran took their own drastic containment steps as an epidemic that has killed nearly 2,500 people in China continued a relentless global expansion.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) also warned Africa’s poor health systems left it vulnerable to the new disease, which has spilled out of China to more than 25 countries.

South Korea is raising the nation’s alert to its “highest” level, President Moon Jae-in said on Sunday after the number of infections nearly tripled over the weekend to 602.

Led by an outbreak cluster in a religious sect in the southern city of Daegu, South Korea now has the most infections outside of China — apart from the Diamond Princess cruise ship docked in Japan.

“The next few days will be crucial,” Moon said following a government meeting on the virus. “The government will raise the alert level to the highest level according to experts’ recommendations.”

He did not specify what those measures might include.

South Korea reported 169 new cases and three deaths on Sunday, taking the countrywide fatality toll to five. Yonhap news agency later reported a sixth death.

More than 300 cases have been linked to the Shincheonji Church of Jesus sect in Daegu with some 9,300 members either quarantined or asked to stay at home, according to the Korean Centres for Disease Control and Prevention. Some 1,240 people have reported symptoms.

The new cases included a Samsung Electronics employee at a plant in Gumi city, leading the tech giant to suspend operations there until Monday (today).

Elsewhere, Italy began introducing the sort of containment measures previously seen only in China, which has put tens of millions of people under lockdown in the epicentre province of Hubei.

More than 50,000 people in about a dozen northern Italian towns near the business hub of Milan were told to stay home, while shops and schools were shuttered.

The number of cases in the country rose to more than 100, the president of the northern Lombardy region said on Sunday.

Italy became the first European country to report one of its nationals had died from the virus on Friday, followed by a second death on Saturday. Both were elderly people.

China reported another 97 deaths in its daily update on Sunday, taking its total to 2,442, plus 648 new infections. Nearly 80,000 people have been infected worldwide, the vast majority in China.

The outbreak in China remains concentrated in the city of Wuhan — locked down exactly one month ago.

Published in Dawn, February 24th, 2020

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