Rabu, 01 April 2020

As Wuhan reopens, China revs engine to move past coronavirus. But it's stuck in second gear. - The Washington Post

AFP Getty Images People eat McDonalds on a bench in Wuhan, China, on March 30, 2020. Wuhan, the city where the coronavirus first emerged in December, is slowly coming back to life with the complete lockdown being lifted in the coming days.

After 10 weeks confined to their apartments, unable to exercise, shop for groceries or walk their dogs, Wuhan residents are emerging into the daylight.

The subway and intercity trains are running again. Shopping malls and even the Tesla store are reopening. State-owned companies and manufacturing businesses are turning on their lights, with others to follow.

“I’ve been indoors for 70 days. Today is the first time that I came outside,” one woman who ventured into a mall this week told local television. “I feel as if I have been separated from the outside world for ages.”

Wuhan’s airport is due to reopen next week, and residents will be allowed to leave the city for the first time since it was locked down Jan. 23 to control the deadly coronavirus that originated there.

China’s leaders say the country has largely won the battle against its outbreak, reporting each day that domestic transmissions are negligible or nonexistent. The gradual reopening of parts of Hubei province — and now of Wuhan, the provincial capital — is testament to that.

But winning the war is proving to be a tougher proposition. That involves not only preventing a second wave of coronavirus infections but also restarting the economy. It’s becoming increasingly clear that officials cannot achieve both things at once.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/video/world/these-videos-show-that-life-in-wuhan-is-far-from-normal-as-coronavirus-lockdown-eases/2020/03/31/e7da2657-627f-43b7-8daa-955566ab7a59_video.html

“These obviously come into conflict, because to prevent the spread of the virus, both from overseas and from unrecorded cases, China needs to maintain some kind of social distancing measures,” said Neil Thomas, a senior researcher at the China-focused Macro Polo think tank in Chicago. “These are going to dampen demand from consumers and limit the operation of factories, the service industry and the transportation networks.”

[As dark reality sets in, president beats a retreat on reopening the U.S.]

Chinese authorities are discovering that allowing people — even those without fevers who are wearing surgical masks and are doused in hand sanitizer — to get too close to each other risks a new rise in infections. Recent media reports have focused on “silent carriers,” and studies have found that as many as one-third of people infected with the coronavirus show delayed or no symptoms.

“The possibility of a new round of infections remains relatively high,” National Health Commission spokesman Mi Feng said Sunday.

Communist Party organizations must “grasp the prevention and control of the epidemic situation with one hand, and grasp the resumption of work and production with the other,” the official CPC News declared Monday. Party outlets have ranked controlling the virus and stopping a second wave of infections above the need to restart the economy.

Roman Pilipey

EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock

A person wearing a full protective gear walks in the streets of Wuhan, China, 30 March 2020.

Like President Trump — who had said he wanted businesses to resume normal operations by Easter, only to backtrack as U.S. deaths surged — Chinese leader Xi Jinping is clearly concerned about the economic impact of a nationwide standstill.

Xi visited the huge Ningbo port and factories in Zhejiang, a hub for exports and a province he once governed, over the weekend to promise that the government would help businesses “recover in the soonest manner.”

Most economists forecast a sharp slump in China’s growth rate in the first quarter, with some predicting the first contraction since 1976. Still, at a Politburo meeting in Beijing on Friday, party leaders signaled further support for the economy, and reiterated their goal of 6 percent growth for the year as a whole.

But efforts to kick-start the economy are not going smoothly.

Despite the gradual reopening of Wuhan, things are still far from normal for the city of 11 million. Officials say that 2,535 people died there during the outbreak, while about 2,500 people remain hospitalized.

People are allowed out of their residential complexes only if they have a return-to-work pass issued by their employer, and only if the government-issued health code on their cellphone glows green — not orange or red — to show that they are healthy and cleared for travel. Residents report that some complexes deemed infection-free have quietly lost that status, without explanation.

[Locked down in Beijing, I watched China beat back the coronavirus]

In the malls that opened this week, people must stand five feet apart on escalators, and clothes that customers have tried on must be sprayed with disinfectant. Subway passengers must wear masks and sit two seats apart; footage on state media showed near-deserted cars and stations.

“They’re trying to turn the industrial engines back on as quickly as they can,” said Ryan Hass, a China expert at the Brookings Institution. “But it’s a bit of a challenge because 60 percent of the Chinese economy is the service sector. And even if they wanted people to go to movie theaters and restaurants right now, I don’t think there’s a lot of demand.”

AFP

Getty Images

Staff members stand outside a Dior store in Wuhan international plaza on March 30, 2020.

While Wuhan struggles to return to normalcy, authorities have reinstated restrictions elsewhere.

Small businesses — from karaoke bars in the northern city of Shenyang to Internet cafes in the southwestern metropolis of Chengdu — that tentatively reopened in early March have been ordered to close.

Employees rushed to get back to Moon Village, a karaoke joint in Chengdu, over the weekend and enjoyed a celebratory drink together. The parlor’s social media pages featured photos of disinfecting procedures.

It wasn’t open even a day before local authorities told it to shut its doors.

Some 600 movie theaters that had reopened after a two-month shutdown — out of 70,000 nationwide that were ordered to close at the end of January, before what should have been the biggest box-office week of the year — have been abruptly ordered to go dark.

Indoor attractions such as Madame Tussauds and the landmark Oriental Pearl Tower in Shanghai, and even pavilions in scenic mountain attractions, have also been told to close.

Chinese authorities have not spelled out reasons for these closures, but analysts such as Thomas say they underline the fear of new infections and the long-term impact that could have on the economy.

This U-turn has been accompanied by other sudden changes, including a ban on foreigners entering China and limited inbound flights for Chinese nationals. The number of flights arriving in the country is less than 2 percent of normal.

[‘I am so afraid’: Coronavirus isolation brings grave new hardships for the world’s poor]

“It’s a difficult calculation: public health risk versus economic risk,” said Ryan Manuel, managing director of Official China, a consultancy specializing in China’s domestic political environment.

But it’s a calculation that other countries, including Italy, Spain and the United States, will have to make.

“Everyone will need to come up with an exit strategy,” said Alicia Garcia Herrero, chief Asia-Pacific economist at Natixis, a French investment bank.

For now, she said, Chinese leaders should not worry about getting the economy back to normal. Domestic demand is low, and external demand is even lower, given the coronavirus’s rampage across the world’s largest economies.

“In a world without demand, rushing into production will create excess capacity and push prices down,” Herrero said. “So Chinese leaders could say they’re going slow for sanitary reasons, but really it’s because they can’t sell their stuff to anyone.”

Roman Pilipey

EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock

A man wearing a protective face mask walks past a security fence in the streets of Wuhan on March 30, 2020.

Liu Yang in Beijing contributed to this report.

Read more

China’s claim of coronavirus victory in Wuhan brings hope, but experts worry it is premature

As coronavirus goes global, China’s Xi asserts victory on first trip to Wuhan since outbreak

Conspiracy theorists blame U.S. for coronavirus. China is happy to encourage them.

Today’s coverage from Post correspondents around the world

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2020-04-01 08:11:02Z
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China starts to report asymptomatic coronavirus cases - Reuters

BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese health authorities began on Wednesday reporting on asymptomatic cases of the coronavirus as part of an effort to allay public fears that people could be spreading the virus without knowing they are infected with it.

FILE PHOTO: A worker in a protective suit sprays disinfectant at a middle school where classes for students in the final year of senior and junior high school have resumed amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Hohhot, Inner Mongolia, China March 30, 2020. Picture taken March 30, 2020. cnsphoto via REUTERS

China, where the coronavirus emerged late last year, has managed to bring its outbreak under control and is easing travel restrictions in virus hot spots.

But there are concerns that the end of lockdowns will see thousands of infectious people move back into daily life without knowing they carry the virus, because they have no symptoms and so have not been tested.

Up to now, the number of known asymptomatic cases has been classified, and it is not included in the official data, though the South China Morning Post newspaper, citing unpublished official documents, recently said it was more than 40,000.

In an effort to dispel public fears about hidden cases of the virus, the government has this week ordered health authorities to turn their attention to finding asymptomatic cases and releasing their data on them.

Health authorities in Liaoning province were the fist to do so on Wednesday, saying the province had 52 cases of people with the coronavirus who showed no symptoms as of March 31, they said in a statement on a provincial government website.

Hunan province said it had four such cases, all of them imported from abroad, it said in a statement on its website.

The National Health Commission is due to start reporting aggregate, national data on asymptomatic cases later on Wednesday.

There is debate among experts about how infectious asymptomatic cases are but the commission has said all cases would be centrally quarantined for 14 days.It said 1,541 people with asymptomatic coronavirus infections were under observation as of the end of Monday.

China has had more than 81,000 cases of the coronavirus and 3,305 deaths.

Reporting by Gabriel Crossley; Editing by Robert Birsel

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2020-04-01 07:45:09Z
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Selasa, 31 Maret 2020

Coronavirus - fears that Russia's President Putin has been exposed to infection - BBC News - BBC News

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  1. Coronavirus - fears that Russia's President Putin has been exposed to infection - BBC News  BBC News
  2. Oil gains nearly 2%, but posts worst month and quarter on record  CNBC
  3. Russian doctor who met Putin last week diagnosed with coronavirus  Reuters
  4. Trump and Putin Are All Talk on Oil Price Plunge  Bloomberg
  5. Coronavirus: Moscow goes into lockdown - BBC News  BBC News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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2020-03-31 21:57:39Z
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Aircraft carrier captain pleads for help after more than 100 crew are infected with coronavirus - CNBC

WASHINGTON — The captain of a U.S. Navy aircraft carrier that has more than 100 cases of coronavirus wrote a stunning plea for help to senior military officials. 

In a four-page letter, first reported by the San Francisco Chronicle, Capt. Brett Crozier of the USS Theodore Roosevelt described a disastrous situation unfolding aboard the warship, a temporary home to more than 4,000 crew members.

"We are not at war. Sailors do not need to die. If we do not act now, we are failing to properly take care of our most trusted asset — our Sailors," Crozier wrote. "The spread of the disease is ongoing and accelerating."

He proposed offloading the majority of the crew, quarantining those infected, testing others for the virus and professionally cleaning the ship. He explained in his letter that by keeping the crew on the vessel the Pentagon was taking "an unnecessary risk" that "breaks faith with those Sailors entrusted to our care."

Read more: Coronavirus cases in the military are probably more widespread than known, Pentagon says

The Pentagon did not immediately respond to CNBC's request for comment.

The USS Theodore Roosevelt is seen while entering into the port in Da Nang, Vietnam, March 5, 2020.

Kham | Reuters

The latest revelation of the coronavirus exposure aboard the USS Theodore Roosevelt, which is currently docked in Guam, follows a recently completed port call to Da Nang, Vietnam. 

Fifteen days after leaving Vietnam, three sailors from the USS Roosevelt tested positive for the virus. The infections were the first reports of coronavirus on a vessel at sea.

Last week, Thomas Modly, the acting Navy secretary, told reporters at the Pentagon that the trio of sailors and those who had been in contact with the individuals were identified and quarantined.

And while port calls for U.S. Navy ships have since been canceled, Modly defended the decision to complete the port call by saying that at the time, the coronavirus cases in Vietnam were less than 100.

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2020-03-31 21:53:17Z
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Italy Hopeful That Coronavirus Pandemic Is Slowing Down - The Wall Street Journal

A worker sprays disinfectant in front of the cathedral of Milan on March 31.

Photo: Luca Bruno/Associated Press

ROME—Italian authorities believe the country’s coronavirus epidemic, the world’s deadliest, is slowing down appreciably after three weeks of national lockdown, a hopeful sign for other Western countries that are following approaches similar to Italy’s with a time lag.

But Italian officials and health experts said it will take until after Easter to cut new infections enough to begin loosening the lockdown and reopen parts of Italy’s economy.

“We seem to be arriving at a sort of plateau, which shows that the measures are working,” said Silvio Brusaferro, president of the National Health Institute, Italy’s main disease-control center.

Italy was the first Western country to suffer a major coronavirus emergency. Many countries around the world have emulated its response, telling people to stay home and businesses to close unless essential. Italy, where a national lockdown began on March 10, has become a test case of whether Western nations can suppress the pandemic fast enough to avoid a deep economic crisis while using strategies less draconian than China’s.

The government in Rome said 105,792 people had tested positive for the coronavirus by Tuesday evening, an increase of 4,053—or around 4%—from the previous day. New daily infections have fallen from a peak of over 6,500 on March 21.

Turning a Corner?

The rate of new coronavirus infections is slowing in Italy

U.S.

Italy

100,000

Spain

China

U.K.

10,000

S. Korea

1,000

100

10

1

January

February

March

Note: Logarithmic scale
Source: Johns Hopkins CSSE

True number of virus carriers is believed to be much higher, since many people with no or few symptoms haven’t been tested. But other indicators are also breeding confidence that Italy’s lockdown is bringing results. The number of hospital admissions across Italy is slowing, and in Lombardy, the worst-hit region, the number of people in intensive care declined by six to 1,324.

However, Italy recorded another 837 deaths on Tuesday from Covid-19, the respiratory disease caused by the coronavirus, bringing the nation’s death toll to 12,428, about 58% of which have been in Lombardy. Health experts say deaths are likely to decline well after infections, because many people dying got infected up to several weeks ago. The tricolor national flag hung at half-mast all over Italy on Tuesday to commemorate the dead.

Members of Italy’s military and civil protection agency move a coffin containing a victim of Covid-19 onto a truck in Bergamo on March 31.

Photo: Francesca Volpi/Bloomberg News

“Before results became evident, too much time passed, too many died,” said Cristina Capellini, a physician from near Bergamo, where deaths and overwhelmed hospitals have made the Lombard city a symbol of Italy’s pain. Dr. Capellini lost her husband to the coronavirus in early March.

“Don’t make the same mistakes we Italians made. Learn from our experience: Be aggressive in containing the spread of the infection at the very beginning,” she said. “We should make sense of this tragedy by changing the approach toward public health care. It should be given the importance it deserves.”

In Bergamo, pressure is finally starting to ease at intensive-care units that have been forced to ration treatment for weeks. The situation is starting to improve slightly at the city’s Papa Giovanni XXIII Hospital, said Mirco Nacuti, an intensive-care doctor there. But some old people are still dying without making it to the hospital, he said: “The tragedy is continuing in private homes, and the official numbers don’t show it because tests aren’t being done.”

Related Video

China is sending doctors and medical supplies to Italy and other countries that have been hit hard by the coronavirus. WSJ’s Eric Sylvers in Milan explains how China is using soft power to change perceptions about its handling of the pandemic. Photo: Moura Balti Touati/Shutterstock

“We’re starting to see a glimmer at the end of the tunnel,” said Frank Rasulo, a senior anesthesiologist and intensive-care doctor at the Spedali Civili hospital system in Brescia, another hard-hit city in Lombardy. Fewer patients are coming into the intensive care unit compared with last week, he said.

“However, they are younger and many are in worse condition due to the fact that they resist longer until calling the ambulance,” said Dr. Rasulo. “Having said that, this characteristic represents the stage where things will soon be slowing down.”

Chiara Appendino, left, Turin’s mayor, stands at attention during a moment of silence to commemorate Italy’s victims on March 31.

Photo: marco bertorello/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

Other countries in Europe are not yet approaching peaks or plateaus in the spread of the virus, because their outbreaks began later than Italy’s. Data suggest many countries are two to three weeks behind Italy. Some other governments in Europe hope that they will avoid Italy’s high death toll because they imposed social-distancing measures at an earlier stage of contagion. But the death toll in Spain, in particular, is rising dramatically.

The Italian government’s scientific advisers began studying on Monday when and how to relax the lockdowns that have frozen much of the national economy. Officials say full lockdown will have to continue until at least Easter. After that, the plan is to reopen some parts of Italian industry—but under stringent safety rules so that infections don’t accelerate again. Service sectors, including restaurants and bars, aren’t expected to reopen until well into May at the earliest.

The strain on Italy’s economy and public finances has prompted negotiations in Europe about how to support the country financially if its borrowing needs spook bond markets, reawakening memories of the eurozone debt crisis of 2010-12. So far, the intervention of the European Central Bank has keep Italy’s borrowing costs stable.

Stay Informed

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Denmark, which also imposed social-distancing measures relatively early in March, is also hoping that it can begin to unwind them slowly after Easter. “The corona outbreak has not peaked yet,” said Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen, calling on Danes to follow the guidelines and keep their distance. “If we each do what we need to, we will gradually and gently reopen society.”

French authorities hope that daily admissions to intensive care units will start to slow down at the end of this week, thanks to France’s national lockdown. France said 418 patients with Covid-19 died in hospitals in the past day, the worst daily death toll since its epidemic started.

The U.K. has also reported a slower rise in infections in recent days, but “it’s really important not to read too much into this,” said Stephen Powis, medical director for England. “It’s early days; we are not out of the woods.”

Germany’s health minister Jens Spahn said it’s too early to say whether social-distancing measures, including a ban on more than two people gathering, are working yet. New infections in Germany aren’t expected to plateau until mid-April. “We will see how the trend develops by Easter,” said Lothar Wieler, head of the Robert Koch Institute, Germany’s disease control agency.

Epidemiologists most closely watch the number R0, or the average number of people that virus carriers infect. “We estimate that R0 is now around one, maybe a little below,” compared with between two and three before Italy’s national lockdown, said Giovanni Rezza, head of infectious diseases at the National Health Institute in Rome. Italian authorities hope to push the number to well below one, so that the epidemic starts to fizzle out.

“However, I don’t think Italy or other European countries will be able to reach zero new infections soon,” Dr. Rezza said. Rather, he said, Italy will need to continue fighting the virus with testing and containment measures across the country even after its lockdown ends.

“Maybe we are going to win the first battle, but the war will be long,” he said. “And we lost many people in the field.”

Write to Marcus Walker at marcus.walker@wsj.com

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2020-03-31 20:13:52Z
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Wild goats take over Welsh town amid coronavirus lockdown - CNN

It comes just days after British Prime Minister Boris Johnson introduced tighter restrictions around social movement last week in a bid to limit the spread of coronavirus.
Residents spotted herds of goats strolling around Llandudno on Friday and over the weekend, after more than a dozen of the animals ventured down from the Great Orme headland and roamed the streets of the coastal town.
Llandundo resident Carl Triggs pictured the wild goats on the street.
Videos and pictures shared online show the goats grazing on grass from church grounds, flower beds, and residential properties.
They are referred to as Great Orme Kashmiri goats, whose ancestors originated from northern India, according to the town's official website.
Town resident, Carl Triggs, was returning home after delivering personal protective equipment masks when he saw the goats.
"The goats live on the hill overlooking the town. They stay up there, very rarely venturing into the street," he told CNN.
The goats were roaming the street in front of Carl Triggs' car.
Resident Joanna Stallard spotted the goats in her garden and said they were a regular occurrence.
Mark Richards, from hotel Lansdowne House, told CNN: "They sometimes come to the foot of the Great Orme in March but this year they are all wandering the streets in town as there are no cars or people."
"They are becoming more and more confident with no people," he said, adding that it saves him cutting the hedge.
The Kashmiri goats walked around residential homes.
But local councilor Penny Andow told CNN she has lived in the area for 33 years and has never seen the goats venture from the Great Orme down into the town.
North Wales Police confirmed that they received a call on Saturday about the wild goats.
However, the force said it was "not that unusual in Llandudno."
"We are not aware of officers attending to them as they usually make their own way back," the police said in a statement sent to CNN.

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2020-03-31 20:24:57Z
52780700133499

Wild goats take over Welsh town amid coronavirus lockdown - CNN

It comes just days after British Prime Minister Boris Johnson introduced tighter restrictions around social movement last week in a bid to limit the spread of coronavirus.
Residents spotted herds of goats strolling around Llandudno on Friday and over the weekend, after more than a dozen of the animals ventured down from the Great Orme headland and roamed the streets of the coastal town.
Llandundo resident Carl Triggs pictured the wild goats on the street.
Videos and pictures shared online show the goats grazing on grass from church grounds, flower beds, and residential properties.
They are referred to as Great Orme Kashmiri goats, whose ancestors originated from northern India, according to the town's official website.
Town resident, Carl Triggs, was returning home after delivering personal protective equipment masks when he saw the goats.
"The goats live on the hill overlooking the town. They stay up there, very rarely venturing into the street," he told CNN.
The goats were roaming the street in front of Carl Triggs' car.
Resident Joanna Stallard spotted the goats in her garden and said they were a regular occurrence.
Mark Richards, from hotel Lansdowne House, told CNN: "They sometimes come to the foot of the Great Orme in March but this year they are all wandering the streets in town as there are no cars or people."
"They are becoming more and more confident with no people," he said, adding that it saves him cutting the hedge.
The Kashmiri goats walked around residential homes.
But local councilor Penny Andow told CNN she has lived in the area for 33 years and has never seen the goats venture from the Great Orme down into the town.
North Wales Police confirmed that they received a call on Saturday about the wild goats.
However, the force said it was "not that unusual in Llandudno."
"We are not aware of officers attending to them as they usually make their own way back," the police said in a statement sent to CNN.

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2020-03-31 19:12:59Z
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