Rabu, 08 April 2020

'Painful lesson': how a military-style lockdown unfolded in Wuhan - Reuters

BEIJING (Reuters) - As the world grapples with the escalating coronavirus pandemic, China reopened the city of Wuhan on Wednesday, allowing its 11 million residents to leave for the first time in over two months, a milestone in its effort to combat the outbreak.

FILE PHOTO: A man wearing a face mask walks next to barriers set up to block buildings from a street in Wuhan, Hubei province, the epicentre of China's coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, March 29, 2020. REUTERS/Aly Song

But while the operation to contain Wuhan’s coronavirus outbreak has been hailed as a success by China and many international health experts, it didn’t come easy.

Using virus case data, official reports and over a dozen interviews with officials, residents and scientists in Wuhan, Reuters has compiled a comprehensive account of how the military-style quarantine of the city unfolded.

SCIENTIST TOUR

Wuhan health authorities reported the first case of what turned out to be the new coronavirus in December, and the first known death linked to the virus in early January.

City officials insisted the situation was under control for the first two weeks of January, downplaying the possibility of human-to-human transmission as they focused on a seafood and wildlife market where the outbreak was believed to have started.

But troubling signs were emerging.

Hospital respiratory wards began reaching capacity by around Jan 12, and some people were being turned away, a half dozen Wuhan residents told Reuters.

But at least up to Jan. 16, Wuhan’s government said that no new cases of the disease had occurred for about two weeks, and the city continued as normal. Diners packed restaurants, shoppers flocked to commercial districts, and travellers headed to train stations and airports for their Lunar New Year holidays.

Minimal measures were put in place to take the temperatures of residents in public places, or encourage them to wear protective masks, residents said.

“We ordinary people did not know that we needed to take protective measures,” said Wang Wenjun, whose uncle died of the coronavirus on Jan 31.

But that changed after Jan 18, when a team of scientists sent by the central government in Beijing arrived in Wuhan.

Leading the group was 83-year-old Zhong Nanshan, an epidemiologist credited with raising the alarm in China about the spread of another coronavirus, SARS, in 2003. Over two days, the team investigated the source and scale of Wuhan’s outbreak, inspecting the seafood and wildlife market and other sites.

As the scientists toured Wuhan, their mood darkened as the scale of the crisis became clear, said a source familiar with the trip.

A day before the scientists arrived, four new cases were confirmed in Wuhan, none of which had apparent links to the market.

That cast doubt over local authorities’ previous assertions that there was no substantial evidence of human-to-human transmission, which would have required them to impose drastic containment measures on the city.

The scientists’ visit was the third by an expert group since the end of December as suspicion in Beijing grew that the virus was transmissible and local officials had concealed the challenges they faced containing the disease, according to an academic on the Jan 18 trip and a scientist who visited on Jan 2. Another trip took place on Jan 8.

During the Jan 18 visit, the team made several discoveries that had been previously undisclosed to the public by local officials.

Over a dozen healthcare workers had been infected, efforts to track close contacts with other confirmed cases had dwindled, and hospitals had not conducted a single test before Jan. 16, Zhong and other experts on the team announced a few days after their trip to Wuhan.

On Jan 19, the group of about a half dozen scientists returned to Beijing, where they reported their findings to the National Health Commission, which formulates China’s health policy.

The experts recommended that Wuhan be put under quarantine and that hospital capacity be rapidly expanded, according to two sources who were briefed on the discussions. Zhong himself had suggested the lockdown measures, they said. Zhong and the commission did not respond to requests for comment.

One of the sources said the proposal was initially rejected by Wuhan government officials because they feared the economic impact, but they were overruled by the central authorities.

On the evening of Jan 20, the central government set up a taskforce in Wuhan to spearhead the fight against the epidemic.

The lockdown of Wuhan had been put in motion.

Ye Qing, deputy chief of the statistics bureau in Hubei province, where Wuhan is located, said it was only when Zhong announced his findings that he began to realize the seriousness of this epidemic.

Wuhan officials, he said, reacted far too late. “If the government had sent out a notice, if they had asked everyone to wear masks, to do temperature checks, maybe a lot fewer people would have died.”

He added: “It’s a painful lesson with blood and tears.”

Later tracing of virus patients showed that people confirmed to have the virus travelled from Wuhan to at least 25 provinces, municipalities and administrative regions across China before the lockdown plan went into action.

The Wuhan government and the National Health Commission in Beijing did not respond to requests for comment.

LOCKDOWN

The ripple effects of events in Beijing were soon felt in Wuhan.

On Jan 22, senior officials in Wuhan received a written government notice telling them not to leave the city, or report their whereabouts if they had, according to two local government sources.

The directive offered no further details, but at about 8 p.m. that night, some officials received notice by telephone that the city would be shut off the next morning, the sources said.

The lockdown was publicly announced at 2 a.m., sending thousands of Wuhan residents scrambling to find a way out.

But access into and out of the city was quickly closed off, with public transportation shut down and the use of private cars banned. Residents were soon after restricted to their homes.

Having seized control of the crisis, Beijing also removed a number of key officials from Wuhan and Hubei province.

Wuhan’s mayor, Zhou Xianwang, who kept his job, made a frank admission in an interview with state media a few days later that party-reporting mechanisms had stifled early action.

“Information should have been released more quickly,” he said. The process had been slowed by officials in Wuhan being “obliged to seek permission” before fully disclosing information to the public, he said.

‘NEW NORMAL’

Almost two months after the lockdown was imposed, China has started allowing residents to leave the city, as well as permitting domestic flights and inter-city trains. Wuhan has reported just one new case in the past week, and around 93% of all cases have recovered, according to official data.

As other countries consider Wuhan-style quarantines, those numbers have come under increased scrutiny, however. U.S. President Donald Trump said last week that China’s numbers were “on the light side,” drawing the ire of Beijing.

Slideshow (2 Images)

China has also only just begun reporting data on asymptomatic cases – those in which carriers can transmit the disease without feeling symptoms - in the past week. That followed a public backlash on social media in China that the key numbers had been omitted from the official tally, raising concerns that such cases could lead to a second wave of infections.

Xue Lan, a professor at Tsinghua University who is a member of a government coronavirus task force, said precautions put in place for the lockdown – like social distancing - would likely  become a part of life in the future in China.

“From now on our social lives will enter a new normal,” Xue said.

Reporting by Cate Cadell and Yawen Chen; additional reporting was contributed by Keith Zhai in Singapore, David Kirton in Shenzhen, and Gabriel Crossley in Beijing. Editing by Philip McClellan

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2020-04-08 06:06:00Z
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Selasa, 07 April 2020

Coronavirus: highest number of deaths so far as PM spends second night in intensive care - BBC News - BBC News

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  1. Coronavirus: highest number of deaths so far as PM spends second night in intensive care - BBC News  BBC News
  2. Boris Johnson is 'stable' in ICU amid questions about who's running the UK  CNN
  3. Boris Johnson in intensive care as coronavirus symptoms worsen  CBS News
  4. Boris Johnson vs. the Coronavirus  The New York Times
  5. Seeing Boris Johnson Go Into Intensive Care With Coronavirus Should Rid Us  Newsweek
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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2020-04-07 21:37:40Z
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Boris Johnson in intensive care as coronavirus symptoms worsen - CBS News

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  1. Boris Johnson in intensive care as coronavirus symptoms worsen  CBS News
  2. Boris Johnson is 'stable' in ICU amid questions about who's running the UK  CNN
  3. Boris Johnson in intensive care with Covid-19  CNN
  4. Boris Johnson vs. the Coronavirus  The New York Times
  5. Seeing Boris Johnson Go Into Intensive Care With Coronavirus Should Rid Us  Newsweek
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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2020-04-07 19:19:27Z
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Coronavirus: U.K. jolted as PM Boris Johnson receives oxygen in intensive care - NBC News

LONDON — British Prime Minister Boris Johnson's move to intensive care has shaken the nation, a jolting reminder that the coronavirus does not discriminate whom it infects and sickens.

Johnson, 55, is not on a ventilator and doesn't have pneumonia but has needed oxygen support while in the intensive care ward, a government spokesman told reporters Tuesday.

The prime minister is conscious and in "good spirits," he said.

"We're desperately hoping that Boris can make the speediest possible recovery," Michael Gove, the Cabinet Office minister and one of Johnson's closest allies, told the BBC earlier, adding the prime minister was "receiving the very, very best care ... and our hopes and prayers are with him and with his family."

Johnson is not known to have any serious underlying health conditions but has in the past admitted struggles with his weight. In 2018, he revealed he went on a diet after reaching 230 pounds, which at Johnson's height of 5 feet, 9 inches would make him clinically obese.

Johnson chairs a Downing Street meeting by video link on March 28, a day after announcing he had COVID-19.Andrew Parsons / AFP - Getty Images

His move into intensive care was all the more shocking because officials had sought to downplay his illness in the 11 days since his infection was confirmed.

The government has insisted his cough and fever were only "mild" and strongly denied anonymous sources quoted in the press that it was more serious.

Meanwhile, Johnson posted cellphone videos from the quarantined apartment above No. 11 Downing St. where, despite looking worse for wear, he said he was continuing to work and suggested he might resume full duties Friday when his mandatory isolation was over.

But Sunday, he was rushed to the hospital after his condition worsened, and at 7 p.m. (2 p.m. ET) the following night, Johnson was moved to the critical care unit at St. Thomas' Hospital, on the opposite bank of the River Thames from the Houses of Parliament.

A No. 10 Downing Street spokesman called Johnson's hospitalization a precaution in case the prime minister needed ventilation as his symptoms had worsened.

Full coverage of the coronavirus outbreak

There has been some concern that Johnson has continued to work too hard through his illness. His former college roommate, the journalist Matthew Leeming, told NBC News the prime minister was "very absorbed in everything that he does" so while in hospital would likely find "it very difficult to switch off and relax."

As Johnson battled the virus overnight, allies and rivals sent messages of support to the first leader of a world power to become seriously ill with COVID-19.

"He's a friend of mine, he's a great gentleman and a great leader, and as you know he went to the hospital today but I'm hopeful and sure that he’s going to be fine," President Donald Trump said Monday. "He's a strong man, a strong person."

In Britain, which is weeks into a lockdown that many said Johnson waited too long to impose, the prime minister's deteriorating condition left the country grappling with unease and uncertainty — not least because of the constitutional questions about what would happen if he were to succumb.

No prime minister has died in office since Henry John Temple, third Viscount Palmerston, in 1865. And unlike the United States — where the 25th Amendment says the vice president becomes leader if anything happens to the president — the United Kingdom has no such formal line of political succession, partly because of its lack of codified constitution.

The Cabinet would choose an immediate successor, likely a temporary position until a long-term successor was chosen by the wider Conservative Party.

Raab is a former lawyer who is one of the most high-profile hard-line Brexit supporters in the ruling Conservative Party.Matt Dunham / AP

In the meantime, Johnson has asked Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab, 46, to deputize when necessary. Raab also holds the title of the first secretary of state, a de facto deputy position.

Raab said Tuesday that the cabinet had “very clear instructions” from the prime minister while he remains in hospital.

"We know exactly what he wants from us and expects from us right now," Raab said, during the government's daily televised coronavirus briefing, adding that he was "confident" the prime minister would pull through.

"If there is one thing that I know about this prime minister is he is a fighter," he added.

Asked earlier Tuesday who currently had the codes for the U.K.'s estimated 215 nuclear warheads, Gove declined to give specifics.

"There are well developed protocols which are in place," he told the BBC. "I just really cannot talk about national security issues."

The door of No. 10 Downing Street after Johnson was taken into intensive care Monday.Henry Nicholls / Reuters

Less than four months ago, Johnson rode home to the most emphatic electoral win his Conservatives have enjoyed in more than 30 years, crushing the opposition Labour Party and setting the groundwork for ambitious reforms he said would reshape the nation.

Now, with the prime minister seriously ill, Raab will chair any necessary meetings of the National Security Council, but he cannot hire and fire people and will not take weekly calls with Queen Elizabeth II as the prime minister usually does, the government spokesman said.

If Raab were to fall ill, finance minister Rishi Sunak would be next in line.

Download the NBC News app for latest updates on the coronavirus outbreak.

Later Tuesday morning, Gove revealed on Twitter that he too is self-isolating after a member of his family started displaying mild symptoms associated with the coronavirus.

Several other U.K. Cabinet ministers and advisers, as well as the heir to the British throne, Prince Charles, have recovered from confirmed or suspected cases. Johnson's pregnant fiancée, Carrie Symonds, 32, is also isolating after suffering more mild symptoms, although she has not been tested.

Even after Johnson was rushed to hospital, Raab insisted Monday his boss was "in good spirits." Many thought it telling advisers refused to divulge details of Johnson's condition, citing patient confidentiality, and Raab revealed he had not spoken with the prime minister since Saturday.

The United Kingdom has 55,242 confirmed coronavirus cases and of those hospitalized 6,159 have died, according to figures released Tuesday.

The new figures showed that 786 people who were hospitalized with the virus had died in a single day between Sunday and Monday — the highest daily death toll recorded since the beginning of the outbreak.

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2020-04-07 17:49:10Z
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China Ends Wuhan Coronavirus Lockdown, but Normal Life is a Distant Dream - The New York Times

China on Wednesday ended its lockdown of Wuhan, the city where the coronavirus first emerged and a potent symbol in a pandemic that has killed tens of thousands of people, shaken the global economy and thrown daily life into upheaval across the planet.

But the city that has reopened after more than 10 weeks is a profoundly damaged one, a place whose recovery will be watched worldwide for lessons on how populations move past pain and calamity of such staggering magnitude.

In Wuhan, sickness and death have touched hundreds of thousands of lives, imprinting them with trauma that could linger for decades. Businesses, even those that have reopened, face a wrenching road ahead, with sluggishness likely to persist. Neighborhood authorities continue to regulate people’s comings and goings, with no return to normalcy in sight.

The Chinese authorities sealed off Wuhan, an industrial hub of 11 million people, in late January, in a frantic attempt to limit the outbreak’s spread. At the time, many outsiders saw it as an extreme step, one that could be tried only in an authoritarian system like China’s. But as the epidemic has worsened, governments around the world have enacted a variety of stringent restrictions on their citizens’ movements.

Some 1.4 million infections and 80,000 deaths have been reported worldwide — figures that are rising fast, and that officials say vastly understate the true extent of the pandemic. The contagion has slowed in hard-hit countries like Italy and Spain, but it continues to spread quickly elsewhere around the globe, including in the United States, which is approaching 400,000 known infections.

News reports are filled with scenes of overflowing hospitals in New York City, uncollected bodies on streets in Ecuador, updates on the condition of Prime Minister Boris Johnson of Britain, who is hospitalized in intensive care, and expert warnings that the epidemic could be exploding, undetected, in the poorest parts of the world.

Most of Europe, India, much of the United States and many other places are under orders for businesses to close and most people to stay at home, abruptly crippling economies and throwing millions of people out of work.

The full measure of the sacrifice that such policies entail — in jobs and income lost, in lives disrupted — might first be taken in Wuhan.

Wednesday’s reopening came after only three new coronavirus cases were reported in the city in the previous three weeks, and a day after China reported no new deaths for the first time since January. Controls on outbound travel were officially lifted just after midnight in China.

People can now leave after presenting to the authorities a government-sanctioned phone app that indicates — based on their home addresses, recent travels and medical histories — whether they are contagion risks.

Footage from state-run news outlets early Wednesday showed a rush of cars traveling through toll stations on the outskirts of Wuhan immediately after the restrictions were lifted.

China’s national rail operator estimated that more than 55,000 people would leave Wuhan by train on Wednesday, according to a state-run broadcaster.

Within the city, however, tough rules on individuals and businesses are still in place to prevent the virus from regaining a foothold. Officials continue to urge everyone to stay at home as much as possible. Schools are still closed.

Many people in Wuhan do not need to be told to keep isolating themselves, to say nothing about leaving the city. The experience of death and near-death has left psychic wounds. Of mainland China’s more than 80,000 reported cases of the virus, nearly two-thirds have been in Wuhan.

“Wuhan people experienced it firsthand,” said Yan Hui, a Wuhan native and sales executive in her 50s who recovered from the coronavirus. “Their friends got sick. Their friends and friends’ relatives died. Right before their eyes, one by one, they left us.”

“Their understanding of this disaster is deeper compared to people in other cities,” she said.

Wuhan is already not the same metropolis where, not so long ago, the passage of time seemed to have ground to a halt.

In recent days, more shops have reopened, often setting up street-front counters so that customers can buy vegetables, alcohol, cigarettes and other goods without entering. In parks along the Yangtze River, growing numbers of families have ventured out to take in the sunshine and fresh air.

Older residents have started congregating again in small groups to chat or play rounds of Chinese chess. Children are a rarer sight, and always appear to be under the wary watch of parents.

Public buses and the subway system have restarted, although they often seem to have few passengers.

Mountains of cardboard boxes have sprouted up outside apartment complexes as online shopping picks up. According to JD.com, an e-retailer, delivery orders in Hubei Province, of which Wuhan is the capital, increased threefold in March compared with February.

And more people are treating themselves, the company said: They have shifted from buying daily necessities and home fitness equipment to buying clothing, cosmetics and travel accessories.

Companies in Wuhan have been cautiously calling their employees back to work, contributing to the revival of city life.

Across Wuhan, nearly 94 percent of businesses — almost 11,000 of them in total — have resumed operations, said Hu Yabo, the city’s deputy mayor, at a recent news briefing. For major industrial enterprises, the rate exceeded 97 percent. For service companies, it was 93 percent.

It is unclear how much business they are actually doing, however. At industrial companies in Wuhan, only 60 percent of employees are on the job, and electricity consumption is one-fifth less than what it was this time last year, said Dang Zhen, another city official, at the same briefing.

Honda’s local venture is back to producing at full capacity, Mr. Hu said. Huawei, the Chinese tech giant, said on social media that employees at its Wuhan research center were eagerly returning to work “as a fresh wave of positivity pulsates around the building.”

Yet gloom about the local economy remains widespread. Much of China’s factory sector is suffering as the pandemic dampens overseas demand for exports. As businesses pull back their spending on equipment and offices, the effects will ripple through the rest of the economy.

During the whole of February, when the epidemic was at its peak in China, not a single residential real-estate deal was made in Wuhan, neither for new properties nor for ones already built, according to government statistics.

Helen Ding, 47, works at an architectural design company in the city. While her firm’s existing projects are mostly large enough that they cannot be easily canceled, her bosses are concerned about future business and future clients.

“The whole world is in a bad state, and as far as the future goes, nobody has much confidence,” Ms. Ding said.

For many small businesses, the loss of income could lead to further trouble. Short on cash, companies that have laid off workers may not be able to rehire them right away. Others worry about backed-up inventories of unsold goods, maintenance costs for equipment and customs disputes as the pandemic continues to snarl commerce around the world.

This month, a large group of restaurateurs in Wuhan wrote a letter to the city government pleading for rent relief, subsidized loans and wage support. The epidemic, they said, had been a “total disaster” for the industry.

At the height of the epidemic, Liu Dongzhou thought about giving up on his company, which makes fish balls, shredded chicken, and other frozen and processed foods. Now, he hopes to restart operations next week — but expects to lay off a fifth of his 80 employees.

Mr. Liu, 45, has heard much talk of government policies to help small enterprises. But he does not think any will be available to him in the short term.

Even if the authorities are allowing people to leave Wuhan, Mr. Liu said his own neighborhood had recently tightened its restrictions on residents’ movements. Wednesday does not feel like much of a milestone.

“To an ordinary person, if you lift or don’t lift the lockdown, there isn’t that big of a difference,” he said.

Ms. Yan, the sales executive, works in Wuhan for a unit of General Electric. Her bosses are wary of bringing too many employees back to work, fearing contagion.

“They’ll grit their teeth and carry on,” she said. “It’s such a big company, after all.”

Gritting one’s teeth and carrying on has characterized much about life in Wuhan these past months.

In February, Ms. Yan spent 15 days fighting the virus in Huoshenshan, one of the city’s newly built coronavirus hospitals. After the outbreak began, she stockpiled food in her apartment. When she got home from the hospital, all of it had gone bad.

She remains on sick leave, helping with company business when she can, but mostly resting at home. She has not seen her parents in two months, even though they live in the apartment complex next to hers.

An experience like that changes things, and for Ms. Yan it has reshuffled her priorities: Health and family first. Work, career, success — all of that second.

She has long talked about adjusting her life in that way. “But I never actually did it.”

The ordeal has also helped her see her home city in a new light.

The grass looks greener, the trees more luxuriant. There even seem to be more little songbirds in the garden outside her apartment.

“Before this epidemic, Wuhan was a city with a lot of vitality,” Ms. Yan said. “Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen are already economically mature. But Wuhan has just gotten started.”

Wang Yiwei and Coral Yang contributed research.

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2020-04-07 17:03:05Z
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Global Coronavirus Death Toll Passes 76,000 as Lockdowns Tighten - The Wall Street Journal

People wearing hazmat suits walk along a street Tuesday in Wuhan, China, where the coronavirus became widespread last year.

Photo: noel celis/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

Hospitals across the U.S. braced for a surge in new patients Tuesday after the coronavirus death toll in America surpassed 10,000, while some Asian leaders called for extended lockdowns to fight the pandemic and European countries with falling infection rates began easing their restrictions.

The Latest on the Coronavirus

  • Johns Hopkins: confirmed cases of infection rise to more than 1.36 million; death toll nears 76,373,
  • Johns Hopkins: U.S. had more than 368,000 confirmed cases and nearly 11,000 deaths
  • Boris Johnson remains in intensive care

Confirmed infections in the U.S. were more than double that of any other nation, at more than 368,000, according to data Monday from Johns Hopkins University. In the 24 hours ending 8 p.m. on Monday, 1,164 people died from the Covid-19 respiratory disease caused by the virus, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis of Johns Hopkins University data—roughly even with the prior four days’ death counts.

Health officials have worked to increase hospital capacity—turning arenas into temporary wards and seeking to reopen shutdown hospitals. They have also sought to fill in gaps of much-needed medical equipment; California, Washington and Oregon have said they would loan ventilators to other states.

Even as other parts of America and the world redoubled efforts to keep people from leaving their homes, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled late Monday that voting in Wisconsin would proceed as scheduled on Tuesday. The court, in a 5-4 vote, overturned lower court orders extending by six days the deadline for mailing absentee ballots.

In the U.K., which is bracing for the outbreak to reach its crescendo, Prime Minister Boris Johnson remained in intensive care Tuesday, struggling with severe symptoms of the virus. A government spokesman said Mr. Johnson, 55, was in a stable condition and breathing without the help of a ventilator but receiving oxygen. Mr. Johnson was in isolation for 10 days before being admitted to a London hospital Sunday night. He has delegated his duties to Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab.

Globally, the number of confirmed cases of Covid-19 rose to more than 1.36 million across 184 countries and regions on Tuesday, while deaths topped 76,373, according to Johns Hopkins.

Wuhan, the Chinese the city where the virus was first detected, prepared to lift its travel ban at midnight on Tuesday, marking the end of more than two months of a complete lockdown covering about 11 million people. China said it had its first day since Jan. 20 with no deaths from Covid-19.

Many nations were still laboring to control the spread of infection.

For many people around the world, coronavirus lockdowns and social-distancing measures mean financial hardship. As some are growing desperate, WSJ reporters explain how governments are addressing the risks of social unrest. Photo: Daniel Irungu/Shutterstock

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Tuesday issued an order for a monthlong state of emergency covering Tokyo, Osaka and five prefectures. People were asked to stay at home unless absolutely necessary and all public gatherings will be suspended for about a month. Mr. Abe said the move was necessary because infections were increasing rapidly and hospitals were facing a crisis.

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte on Tuesday approved the extension of a community quarantine across the island of Luzon to April 30. In India, a top local official on Tuesday called for the national government to extend the country’s nationwide lockdown, which is currently due to end on April 15.

In Europe, some countries that credit strict containment measures with helping to curb the contagion began taking steps to reopen their societies after a month of lockdown.

Pedestrians watch a live broadcast of a news conference by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Tuesday.

Photo: Eugene Hoshiko/Associated Press

The Czech Republic began relaxing coronavirus restrictions on Tuesday, citing a daily case count that has flattened over the past two weeks.

Closed shops are allowed to reopen, provided they set up hand washing stations and let in only a few customers at a time. Tennis and other noncontact sports will be permitted. Next week, Czechs will be allowed to leave the country for business or medical travel or to see family members, ending a month-old border closure. Schools will reopen on May 15, provided the coronavirus case count remains manageable.

Face masks will remain mandatory for all Czechs going out in public. And the relaxed restrictions come with stepped-up testing and the use of mobile phone data to track people who may have been exposed to the virus.

In Denmark, which imposed one of Europe’s earliest and strictest lockdowns, Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said her government would allow a “cautious, gradual and controlled reopening” of society starting next week.

Danish kindergartens and primary schools will reopen for children in good health on April 15 and for older students on May 10. The government will speak to private employers about allowing some people to return to workplaces next week while staggering their working hours, the prime minister said. Bars, restaurants and leisure facilities will stay shut and stay-home orders for noncritical public servants will continue until May 10.

Ms. Frederiksen said the opening would proceed as long as people follow social-distancing guidelines, which remain in force, and guided by stepped-up testing and surveillance.

Austria will start easing its lockdown next Tuesday, accompanied by a government mandate to wear face masks in all shops and on public transport, Prime Minister Sebastian Kurz said. Shops smaller than 400 square meters (about 4,300 square feet) that had been ordered shut will be allowed to reopen next week, followed by other businesses on May 1.

Italy, Spain and France, Europe’s worst-hit countries, remain locked down. French health authorities said Monday that 605 patients had died of Covid-19 in the previous 24 hours, the highest daily total yet. Although the daily toll of confirmed new infections and deaths has been slowing this month in Spain, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said he would ask parliament to extend the country’s lockdown to April 25.

Iran’s parliament convened on Tuesday for the first time in two months and voted down a bill to quarantine parts of the country, arguing that it would cause further harm to the economy. Some factories closed in the country’s lockdown reopened this week and President Hassan Rouhani said some other businesses will be allowed t do so starting this weekend. 

Iran’s daily rate of infections and deaths have flattened over the past two weeks, but Mr. Rouhani’s critics have warned that reopening the country too soon risks a second wave of infections that would overwhelm the health system.

China has reported a leveling off of its infection numbers since late February but has mostly kept strict controls in place around Wuhan, including a ban on traveling outside the city.

Chinese state media reported that around 276 trains will leave Wuhan, heading for Shanghai, Shenzhen, Chengdu, Fuzhou and Nanning on Wednesday. Based on the ticket sales for Tuesday, an estimated 55,000 passengers will be leaving the city, with about 40% of them heading toward the Pearl River Delta region in southern China.

China first sealed Wuhan off on Jan. 23, followed by most other cities and towns in Hubei province, cutting off all transportation to and from the area and restricting movements inside the city. Travel bans in Hubei province were relaxed on March 25, and last week, shopping malls in Wuhan were reopened.

Chinese state broadcaster CCTV reported Tuesday that more people have been seen on Wuhan’s streets and shops are beginning to reopen for business. But the state-owned newspaper People’s Daily warned that while Wuhan will end its controls on outbound traffic, people shouldn’t relax nor let their guards down. 

“This day is not the final victory day. We need to remind ourselves that while the restrictions on Wuhan have been lifted, we can be pleased but we cannot relax,” it said.

  1. confirmed cases in the U.S.
  2. total deaths in the U.S.
Source: Johns Hopkins Center for Systems Science and Engineering

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Write to Chong Koh Ping at chong.kohping@wsj.com and Drew Hinshaw at drew.hinshaw@wsj.com

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2020-04-07 16:31:43Z
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Boris Johnson in intensive care sparks leadership questions at heart of Britain during coronavirus crisis - Fox News

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U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s move to intensive care on Monday is raising fears about a potential paralysis at the heart of British government in the middle of a national crisis -- particularly as the British system has no clearly defined line of succession in place if a prime minister should become incapacitated.

Johnson was moved to intensive care on Monday after being admitted to a hospital on Sunday because of worsening coronavirus symptoms. Downing Street said Tuesday that Johnson is “in good spirits,” is conscious and is not on a ventilator.

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Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab has been deputized "where necessary" in Johnson’s absence and will be conducting daily cabinet meetings as the government’s response to the crisis continues.

As foreign secretary, Raab is formally the First Secretary of State, which gives him a certain superiority over other cabinet members, and therefore a natural pick for a successor in case of an emergency.

The Daily Telegraph reported that Downing Street foresaw a possible constitutional dilemma and started drawing up a "designated successor" plan with Raab picked as first successor.

WHO IS DOMINIC RAAB?

According to the Telegraph, Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak would be next in line if Raab was taken ill. That is not a far-fetched proposition given the rapid spread of the virus. Health Secretary Matt Hancock tested positive for the virus last month and Cabinet Minister Michael Gove is currently self-isolating after a family member tested positive for it.

Should Johnson be incapacitated for a longer time or permanently, it would likely eventually see a new leadership election in the governing Conservative Party, and whoever won that would take over permanently as prime minister.

This is what normally happens when a prime minister resigns. Johnson took over 10 Downing Street from Theresa May last year after a six-week leadership election following her resignation. May had also taken the keys to Number 10 after winning a leadership election following the resignation of then-Prime Minister David Cameron in 2016.

But it is not clear to what extent, if at all, a prime minister’s death would change that dynamic, especially during an unprecedented crisis like the coronavirus -- which has locked down much of British life.

BORIS JOHNSON GIVES OXYGEN BUT NOT ON A VENTILATOR AFTER CORONAVIRUS-STRICKEN PM MOVED TO INTENSIVE CARE 

There is little past precedent to go on. The last party leader to die in office was Labour Party leader John Smith, who died suddenly of a heart attack in 1994. But he was in opposition, not prime minister, and that allowed a full leadership race to go ahead.

The last prime minister to die in office was Lord Palmerston in 1865. He was succeeded by then-Foreign Secretary Lord John Russell.

More recently, Prime Minister Winston Churchill suffered a stroke in the 1950s, while Prime Minister Tony Blair was briefly hospitalized for heart surgery in 2004 -- but neither handed over their powers, even temporarily.

CORONAVIRUS: WHO IS BRITISH FOREIGN SECRETARY DOMINIC RAAB?

With Raab deputized, it is not entirely clear to what extent he holds the powers of the prime minister. Unlike in the U.S., Britain has an unwritten constitution, and therefore while there is guidance in documents such as the Cabinet Manual -- it is not always explicitly set out what must happen in extreme circumstances. Additionally, the British head of state is Queen Elizabeth II and not the prime minister.

That uncertainty means therefore that Raab’s role could have some limits. With Johnson conscious, it is not clear how much of his job has been deputized to Raab. Raab can make recommendations to Her Majesty on appointments to the senior judiciary and elsewhere according to the BBC, but may fall short of being able to reshuffle the Cabinet, although he may have the power to do so.

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Less clear would be what to do about the so-called letters of last resort written for nuclear submarines in the case of a serious attack. Those and other military-related decisions would likely be taken in consultation with other Cabinet ministers.

But in the meantime, Raab is likely to postpone making major decisions as long as possible, such as the lifting of the national lockdown, until a hopeful return to power soon by Johnson.

"Government will always continue. The people are there, the support's there,” Speaker of the House of Commons Lindsay Hoyle told the BBC on Tuesday. “Whatever happens, no matter how bad it is, the country continues, government continues.”

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2020-04-07 14:27:08Z
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