by Helen Roxburgh

Millions of people in China were returning to work Monday after an extended holiday designed to slow the spread of the new coronavirus, which has killed more than 900 people in the country.

At least 40,000 people in China have now been infected by the virus, believed to have emerged late last year in Hubei province’s capital Wuhan.

And although the World Health Organisation (WHO) has said there are tentative signs the epidemic is stabilising in China, the agency’s director general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, warned that the number of cases recorded overseas could be just “the tip of the iceberg”.

His comments came as an advance team of WHO international experts left late Sunday for China, led by Bruce Aylward, a veteran of previous health emergencies.

In an attempt to contain the virus, cities in Hubei have been locked down and transport routes across the country cut to stop the movement of hundreds of millions of people who usually visit family during the annual Lunar New Year holiday.

The unprecedented measures included an extension of the holiday, with citizens told to stay inside as much as possible.

Officially the holiday was extended by only three days, but many cities and provinces pushed the deadline until February 10.

The measures have left businesses, shops, factories and tourist sites closed and turned many cities into ghost towns, sparking concerns about the impact of the outbreak on the economy.

But there were some signs Monday of the country beginning to make a return to normality.

Roads in Beijing and Shanghai had significantly more traffic than in recent days and the southern city of Guangzhou said it would start to resume normal public transport from Monday.

The city had been running a partial service due to the epidemic, said city authorities — who reminded people to continue avoiding crowded places.

Work, interrupted

However, tens of millions of people in Hubei province were not returning to work, as the province — the epicentre of the outbreak — remained under lockdown with travel links cut off.

Many companies were offering staff the option of working from home.

Car manufacturer Volkswagen said while some of its factories would re-open on Monday, others had delayed production for another week. Toyota has extended the closure of its Chinese plants to February 16.

Many factories involved in manufacturing medical equipment had already returned to work.

According to the National Development and Reform Commission, around 87 percent of the country’s medical mask production had already resumed.

China’s central bank said it would make 300 billion yuan ($43 billion) available in special loans to banks from Monday to help businesses involved in fighting the epidemic.

But the tourism industry remains in the doldrums, with several countries banning arrivals from China, major airlines suspending flights and international and domestic tour groups being halted.

Schools and universities across the country remained closed.

‘Tip of the iceberg’

The death toll from the novel coronavirus has overtaken global fatalities in the 2002-03 SARS epidemic.

China drew international condemnation for covering up cases during the SARS outbreak, but the WHO has praised the measures Beijing has taken this time.

However, the health body has warned that the figures could still “shoot up”.

Ian Lipkin — a professor at Columbia University who worked with China on the SARS outbreak — also warned of the risk of a “bump” in infection cases when people return to work.

WHO chief Tedros said there had been some “concerning instances” of cases overseas in people with no travel history to China.

“The detection of a small number of cases may indicate more widespread transmission in other countries; in short, we may only be seeing the tip of the iceberg”, he tweeted.

Meanwhile in Hong Kong, thousands of people stranded aboard the World Dream cruise ship for five days were allowed to disembark Sunday after its 1,800 crew tested negative for the new coronavirus.

The ship carried three Chinese passengers to Vietnam between January 19 and 24 who were later found to be infected with the SARS-like coronavirus.

Health authorities in the semi-autonomous Asian financial hub said the crew and a similar number of passengers had been released from quarantine.

– AFP

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

Iraqi reporter seriously wounded day after activist’s killing sparks protests

An Iraqi journalist was in intensive care after being shot in the…

新加坡保安协会质疑评估制 吁当局改善现有评估标准

新加坡保安协会发表措辞强烈声明,对政府最新的保安机构评估结果持质疑态度,认为当局有必要改善评估标准和方法。 该协会代表国内180个保安机构。协会执行董事依山(Ikhsan)认为,评估结果获得A级与B级的保安机构,都和去年相仿,可能给予外界印象,认为他们并没有进步。 保安协会认为,现有制度根据钟形曲线(bell curve)评级,但尽管总得分95以上的机构有增长三分之一,惟仅63家机构能获得A评级。 针对上述协会的声明,内政部则在昨日傍晚回应,指评估制一项透明,所有保安机构都清楚,再者更改评估制也有是咨询过业界,且事先知会各机构。 自从2009年推行以来,该评估制协助提升保安业的专业和水准;大部分业者都维持和提升评估表现,至于连年表现欠佳者责备吊销执照。 政府在去年起调整保安业分级制评估标准,旨在针对这些保安机构表现,进行独立的年度评估。这些评估类别分为:程序(35巴仙)、人员(22巴仙)、系统与科技(20巴仙)、雇佣制度(15巴仙)以及反恐(8巴仙)。 评级具商业意义  客户货比三家 今年共有235家保安机构参与评估,多达63家获得A级(26.81巴仙)、105家获B评级(44.68巴仙)以及64家得到C评级。仅3家保安机构获得D级。 依山也补充,评级对于保安机构具有商业意义,客户会根据评级货比三家。 保安员的处境…

No rational basis for revocation of approval, says Han Hui Hui’s lawyer

By Andrew Loh There is no rational basis for the revocation of…

Health Minister “不三不四”? (Neither here nor there)

by Leong Sze Hian On 29 January, the Ministry of Health (MOH)…