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WHO travel warning as Sars death
toll mounts
Beijing - The
World Health Organisation today warned against travel to Toronto,
Beijing and China's Shanxi province as the death toll from Sars
continued to climb. The warning was echoed by the British government,
which has advised Britons not to travel to Toronto, Hong Kong and
three Chinese provinces: Guangdong, Beijing and Shanxi.
A Department of Health statement
said: "Defer travel to areas where there is, or is thought to be,
ongoing transmission of infection. The UK public is strongly advised
not to travel to these areas."
Officials in Canada confirmed
Toronto's 15th death from severe acute respiratory syndrome, a
flu-like disease that, so far, has been largely confined to Asia. The
Ontario health ministry said that a 64-year-old man believed to have
been suffering from Sars died in hospital yesterday.
Canada reported 324 probable or
suspected cases of Sars as of late Monday.
Officials in the Chinese capital,
Beijing, struggling to contain a recent jump in the number of Sars
cases, today announced that they will shut down public schools for two
weeks to prevent students from spreading the disease.
The school closures begin tomorrow,
and will affect 1.7 million students in a city in which Sars has
already killed 35 people. An official of the Beijing municipal
education commission said that tests for primary, junior high and high
school students were postponed indefinitely.
The Beijing Morning News said that
students with Internet access would receive lessons at home, and
teachers would be required to come to work to supervise their studies.
China released the latest figures for
the disease today, reporting that another 147 people had contracted
Sars and nine had died. The vast majority of the new cases were in
Beijing. The health ministry said that the total number of Sars
infections in mainland China rose to 2,305, while the number of deaths
rose to 106.
In Shanghai, officials announced that
they will shut down a popular car show tomorrow, three days earlier
than planned, as a public health measure.
The show's organisers said in a
statement: "Now is a crucial period in preventing Sars. The
government has decided to safeguard people's health and close the show
early." There have been 10 suspected cases of Sars in Shanghai,
and two confirmed cases.
More than 4,000 people worldwide are
believed to have contracted Sars, with the majority of cases and
deaths in mainland China and Hong Kong. The WHO has already warned
against travel to Hong Kong and the southern Chinese province of
Guangdong.
Officials in Hong Kong said today
that the Sars death toll rose to 105 as the flu-like disease claimed
six more lives. Another 24 people were reported to be infected,
bringing the total number of cases in Hong Kong to 1,458.
The WHO said today that it plans to
investigate claims in a Hong Kong government report that Sars has
spread by sewage leaks, personal contact, or even through cockroaches
and rats.
It issued a warning against
travelling to Hong Kong after a disturbingly virulent outbreak in an
apartment complex, the Amoy Gardens. More than 300 residents were
infected, and 14 died.
WHO officials want a "complete
and satisfactory understanding" of what happened at Amoy Gardens,
as well as evidence that a repeat is unlikely, before the travel
advisory is lifted, spokesman Peter Cordingley said from the agency's
regional office in Manila.
The Geneva-based WHO also needs to
see Hong Kong's daily infection numbers coming down, Mr Cordingley
said.
Hong Kong government officials say
that numbers are already dropping steadily, though the daily tally
remains in the double digits. The economic effect of the disease on
Hong Kong has been devastating. -- Guardian News
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