Researchers
say the virus that was first identified in China is now spreading freely in
four regions, has reached every continent but Antarctica, and its advance seems
unavoidable. “I think it’s pretty clear we’re in a pandemic and I don’t know
why WHO is resisting that,” said Michael Osterholm, director of the Centre for
Infectious Disease Research and Policy at Minnesota University. Devi Sridhar, a
professor of global public health at Edinburgh University, agreed. This
outbreak meets all the definitions for a pandemic, she said.
Italy set
to quarantine whole of Lombardy due to coronavirus
Government’s
draft decree would impose fines on anyone caught entering or leaving northern
region
Lorenzo
Tondo in Palermo
@lorenzo_tondo
Sat 7 Mar
2020 20.57 GMTLast modified on Sat 7 Mar 2020 22.59 GMT
The Italian
government is to lockdown the northern region of Lombardy, as it battles to
contain the spread of the coronavirus. A draft decree would extend the
quarantined areas, so-called “red-zones”, ordering people not to enter or leave
the region.
The country
is grappling to contain Europe’s worst outbreak of Covid-19, which has claimed
233 lives and infected a total of 5,883 people.
Italian
authorities announced that a new decree containing draconian measures would be
approved later on Saturday. It will include the power to impose fines on anyone
caught entering or leaving Lombardy, the worst-affected region, until 3 April.
People may be allowed in and out for serious reasons. The decree provides for
banning all public events, closing cinemas, theatres, gyms, discos and pubs.
Religious ceremonies such as funerals and weddings will also be banned.
Rome is
also considering prolonging the closure of schools across the country until 3
April, while major sporting events, such as Serie A football games, will be
played behind closed doors.
The number
of coronavirus cases in Italy leapt by more than 1,200 in a 24-hour period, the
civil protection agency said on Saturday. It is the biggest daily rise since
the outbreak began two weeks ago.
The number
of cases in the country rose to 5,883 on Saturday from 4,636 announced on
Friday, with the spread showing little sign of slowing. In total there are now
5,061 cases, not including those who have died or recovered.
The
northern regions of Lombardy, Emilia-Romagna and Veneto are the hardest hit,
representing 85% of cases and 92% of recorded deaths.
“We will
win this battle if our citizens adopt a responsible attitude and change their
way of living,” the head of Italy’s civil protection agency, Angelo Borrelli,
told a press conference.
The
outbreak is severely damaging the Italian economy, with warnings that the
tourism sector alone could experience €7.4bn (£6.4bn) of losses during this
trimester.
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