Senin, 27 Juli 2020

80,000 people will be evacuated from Vietnamese city after THREE cases of Covid-19 were recorded - Daily Mail

80,000 people will be evacuated from Vietnamese city after THREE cases of Covid-19 were recorded at the weekend

  • The evacuation of mostly local tourists from Danang will take at least four days 
  • Domestic airlines will operate 100 flights daily out to 11 other Vietnamese cities 
  • Vietnam kept its total tally of reported infections to just 420, with no deaths

Vietnam is evacuating 80,000 people from the central tourism hot spot of Danang after three residents tested positive for coronavirus at the weekend.

The Southeast Asian country is back on high alert after the government on Saturday confirmed its first community infections since April, and another three cases on Sunday, all in or around Danang.

The evacuation of mostly local tourists will take at least four days with domestic airlines operating approximately 100 flights daily from Danang to 11 Vietnamese cities.

Vietnam is evacuating 80,000 people from the central tourism hot spot of Danang after three residents tested positive for the coronavirus. Pictured: people wearing face masks in Hanoi

Vietnam is evacuating 80,000 people from the central tourism hot spot of Danang after three residents tested positive for the coronavirus. Pictured: people wearing face masks in Hanoi

Vietnam has imposed strict quarantine measures and carried out an aggressive and widespread testing programme during the pandemic, keeping its total tally of reported infections to just 420, with no deaths.

Vietnam is still closed to foreign tourism, but there had been a surge in domestic travellers looking to take advantage of discounted flights and holiday packages to local hotels and resorts.

The evacuation of mostly local tourists will take at least four days. Pictured are people in Hanoi wearing masks

The evacuation of mostly local tourists will take at least four days. Pictured are people in Hanoi wearing masks

A girl wearing face mask waits at a bus station in Hanoi, Vietnam, yesterday as the country is back on high alert

A girl wearing face mask waits at a bus station in Hanoi, Vietnam, yesterday as the country is back on high alert 

Those returning from Danang to other parts of the country would be required to quarantine at home for 14 days, the health ministry said.

Following the discovery of the new cases, Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc ordered police to step up a crackdown on illegal immigration to the country.

State media on Sunday said police in Danang had arrested a 42-year-old Chinese man it said was the head of a criminal group which helps people illegally enter Vietnam from China.

Authorities have not officially linked the new cases in Danang to illegal immigration.

The government said in a separate statement on Monday that authorities in Ha Giang province, which borders China, had caught more than 1,500 people illegally crossing into the province since May.

Most of those caught were Vietnamese citizens, the statement said, and were quarantined.  

Scottish pilot who was Vietnam's most critically ill patient gives virus warning  

A Scottish pilot who was Vietnam's most critically ill Covid-19 patient has warned others not to be 'blase' about the risks of the virus.

Stephen Cameron was working for national carrier Vietnam Airlines when he tested positive for the coronavirus in March and went on to become seriously ill, spending 65 days on life support.

The 42-year-old, who became something of a media sensation in Vietnam as one of the country's earliest and most critically ill patients, said the response of the country had been 'mind-blowing'.

Speaking to BBC News, Mr Cameron, from Motherwell, North Lanarkshire, said the effects of Covid-19 should not be under-estimated.

Stephen Cameron (pictured) was working for national carrier Vietnam Airlines when he tested positive for the coronavirus in March and went on to become seriously ill, spending 65 days on life support

Stephen Cameron (pictured) was working for national carrier Vietnam Airlines when he tested positive for the coronavirus in March and went on to become seriously ill, spending 65 days on life support

He added: 'I'm a living example of what this virus can do and it is serious.

'People might grumble about having to put on gloves or social distancing two metres apart ... but I contracted it and I was under for 10 weeks on life support.

'People can't be blase about this until we have eradicated it.'

Mr Cameron said he was unsure if he would be able to walk again when he came round and was told that at one point he had only a 10 per cent chance of survival.

He added: 'When I first woke up I thought was I paralysed? I didn't know if I was paralysed for life, because I couldn't feel my feet.'

Mr Cameron said he thought it was 'just incredible' that he gained such a following in the south-east Asian country.

He said: 'The vast majority of the country knew about 'Patient 91', which was my moniker.

'On the equivalent of the 10 o'clock news they had somebody with my X-rays, my CT scans, my stats and actually talking through them in maybe a five-minute segment.

'I mean, that is a bit mind-blowing, if you think about it.'

He added: 'When I left the hospital, there were people already queuing up at 8.30am to see me away, which I thought was just incredible.

'When we went through the lobby it must have been about 10-deep with people, everybody had their phones out.'

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2020-07-27 07:24:32Z
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