Sabtu, 07 Maret 2020

China May Be Beating the Coronavirus, at a Painful Cost - The New York Times

BEIJING — As the new coronavirus races around the world, tanking markets, cutting off global travel and suspending school for hundreds of millions of children, governments are desperate for ways to contain it.

China, the place where it first appeared, says it has the answers.

To the surprise of some, the country that concealed and mismanaged the initial outbreak appears to be bringing it under control, at least by its own official figures. The number of new cases reported has fallen dramatically in recent days even as infections are surging in other countries. The World Health Organization has praised Beijing’s response.

Officials reported only 99 new cases on Saturday, down from around 2,000 a day just weeks ago, and for the second day in a row, none were detected in Hubei Province outside of its capital, Wuhan, the center of the outbreak.

China says the trend proves that its containment measures — which include a lockdown on nearly 60 million people in Hubei and strict quarantine and travel restrictions for hundreds of millions of citizens and foreigners — are working. And it has begun trying to promote its efforts as successful in propaganda at home and abroad.

The rest of the world, much of it fearfully confronting its first cases, has taken note. But there is also concern that China’s numbers may be flawed and incomplete. The real test will be whether the virus flares again when children return to classrooms and workers to factories, and commuters start taking buses and subways.

China’s blunt force strategy poses deeper questions for other countries. Its campaign has come at great cost to people’s livelihoods and personal liberties. Even countries that could copy China still have to ask whether the cure is worse than the disease.

“I think they did an amazing job of knocking the virus down,” said Michael T. Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota. “But I don’t know if it’s sustainable. What have the Chinese really accomplished? Have they really contained the virus? Or have they just suppressed it?”

Elsewhere, Italy, South Korea and Iran are struggling to control the spread of the virus. In the United States, where there are now more than 300 confirmed cases, the government has been criticized for fumbling its rollout of test kits and allowing the virus to spread in vulnerable communities like a nursing home in Seattle. The outbreak now threatens global growth and is intensifying a backlash against immigration and globalization.

Countries studying China’s approach would need to consider how it has upended nearly every corner of Chinese society.

The economy has ground to a near standstill, and many small businesses say they may soon run out of cash. Patients with critical illnesses are struggling to find timely care, and some have died. Hundreds of millions of people have been placed in some form of isolation. As of Friday, about 827,000 people remained under quarantine in Beijing, according to the state-run China Daily newspaper.

“I have been worried about all the focus on just controlling the virus,” said Dr. Jennifer Nuzzo, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. She recommended a more measured response, such as that taken by the governments in Hong Kong and Singapore. Officials there enacted targeted quarantines but did not shut down workplaces altogether, allowing their respective economies to continue operating while so far successfully containing the virus.

“We have to take a broad view of the impact on society,” Dr. Nuzzo said, “and do a better accounting for the social tolls of these measures that is not just focused on the numbers.”

For China, the numbers are key.

The number of cases reported on Saturday was a substantial decline from two and a half weeks ago, when China was recording around 2,000 new infections and as many as 100 deaths a day. Twenty-eight new deaths were reported on Saturday, all in Hubei.

By comparison, Italy reported 49 deaths from the virus on Friday.

Outside of Wuhan, the spread has effectively stopped, according to the official figures. All but one of the 99 new cases reported on Saturday were in Wuhan or were people who had traveled to China from abroad.

The World Health Organization says China’s containment measures may have saved hundreds of thousands of people from infection. Its efforts show that uncontrolled spread of the virus “is not a one-way street,” Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the group’s director general, said on Thursday.

“This epidemic can be pushed back,” Dr. Tedros said, “but only with a collective, coordinated and comprehensive approach that engages the entire machinery of government.”

W.H.O. experts sent to China have also highlighted clinics that could diagnose hundreds of cases a day with CT scans and laboratory tests, and the mass isolation centers in stadiums in Wuhan that separated people who had mild infections from their families.

“There’s no question that China’s bold approach to the rapid spread of this new respiratory pathogen has changed the course of what was a rapidly escalating and continues to be a deadly epidemic,” Dr. Bruce Aylward, the leader of the W.H.O. team that visited China, told reporters in Beijing late last month.

The numbers suggest that aggressive quarantine measures, when fully enforced, could choke the spread of the virus, said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University.

“This is the largest public health experiment in the history of humankind,” Dr. Schaffner said. “They can’t turn it off, but they did turn it down. And it did provide the rest of the world with some extra time.”

Still, the total number of infections in China, at more than 80,000, is staggering. And there are reasons to doubt the official figures.

In the early days of the outbreak, a shortage of test kits and hospital beds meant that many were not able to get tested. Many mild infections are likely going undetected. The government has changed how it counts cases several times in recent weeks, prompting large fluctuations in the reported figures, though experts say such adjustments are not unusual.

Medical experts say that there have been few signs that the government has aggressively tested for the coronavirus outside of medical facilities in Hubei. Until they broaden the scope of testing, experts say, it will be impossible to determine the true extent of the epidemic because those who have mild infections might not see a doctor.

“At the moment we are focused on the tip of the iceberg,” said David Hui, the director of the Stanley Ho Center for Emerging Infectious Diseases at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

The ruling Communist Party hails the slowdown of the outbreak as a sign of the superiority of its authoritarian, top-down political system that gives officials nearly unchecked power. But its heavy-handed measures are testing the patience of its citizens, many of whom think such a clampdown could have been avoided if officials had not first hid the scale of the outbreak and silenced whistle-blowers.

The impact of the restrictions has been felt most acutely in Hubei, where 56 million people have been effectively penned in since January. For more than five weeks, the typically bustling hub of universities, commerce and transportation has been transformed into a collection of ghost towns as the virus has ravaged communities, ensnared entire families and infected thousands of medical workers.

China’s experience combating the virus has also highlighted the risk of family transmission if hospitals run out of beds and testing kits, as they did in Wuhan, where for weeks, many who were sick were sent home and infected their relatives.

Roadblocks have sealed off cities, public transportation has been shut down and private cars have been mostly banned from the roads. In Wuhan, restrictions on individual movement have been stepped up in recent weeks, with residents now mostly barred from leaving their homes.

Among residents in Hubei, there are signs that anger and frustration are mounting. Chinese social media sites are flooded with posts from residents saying they have lost their jobs because of the extended lockdown, making it difficult to make payments on mortgages and loans. Others have described food shortages in their communities.

On Thursday, in a rare public rebuke of the government, disgruntled people in a residential community in Wuhan heckled high-level officials as they walked through the neighborhood on an inspection.

“Fake! Everything is fake!” shouted one resident at the delegation, which included Sun Chunlan, a vice premier leading the central government’s response to the outbreak.

The state-run People’s Daily newspaper later said that the accusations were aimed at local neighborhood officials who had “faked” delivery of vegetables and meat to residents. Ms. Sun ordered an immediate investigation into the issue.

Wang Zhonglin, the party secretary of Wuhan, announced plans on Friday to teach the city’s residents to be grateful to the party, a move that was quickly met with derision and anger on Chinese social media.

Relationships are also fraying as families are forced to live for extended periods in confined spaces. Guo Jing, a feminist activist in Wuhan, said she and other volunteers had fielded a number of requests for help from residents reporting physical abuse by their family members at home.

“Under these circumstances, it’s really difficult for them to find help during the epidemic,” said Ms. Guo. “It’s so difficult to leave the house.”

Fang Fang, a writer who has been keeping a widely read — and often-censored — online journal of life in Wuhan, said that the lockdown was exacting a psychological toll on residents.

“Ordinary people have no source of income and lack a sense of certainty even about when they’ll be able to go out,” she wrote in a recent entry. “When you can’t feel the ground or you lose control over a situation, it’s easy to lose the most basic sense of security.”

Outside of Hubei, China wants to fire up its economy, but local officials are also under immense pressure to take no risks in order to reduce the number of infections. Even as provinces have lowered their alert levels for the virus, many companies are choosing to err on the side of caution. Some have even faked electricity consumption rates in order to hit stringent back-to-work targets, according to a recent report by Caixin, an influential Chinese magazine.

Some experts are increasingly wondering if China’s lockdown will become pointless the more widespread the virus becomes. Given the global spread of the virus and the difficulty of spotting mild cases, they say, it is unlikely that it will ever be completely eliminated — even in China.

“I do think the declining case numbers likely mean that all these incredible measures that have been taken are probably having an effect,” said Marc Lipsitch, an epidemiologist at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. “But I don’t think zero is zero.”

Donald G. McNeil Jr. contributed reporting from New York. Zoe Mou contributed research from Beijing.

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2020-03-07 17:42:19Z
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Saudi rivals to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman arrested - The - The Washington Post

Pool Reuters Saudi Arabia's crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, attends a meeting with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in Jidda on Sept. 18, 2019.

Saudi royal guards have arrested two of the most prominent members of the Saudi ruling family and charged them with treason, a move that could be designed to further strengthen the position of the kingdom’s de facto ruler, according to two people close to the Saudi leadership.

Prince Ahmed bin Abdulaziz, an uncle of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, and one of his cousins, Mohammed bin Nayef, were detained Friday morning, the people said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss highly sensitive internal Saudi matters.

Mohammed bin Nayef had been replaced as crown prince and heir to the throne in 2017 when King Salman elevated one of his sons, Mohammed bin Salman, to the role and gave him wide authority to effectively run the kingdom.

Mohammed bin Nayef had earlier served as the country’s interior minister, developing a close working relationship with U.S. security officials.

Both the arrested men could claim a more senior place in the line of succession to Mohammed and were seen as potential rivals to the throne.

[U.N. report: Saudi crown prince involved in alleged hacking of Bezos phone]

The two princes had returned together from a hunting trip late Thursday when they received a call summoning them to meet the crown prince at the royal palace, said one of the people who had been briefed on the events by members of the royal family. When they arrived, they were taken into custody, according to the account.

The arrests come at a sensitive time for the kingdom, with oil prices plummeting and Mohammed’s decision to halt visits to Mecca in response to the coronavirus stoking discontent. The arrests were first reported by the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times.

The royal family also has faced international criticism over the October 2018 murder of Washington Post columnist and Saudi critic Jamal Khashoggi. The United Nations blamed what it called an “extrajudicial execution” on Saudi state agents, and U.S. intelligence officials have privately told Congress that Mohammed, who is often called by his initials MBS, was responsible.

Mohammed, the crown prince, has been consolidating his power over the past couple years, seeking to disarm critics and silence dissent both at home and abroad.

While he has succeeded in concentrating authority in his own hands to a degree that’s highly unusual in the kingdom, it’s unclear what kind of opposition he might face to becoming king when his elderly father dies. It is also uncertain what may have prompted the reported detentions.

[As backlash fears fade, major firms begin to return to Saudi Arabia]

Some Saudi commentators said the arrests suggest rifts within the royal family over the succession of the crown prince, whose strong-arm tactics have alienated many princes.

“The arrest of several senior disgruntled princes such as Ahmed and MBN [Mohammed bin Nayef] reflects a growing discontent with the ‘Son King’ over his despicable hegemony and erratic social, economic, foreign and religious policies,” tweeted Madawi al-Rasheed, a Saudi academic based in London and a fierce critic of the crown prince.

As a son of the founder of the Saudi kingdom, Prince Ahmed is senior in line to Mohammed, but was passed over in favor of a new generation of younger princes.

As Mohammed has strengthened his grip, there had been speculation that he could be considered as an alternative to Mohammed bin Salman.

Mohammed bin Nayef had been living in Britain, afraid to return after he made comments that appeared to criticize the crown prince. He returned to Saudi Arabia in 2018 after Khashoggi’s killing after being given assurances for his safety, according to the person with knowledge of the arrests.

Mohammed bin Nayef has survived four assassination attempts, including one in which he was injured by an al-Qaeda suicide bomber in 2009.

In 2017, the crown prince ordered the arrests of hundreds of princes, government ministers and business people, detaining some of them in a Ritz-Carlton hotel in Riyadh. Ostensibly an anti-corruption crackdown, the sweeps were seen as a part of his effort to consolidate power.

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2020-03-07 18:35:30Z
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Coronavirus Live Updates: U.S. Outbreak Spreads; Navy Sailor Tests Positive in Italy - The New York Times

Credit...Chang W. Lee/The New York Times

A day after the East Coast of the United States reported its first deaths from the coronavirus and schools and universities canceled classes or took measures to keep students at home, Amtrak said on Saturday that it would cancel its nonstop service between New York and Washington because of falling demand.

“We are making temporary adjustments to our schedule, such as removing train cars or canceling trains when there is a convenient alternative with a similar schedule that will have minimal impact to customers,” the company said in a statement. Starting Tuesday, the nonstop Acela service will be suspended through May 26.

The move came as officials across the United States reported 312 cases of coronavirus and 17 deaths as of Friday, with Florida reporting the first deaths on the East Coast and, along with Georgia, new cases on Saturday. The number of infections does not count the 21 people who have tested positive aboard a cruise ship off California, the Grand Princess.

Florida officials reported on Friday night that there had been two deaths in the state related to the coronavirus. Both of the people who died had traveled internationally, they said.

On the East Coast, a cluster has emerged in New York State. All but a few of its 33 confirmed cases as of Friday were linked to a New Rochelle man. More than 2,700 people are under some form of quarantine in New York City.

The West Coast has borne the brunt of the toll in the United States. Washington State has recorded the most coronavirus cases, more than 80, and the highest number of deaths, 14. Most of the fatal cases emerged from a Seattle-area nursing home. Officials in King County, Wash., said 15 residents of the facility, Life Care Center, had been taken to hospitals over the past 24 hours.

California has treated 70 people for the virus, one of whom has died, and new cases continue to emerge at a worrying rate. An employee of the F.B.I.’s San Francisco division tested positive, the first confirmed case at the bureau.

And Starbucks on Friday night reported that one of its employees in downtown Seattle had tested positive. The company said the store has been closed for cleaning.

Also in the Seattle area, two Microsoft employees were being treated for the coronavirus, a company spokesman said. Microsoft did not close its campus, but it had already advised employees to work from home if possible.

Two residents of other Seattle-area complexes that largely serve older people have now also been hospitalized and tested positive, officials said, identifying them as Issaquah Nursing & Rehabilitation Center and Ida Culver House Ravenna.

The chief federal judge in Seattle ordered the cancellation of all in-person federal court hearings in Western Washington State. And Hawaii reported its first confirmed infection, a person who had been on the Grand Princess.

At Stanford University, officials announced late Friday that classes would not meet in person as of Monday, and that any looming exams would be changed to a take-home format.

The University of Washington, with 50,000 students, said that it would cancel in-person classes from Monday through at least March 20, and have students take classes and final exams remotely.

Seattle University, with about 7,300 students, also said it would move to online classes for the rest of the winter quarter, and Northeastern University in Boston will do the same for students on its Seattle campus.

But New York City’s public schools will probably stay open even if the new coronavirus becomes more widespread. Richard A. Carranza, the schools chancellor, said this week that he considered long-term closings an “extreme” measure and a “last resort.”

New York City has the largest public school system in the United States, a vast district with about 750,000 children who are poor, including around 114,000 who are homeless. For such students, school may be the only place they can get three hot meals a day and medical care, and even wash their dirty laundry.

Even a single snow day can seriously disrupt the lives of New York’s most vulnerable children and their parents and other relatives, whose jobs often do not provide paid time off, said Aaron Pallas, a professor of education at Columbia University’s Teachers College.

“Kids will need to be supervised,” Professor Pallas said. “And there are complex interactions here that affect the well-being of families.”

Mayor Bill de Blasio said Friday that none of the city’s 1.1 million public school students had shown any symptoms of the virus. The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has advised that, so far, children have been less likely than adults to become infected.

A hotel in Fujian Province in China where officials had placed people who might have had contact with coronavirus patients collapsed on Saturday night, trapping scores in the rubble, according to officials and local news outlets.

The toll was not immediately clear, but at least 35 people were pulled from the rubble and a total of about 70 people may have been buried under the building, officials said.

Early reports did not give a reason for the collapse of the Xinjia Hotel, which is in Quanzhou, roughly 60 miles northeast of the city of Xiamen. A statement from Quanzhou City officials confirmed the collapse.

Photos from the site published by the website of The People’s Daily, the official newspaper of the Chinese Communist Party, showed rescue workers wearing medical masks surrounding a mass of crumbled concrete, bent steel beams and scaffolding. Quanzhou City officials said more than 140 emergency responders were involved in the rescue effort.

The hotel, which opened in June 2018, had been designated as a medical observation and quarantine site for people who had been in contact with others potentially infected with the coronavirus, The People’s Daily and other news media said.

That would make it part of an extensive network of quarantine zones and buildings set up by China since January, when the coronavirus outbreak spread from the central Chinese city of Wuhan to the rest of the country and then the world.

An American Navy sailor stationed in Naples, Italy, was found to have the coronavirus, the first positive case of a U.S. service member in Europe, the United States European Command said on Saturday in a statement.

The sailor is being restricted to his or her home and receiving medical care in accordance with guidelines from Italy and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the statement said.

Health officials in the military were also conducting contact tracing for anyone else who may have been exposed.

The coronavirus outbreak that has paralyzed and disrupted economic and social life in Italy spread into the top of the Italian politics on Saturday when the leader of the governing coalition’s Democratic Party announced that he had contracted the virus.

“Well, it’s arrived; I also have the coronavirus,” the politician, Nicola Zingaretti, the leader of the Democratic Party, said in a Facebook video.

In the video, Mr. Zingaretti, wearing a sweater and looking relaxed, said that he would follow all the protocols suggested by the authorities, who have urged infected people to separate themselves from others.

“I’m well, and so it was decided home isolation,” Mr. Zingaretti said, adding that his family was following the protocols as well.

He said that Italian health officials had already begun contacting people with whom he worked closely and had meetings and that the party’s vice president would take over “political activities” as he stayed home.

The number of infections climbed past 7,400 in Europe on Saturday — more than doubling in just a few days.

France, Britain, Spain, the Netherlands, Italy and others each recorded their biggest one-day increases in cases on Friday. More than 30 European countries now have cases; 10 of them have at least 100 each. A member of the French Parliament tested positive for the virus. The number of confirmed cases in Britain passed 200 on Saturday.

In Britain, the police in London said they had arrested two teenagers in connection with a racially aggravated assault, days after a 23-year-old student from Singapore said he was attacked by a group of men, one of whom shouted “I don’t want your coronavirus in my country.”

And after the health authorities in Denmark recommended that people avoid shaking hands because of the coronavirus outbreak, government officials have suggested postponing naturalization ceremonies across the country since they require handshakes by law to complete the process.

That means thousands of people about to become Danish citizens will most likely have to wait. It was not clear for how long the suspension would be in place or if all local mayors would follow the recommendation.

Outside Europe, the government of Iran, where the outbreak is one of the world’s largest, reported more than 4,700 infections, an increase of more than 1,200 from the day before. An Iranian member of Parliament, Fatemeh Rahba, also died after contracting the coronavirus, according to state media. Ms. Rahba had been hospitalized in Masih Daneshvari Hospital, the Tasnim news agency reported.

A church group from Alabama is among dozens of guests and workers who have been quarantined at a hotel outside the West Bank city of Bethlehem, after a Greek tourist who had stayed there came down with the coronavirus.

All told, some 40 people, most of them Palestinians, are being quarantined at the Angel Hotel, officials said, with Palestinian security officers in masks standing guard outside on Saturday.

The 13-member Alabama group, which includes pastors, other church workers and several spouses, arrived in Beit Jala on Monday and visited Bethlehem and Jerusalem before checking out on Thursday morning and heading to the West Bank, expecting to continue on to the Sea of Galilee, the Jordan River and Petra.

But they were summoned back to their hotel by the authorities, said the Rev. Chris Bell, the lead pastor of 3Circle Church in Fairhope, Ala.

The group was tested for the virus on Friday but had not been told the results as of midday on Saturday, he said in an interview.

“We’re heartbroken in a million different ways,” he said.

Hubei, the Chinese province at the center of the coronavirus outbreak, reported on Saturday that for two consecutive days, the province had seen no new infections outside its capital, Wuhan. The news confirmed that China’s new cases and deaths are increasingly concentrated in that city, where the virus emerged, while the rest of the province — and the rest of the country — are largely spared.

Hubei reported 74 new infections on Saturday, all in Wuhan. China also recorded 24 cases in people who had arrived from abroad, including 17 in Gansu, a northwest Chinese province. Excluding the infections in Wuhan and among arrivals from abroad, there was only one other new infection in the rest of China.

China also reported 28 deaths among those with the virus, all in Hubei Province. By comparison, there were 49 deaths from the virus in Italy on Friday.

The downward trend in China is a result of an all-out effort by the government to contain the spread of the disease, which has come at a great cost to the country’s economy and its social life. Since January, the government has enacted nationwide quarantine and travel restrictions and placed Hubei under a strict lockdown, effectively penning in 56 million people.

The new numbers reflect a steep decline from just a few weeks earlier. At one point in early February, Hubei reported more than 1,400 new cases outside Wuhan in one day.

The South Korean city of Daegu has ordered members of a Christian sect at the center of the country’s coronavirus outbreak to be tested for the virus by the end of Saturday.

Daegu, a southeastern city of about 2.4 million, has been scrambling to test more than 10,000 members of the Shincheonji Church of Jesus within its jurisdiction since last month, when it became clear that its followers had been spreading the virus in Daegu and elsewhere. Local officials are still trying to locate and test more than 1,000 members of Shincheonji, which is considered a cult by many other South Korean Christian churches.

South Korea, whose coronavirus outbreak is the biggest outside China, reported 483 new infections on Saturday, bringing its total caseload to 6,767, including 47 deaths. More than 5,000 of those infected are Daegu residents, and a vast majority of them belong to the church.

“Yesterday alone, we tested 709 Shincheonji members and 236 of them tested positive,” Daegu’s mayor, Kwon Young-jin, said on Saturday. “This is why church members should extend their self-isolation and must subject themselves to testing.”

Mr. Kwon issued an executive order that made the testing mandatory. Anyone who disobeys it can be fined under South Korea’s laws on controlling epidemics.

The church’s founder, Lee Man-hee, recently apologized for its role in the outbreak but said the church had been cooperating with the authorities.

On Saturday, Daegu placed two adjacent apartment buildings under quarantine after 46 of their residents, all of them Sincheonji members, were confirmed to have the virus.

Japan announced that a man from Hong Kong who was a passenger on the Diamond Princess cruise ship died of the coronavirus on Friday, making it the eighth death associated with the vessel that was quarantined off Yokohama for two weeks in February.

On Saturday, another cruise ship, the Costa Fortuna, became the latest luxury liner to be kept at sea over coronavirus fears, after Malaysia and Thailand denied it entry for fear that passengers from Italy had been exposed to the virus before boarding.

Malaysia turned away the Costa Fortuna, which has more than 2,000 people aboard, under a government policy announced on Saturday, which bars all cruise ships from docking at any of the country’s ports until further notice.

The ship was denied permission to dock at the island of Penang in northern Malaysia on Saturday morning. It had already been turned away on Friday from the island of Phuket in southern Thailand, about 220 miles from Penang.

Thai officials refused to allow the Costa Fortuna to dock because 64 of its passengers had departed less than 14 days earlier from Italy, which has been hit hard by the coronavirus. Fourteen days is believed to be the virus’s maximum incubation period.

The operator of the Costa Fortuna, Costa Cruises, confirmed on Twitter that the ship had been turned away by Thailand, but it said none of the ship’s passengers on board were suspected of having Covid-19, the illness caused by the virus.

The 34th annual edition of South by Southwest, the annual festival of music, film and technology in Austin, Tex., that has become a global draw, was ordered canceled on Friday by local officials over fears about the spread of coronavirus.

Festival organizers and government officials had come under intense pressure in recent days to pull the plug, with more than 50,000 people signing an online petition and a growing list of tech companies — among them Apple, Facebook, Twitter and TikTok — announcing their withdrawal.

The festival was to have run from March 13-22, with events spread across bars and party spaces in Austin, in addition to the main conference activities.

The cancellation is perhaps the largest collateral damage of the virus so far on the international cultural calendar. Last year, South by Southwest’s various events had a combined attendance of 417,000, including 159,000 who came to the music portion, according to festival figures.

Two other large-scale, multiday gatherings were also called off or pushed back on Friday: Emerald City Comic Con, a convention that draws thousands of people to Seattle each year, was postponed until the summer; and the Ultra Music Festival, an electronic dance music event held annually in Miami, where city officials blocked the event from going on.

The San Francisco Symphony said in a tweet on Saturday that it was canceling all concerts scheduled at the city’s Davies Symphony Hall through March 20.

If you’re returning from an area that’s had a coronavirus outbreak, or if you’ve been in close contact with someone who tests positive, you may be asked to isolate yourself at home for two weeks, the presumed incubation period for the coronavirus.

It’s not easy to lock yourself away from your family and friends. These are the basics.

Isolation If you are infected or have been exposed to the coronavirus, you must seclude yourself from your partner, your housemates, your children, your older aunt and even your pets. If you don’t have your own room, one should be designated for your exclusive use. No visitors unless it’s absolutely essential. Don’t take the bus, subway or even a taxi.

Masks If you must be around other people — in your home, or in a car, because you’re on your way to see a doctor (and only after you’ve called first) — wear a mask. Everyone else should, too.

Hygiene Cover your mouth and nose with a tissue to cough or sneeze, and discard it in a lined trash can. Immediately wash your hands with soap and water for at least 20 seconds. You can use sanitizer, but soap and water are preferred. Wash your hands frequently and avoid touching your eyes, nose and mouth, if you haven’t just washed them.

Disinfecting Don’t share dishes, drinking glasses, eating utensils, towels or bedding. Wash these items after you use them. Use a household cleaner to wipe down countertops, tabletops, doorknobs, bathrooms fixtures, toilets, phones, keyboards, tablets and bedside tables. That also goes for any surfaces that may be contaminated by bodily fluids.

Household members When around the patient, wear a face mask, and add gloves if you’re touching anything that might carry the patient’s bodily fluids. Dispose of the mask and gloves immediately. The older members and those with chronic medical conditions should minimize contact with the secluded individual.

The Times is publishing many articles daily on the coronavirus, which help inform this briefing. Here is a list of articles from the last day or so.

International:

As Death Toll Mounts, Governments Point Fingers Over Coronavirus

China Pushes Back as Coronavirus Crisis Damages Its Image

Florida Lobster Got a Break on China Tariffs. Then Came Coronavirus.

Climate:

Coronavirus Could Slow Efforts to Cut Airlines’ Greenhouse Gas Emissions

Culture:

South by Southwest Is Canceled as Coronavirus Fears Scuttle Festival

From Coughing Fits to Closings, Cultural World Girds for Coronavirus

TEFAF Art Fair Carries on. But Business Isn’t Usual.

Lifestyle:

The Handshake Is on Hold

Coronavirus Puts a Wrinkle in Wedding Industry

How to:

How to Help Protect a Family Member in a Nursing Home

How to Quarantine Yourself

How to Stock a Pantry

Reporting was contributed by David Halbfinger, Mohammed Najib, Jason Horowitz, Eric Schmitt, Margaret Ho, Eliza Shapiro, Katie Rogers, Roni Caryn Rabin, Keith Bradsher, Thomas Fuller, Richard C. Paddock, Elian Peltier, Sarah Mervosh, Tim Arango, Jenny Gross, Ben Sisario, Julia Jacobs, Amy Qin, Sopan Deb and Marc Stein.

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2020-03-07 15:37:09Z
CAIiEKWrJUpjUJd1khVSAYU4WGgqFwgEKg8IACoHCAowjuuKAzCWrzwwloEY

Migrants say Greek forces stripped them and sent them back to Turkey in their underwear - CNN

CNN has obtained a video showing men in their underpants arriving back on Turkish soil, allegedly sent back through Evros River, with no clothes by Greek security forces. The river, known as Meriç in Turkey, forms the natural border between both countries.
The video was captured by Turkish state broadcaster TRT. CNN cannot independently verify this specific video or circumstances surrounding how it was shot. But human rights groups like Amnesty International have documented dozens of similar refugee testimonies in recent years -- which Greek authorities have repeatedly denied.
CNN has spoken to several men from Syria, Afghanistan, Morocco and Pakistan who said they experienced this violent and degrading treatment by the Greek security forces in recent days.
Greece stands firm on migrants, as Turkey opens floodgates to Europe
Abdel Aziz, a 20-year-old tailor from Aleppo province in Syria, told CNN he was beaten up, stripped down to his underwear and had his belongings taken before he was sent back.
"We were caught by military or police, they were carrying weapons ... they took all our clothes, we were left in our underwear, they started beating us up, some people were beaten so hard they couldn't walk anymore," Aziz told CNN, as he was walking barefoot in the city of Edirne near the border. "They burned the IDs and clothes, they kept the phones and money," he added.
Hameed, a 23-year old Afghan man holding his 14-month-old son in a baby carrier, said he and his family crossed to Greece the night before, but were pushed back with a big group of other people.
He told CNN the group crossed the border river and walked for five hours before the Greek security forces stopped them, took their belongings and deported them back to Turkey.
"They beat us with some, like, sticks and then they deport us," he told CNN. He said both he and his wife were hit.

'Responding to the provocations'

The government denies using excessive force against migrants. Greece's Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis told CNN's Richard Quest on Friday that "Europe is not going to be blackmailed by Turkey."
Greece had "every right to protect our borders," he said, adding "we have not used any sort of excessive force."
"We're always reacting, we are never initiating, in terms of responding to the provocations across the border."
Greece and Turkey have been at odds over immigration policy after thousands of migrants gathered at the border between the two countries earlier this week.
Turkey hosts 4.1 million refugees, many of whom are Syrian, and under a 2016 agreement with the European Union, it agreed to halt the flow of migrants into Europe in exchange for economic incentives and support.
A migration crisis and disagreement with Turkey is the last thing Europe needs right now
But the uptick of violence in northern Syria has seen around 1 million displaced people amass south of Turkey's border.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused the EU last weekend of not keeping its side of the agreement last weekend, and began allowing refugees to cross its border toward Europe, saying it had "reached its capacity" to hold them.
Greece has refused to open its side of the border and responded to the influx of migrants with force. At Turkey's Pazarkule border crossing, eyewitnesses told CNN on Wednesday that Greek security forces had fired live ammunition.
Turkey accused Greek border guards of opening fire on refugees and migrants gathered at its border on Wednesday, killing one and injuring five others. The Greek government has denied using live ammunition.

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2020-03-07 15:24:59Z
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Two Coronavirus Deaths in Florida as Global Infections Rise - The Wall Street Journal

Travelers in Tampa International Airport. Florida reported two deaths from coronavirus on Friday, bringing the U.S. death toll to 16.

Photo: Douglas R. Clifford/Zuma Press

HONG KONG—The coronavirus epidemic escalated globally into the weekend, as Florida reported the first two deaths on the U.S. East Coast and countries across Asia experienced their largest one-day jumps in new infections.

China, where the epidemic first broke out, has reported success in slowing the domestic spread of Covid-19, the respiratory disease caused by the coronavirus, which has now sickened more than 100,000 people—including more than 80,000 in China. But the rising tally around the world is raising concern there about the possibility of cases imported from abroad.

On Saturday, Chinese state media reported the collapse of a hotel in southeastern China, which the Communist Party’s flagship newspaper said was being used to quarantine people who had close contact with Covid-19 patients. Officials believe that about 70 people were trapped and rescuers have pulled out at least 32 people from the rubble as of Saturday evening, state media said.

Japan logged 60 new cases on Friday, raising its tally to 408. Malaysia also reported its largest one-day increase with 28 new cases on Friday, lifting the Southeast Asian nation’s total to 83. The neighboring city-state of Singapore, meanwhile, said it discovered 13 new cases, also its biggest single-day increase, for a total of 130.

The Latest on the Coronavirus

  • Two deaths have been reported in Florida, bringing the number of U.S. fatalities to 16; the total number of infections is now 338
  • Japan, Singapore and Malaysia all reported their highest single-day increases in cases
  • South Korea added 483 cases for a total of 6,797 and Italy added 620 new cases and 49 fatalities in the 24 hours preceding its report Friday evening

South Korea, the country worst hit by the coronavirus apart from China, said it found 483 new infections on Friday, bringing its total to 6,767 cases.

Italy, the worst-hit country in Europe, said Friday evening it logged 620 new coronavirus cases and 49 fatalities over the preceding 24-hour period. Its death toll of 197 is the highest outside of China.

In Iran, a further 21 people died of the virus, bringing the total dead to 145 on Saturday, health ministry spokesman Kianoush Jahanpour said. The fatalities included newly elected lawmaker Fatemeh Rahbar. The number of confirmed cases also increased by 1,076 over the past 24 hours to 5,823 in total.

The two people who died in Florida had recently traveled abroad, according to the state’s Department of Health. Their deaths raised the number of fatalities in the U.S. to 16. Overall cases in the U.S. have shot past 300 to 338, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

Municipal authorities in Beijing and other Chinese cities have in recent weeks stepped up health screenings of travelers arriving from abroad, even quarantining people who came from countries badly hit by the coronavirus—such as South Korea, Italy, Iran and Japan.

Chinese authorities reported the lowest one-day figures since the country’s health commission started disclosing nationwide data on new infections in late January. But China’s National Health Commission noted 24 new imported cases on Friday, raising the total to 60. It counted 16 imported cases on Thursday and two such cases on Wednesday. China’s death toll is now at 3,070.

In a sign of Beijing’s growing confidence in overcoming the epidemic, Chinese President Xi Jinping sought to refocus the Communist Party’s attention on his signature campaign to eradicate extreme poverty, which was meant to conclude by the end of this year.

Addressing officials across China on a Friday teleconference, Mr. Xi insisted that the poverty-alleviation target must be reached on time, and ordered all levels of government to double their efforts.

“The epidemic, like a natural disaster, will affect the progress in reducing poverty,” Mr. Xi said. “We must take effective measures to reduce the epidemic’s impact to a minimum.”

The fast spread of the new virus has suppressed business activity and trade, rattling markets.

Related Video

The global spread of the novel coronavirus is affecting many aspects of daily life and soon, that could include what's in your medicine cabinet. WSJ’s Charley Grant explains. Photo: Getty Images

China on Saturday said its exports and imports tumbled in the first two months of the year. Official data showed exports plunged 17.2% in January and February compared with a year earlier, while imports dropped 4.0%. The poor showing followed official reports last week of a deep drop in the country’s manufacturing and service sectors.

Even as China struggles to ramp up production, it faces new pressures as the coronavirus epidemic spreads, depressing demand for Chinese-made goods. Exporters surveyed by China’s Ministry of Commerce said many foreign customers have suspended purchases or canceled orders.

Egypt’s authorities said Friday they detected 12 new coronavirus cases on a Nile cruise ship, bringing the total number of cases in the country to 15 so far.

The ship has been evacuated, according to state media. The 12 cases were Egyptians who worked on the ship and who have been transferred to an isolated hospital, while others who were on the ship are being quarantined for 14 days.

A Taiwanese woman, who had previously been on board the ship, was diagnosed with the virus upon returning home and is suspected of infecting others on the ship, health ministry spokesperson Khaled Megahed said Friday.

Write to Chun Han Wong at chunhan.wong@wsj.com

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2020-03-07 14:42:16Z
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US Navy sailor in Italy tests positive for coronavirus - CNN

The servicemember, stationed at a naval support facility in Naples, tested positive Friday and is currently restricted to their residence, according to the statement, receiving medical and other support in accordance with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Italian guidelines.
Authorities said health professionals from the US military are conducting what they call "a thorough contact investigation" to determine if any other personnel may have been exposed. They say depending on the results other precautionary measures may be taken.
The statement said personnel that the servicemember came in close contact with have already been notified and are in self-isolation at their residences.
Last month, a US soldier stationed in South Korea tested positive for coronavirus -- the first American servicemember to be confirmed with the virus.
The soldier, a 23-year-old man, was moved to Camp Humphreys, the United States Forces Korea's headquarters, and placed in negative pressure isolation.
As of Saturday morning, the virus has spread to over 80 countries and territories, and killed more than 3,500 people, the vast majority in mainland China, according to the latest CNN tally.
In Italy, which has the most cases of any country outside of Asia, 197 people have died and over 4,600 are infected.
To prevent the virus from spreading among the Armed Forces, the US Navy, Air Force and Army has begun screening new recruits for the coronavirus.
And as a precautionary measure, the US has canceled different joint military exercises with Israel and South Korea due to the outbreak.

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2020-03-07 14:44:46Z
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