Officials seek people linked to UK cases as some airlines stop China flights
The University of York
said it has been advised by Public Health England that the risk of the
infection being passed on to other people on campus is low.
A spokesman for the
university said: “We understand this development will cause concern and anxiety
among our students, staff, and the wider community.
“PHE (Public Health
England) has advised us that the risk of infection being passed to others on
campus is low.
“Current information
from PHE suggests that the student did not come into contact with anybody on
campus whilst they had symptoms, but investigations are ongoing to fully
establish this.
“Our immediate concerns
are for the affected student and family, along with the health and continued
wellbeing of our staff, students and visitors.”
Qatar Airways has
announced it has suspended flights to mainland China from 3 February due to
“significant operational challenges”.
Public Health England
has said the University of York student confirmed as infected with coronavirus
did not come in contact with anyone on campus while showing the coronavirus
symptoms, Sky News is reporting.
Vietnam has declared a
public health emergency over the coronavirus epidemic and said it would stop
all flights to and from China.
The government said it
would also stop issuing visas for foreign visitors who had been in China in the
past two weeks.
All permits granted for
flights between Vietnam and China, including Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau, have
been revoked until further notice, the government said.
Budget carrier Vietjet
Air and the national firm, Vietnam Airlines, earlier said they would suspend
all flights to and from China from today.
One of two people in
the UK who tested positive for coronavirus is University of York student
One of the two people
who has tested positive for coronavirus is a student at the University of York,
a university spokesman said.
He said the university
continues to operate normally.
The spokesman added:
“We are monitoring the situation closely and we continue to provide as much
advice, care and support as we can to our university community.
“If people have any
concerns about their health in relation to suspected coronavirus we ask that
they follow current PHE advice and contact NHS 111.
“The University has set
up a call centre over the weekend for anyone who has any further concerns or
inquiries. The telephone number is 01904 809571.”
Three Chinese citizens
were denied entry to Erbil International airport, in the semiautonomous
Kurdistan region of Iraq, over fears about the coronavirus outbreak in China,
authorities said.
The three passengers
were sent back to Dubai, from where they had flown to Erbil, a statement from
Kurdistan’s airport authority said.
Iraq’s Basra
International airport said on Friday it was denying entry to passengers of any
nationality travelling to Iraq from China.
Turkmenistan Airlines
has suspended flights to and from Beijing.
The move was aimed at
preventing the spread of the coronavirus, the company said in a statement.
The government of
Uzbekistan has also instructed the state airline to suspend flights to and from
China.
Charter flights will
bring back Uzbek citizens if they wish to return, except from Wuhan, it said.
Eighty-three Britons
evacuated from China will spend their first full day in quarantine today.
They will spend 14 days
in two apartment blocks normally used to house nurses, who have been moved to
local hotels, in Wirral.
The UK evacuees have
been put up in fully furnished rooms, including kitchens, and provided with
food and laundry facilities.
Families are being kept
together with toys and baby equipment available.
They will have access
to a team of medical staff who will closely monitor their condition.
An English teacher,
speaking from his room at Arrowe Park Hospital, Wirral, told The Guardian:
“It’s like being in a crap hotel or a student halls of residence.
“I haven’t actually
asked but I suspect I’m not really supposed to come out here in the next 14
days.
“It’s alright though.
It will be OK.”
Matt Raw, one of those
in quarantine, said he and his family “were extremely glad to be here” and they
are feeling fine.
He told the BBC that
he, his wife and his mother were staying in a four-bedroom apartment, along
with another woman and her daughter.
Raw stressed they had
“an army of people looking after them”.
He added there was a
contained area outside where they were able to get some fresh air, adding they
were “allowed contact with anybody within the facility, as long as we’re
wearing face masks”.
Officials are
attempting to trace people who had close contact with two Chinese nationals
diagnosed with the new strain of coronavirus in the UK.
The pair, who are
related, were taken ill while staying at a hotel in York on Friday.
Public Health England
(PHE) said anyone who had close contact – defined as being within two metres of
those infected for at least 15 minutes – will receive health advice.
Professor Sharon
Peacock, director of the national infection service at PHE, said: “Public
Health England is contacting people who had close contact with the confirmed
cases.
“Close contacts will be
given health advice about symptoms and emergency contact details to use if they
become unwell in the 14 days after contact with the confirmed cases.”
The Department of
Health and Social Care has just published its latest advice for the public.
It has confirmed that
two patients in England have tested positive for coronavirus. If more cases are
confirmed in the UK, it will be announced as soon as possible by the relevant
chief medical officer.
“Based on the World
Health Organization’s declaration that this is a public health emergency of
international concern, ,” the statement said. “This permits the government to
plan for all eventualities.
“The risk to
individuals in the UK has not changed at this stage. Our advice for travellers
from Wuhan and Hubei province remains unchanged from the below and we have
added further advice for travellers from elsewhere in China.
“As of 31 January, a
total of 177 UK tests have concluded, of which 175 were confirmed negative and
2 positive.
“Some 1,466 passengers
and 95 staff arrived in the UK on direct flights from Wuhan between 10 and 24
January.
Foreign Office pulls
staff out of China
The Foreign Office is
withdrawing staff from China hours after flying dozens of UK nationals home
from coronavirus-hit Wuhan, PA Media reports.
Essential staff will
remain to continue “critical work” but the FCO has warned that its ability to
provide help to Britons in the country may be limited.
The rescued UK
nationals were taken to Arrowe Park hospital in Wirral in a convoy of six
coaches on Friday.
They will spend the
next 14 days in quarantine.