China's imported COVID-19 cases spike as fears grow of second wave

24 March, 2020
China's imported COVID-19 cases spike as fears grow of second wave
China reported 78 new cases of the deadly coronavirus on Tuesday (Mar 24), with a large proportion earned from overseas as fears rise of another wave of infections.

The first new case in nearly a week was also reported in Wuhan - the epicentre where in fact the virus emerged last year - along with three other local infections elsewhere in the united states.

Seven more persons died, the National Health Commission said, all in Wuhan.

But at 74, the imported cases confirmed Tuesday were the best since officials started reporting the info at the beginning of March, and nearly.

In recent days virtually all the new infections in China have been earned from overseas, and Beijing keeps growing increasingly anxious about an influx just as it were bringing the country's outbreak under control.

As nations around the world battle to support the pandemic, which includes now killed a lot more than 16,000 people worldwide, the tally of imported cases in China has soared to 427.

Many cities have brought in tough rules to quarantine new arrivals, and all Beijing-bound international flights are being diverted to other cities where they'll be screened for the virus.

Local authorities in Beijing said Tuesday that anyone who entered China through a different city and arrived in the capital within the last two weeks would also be tested for the virus and instructed to quarantine.

Both Shanghai and Beijing reported a case of a locally-transmitted infection from an imported patient Tuesday.

State media warned of another wave of infections, with the nationalistic Global Times warning on its front page that "inadequate quarantine measures" meant another wave of infections was "highly likely, even inevitable".

There have been a lot more than 81,000 cases in China, and the death toll has already reached 3,277.

As the country tries to control imported cases, there are signs of normality starting to return to Wuhan and the encompassing Hubei province, where 56 million persons were put under lockdown in January.

Travel and work restrictions in the province have been little by little eased and Chinese President Xi Jinping made his first visit to Wuhan earlier this month.

Wuhan residents considered healthy is now able to move around the location and take public transport if indeed they show identification, and they can also go back to work if they have a permit from their employer.
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