Coronavirus is jumping borders, with more than 100 countries having now confirmed at least one case of infection.
Stock markets around the world have been savaged, millions of people quarantined, and countries are scrambling to prevent the spread of the deadly virus, implementing emergency plans and travel restrictions on the worst-affected places.
“The WHO has been assessing this outbreak around the clock and we are deeply concerned both by the alarming levels of spread and severity, and by the alarming levels of inaction,” World Health Organisation (WHO) director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters in a briefing.
“We have therefore made the assessment that COVID-19 can be characterised as a pandemic.”
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The viral outbreak that began in China three months ago has infected more than 181,000 people globally and killed more than 7000 people.
Bruce Aylward, the leader of a joint WHO-China mission of experts, warned countries they needed to do more to get ready for coronavirus cases.
“Think the virus is going to show up tomorrow. If you don’t think that way, you’re not going to be ready,” he said.
CHINA
Confirmed cases: 81,137
Deaths: 3237
The epidemic is believed to have peaked in China between January 23 and February 2.
Most cases in other countries around the world have involved people who travelled from China, where the outbreak originated in the city of Wuhan.
While close to 4000 people have died from the disease in China, the WHO concluded on February 24 that the measures imposed by the Chinese government — sealing off cities, shutting down businesses and schools and ordering people to remain indoors — may have saved hundreds of thousands of people from infection.
“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,” said Dr Bruce Aylward, who led the WHO delegation.
The WHO said that of about 80,000 people who have been sickened by COVID-19 in China, more than 70 per cent have recovered and been discharged from hospitals.
“China has certainly peaked and there is certainly a decline,” said head of WHO’s emerging diseases and zoonosis unit, Dr Maria Van Kerkhove.
ITALY
Confirmed cases: 35,713
Deaths: 2,978
Italy has been declared the epicentre of the virus outbreak in Europe, with more virus cases now being reported on the continent than were reported in China at the height of its epidemic, Dr Adhanom Ghebreyesus said.
The Italian government have taken drastic action, closing all shops – except for pharmacies and those stocking food; ordering companies to shut their non-essential departments; closing venues and limiting movement to urgent medical or professional need.
Entry and exit to affected areas is forbidden, weddings and funerals banned, cinemas, gyms, pubs and museums closed. Anyone violating the new law can be arrested and fined.
Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte has also restricted travel nationwide.
While infections and virus-related deaths continue to soar, Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio told the BBC he hopes his country will be the first in Europe to overcome the virus emergency.
“Italy was the first nation in Europe to be affected so badly,” Mr Di Maio said.
“But I hope it also means that Italy is the first one to leave the emergency behind.”
IRAN
Confirmed cases: 17,361
Deaths: 1,135
Iran’s entire population – of more than 81 million people – will likely be confined to their homes for the foreseeable future.
“During the next 10 days, the entire Iranian nation will be monitored through cyberspace, by phone and, if necessary, in person, and those suspected of being ill will be fully identified,” Major General Mohammad Bagheri said.
An army commission had been set up to carry out the “emptying of shops, streets and roads” in an attempt to limit the spread of the virus.
The New York Times have suggested that the country is rapidly expanding the number of graves at a cemetery near the city of Qom, where the outbreak was particularly severe due to people licking holy shrines.
SPAIN
Confirmed cases: 14,769
Deaths: 638
GERMANY
Confirmed cases: 12,327
Deaths: 12
UNITED STATES
Confirmed cases: 9,410
Deaths: 147
As the number of virus cases continues to rise in America, US President Donald Trump has declared a national emergency.
He announced on Saturday that he would sign a measure under the Stafford Act that would unlock up at US$ 50 billion in disaster aid from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to help federal and state governments fight the outbreak.
Some of the nation’s most popular talk shows, including The Ellen DeGeneres Show and The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, have announced they will no longer film with a studio audience. Schools around the US have been closed, communities have cancelled public events, and in an unprecedented move, the NBA season has been suspended.
Mr Trump also made one of the most dramatic actions of any country, by suspending all travel from Europe for the next month.
The US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has warned the American public to prepare for an outbreak of the disease.
“We expect we will see community spread in this country,” said CDC’s Nancy Messonnier.
“It’s not so much a question of if this will happen any more, but the rather more correct question to be asking is, ‘When this will happen and how many people in this country will have severe illness?’”
FRANCE
Confirmed cases: 9,054
Deaths: 264
SOUTH KOREA
Confirmed cases: 8,565
Deaths: 91
South Korea is struggling to deal with the growing coronavirus crisis, as the number of confirmed cases continues to rise.
The fringe Christian group Shincheonji Church has been identified by authorities as the heart of the country’s outbreak.
Jung Eun-kyeong, director of the South Korean Centre for Disease Control, suggested that “there is a possibility that the characteristics of many people sitting close together in a very confined space and holding service for more than an hour” would have led to “a few who were exposed infecting other infectees”.
South Korea’s president has declared southeastern parts of the country, hit hard by the coronavirus outbreak, as “special disaster zones”, a designation that makes residents there eligible for emergency relief, tax benefits and other state financial support.
SWITZERLAND
Confirmed cases: 3,067
Deaths: 33
UK
Confirmed cases: 2,644
Deaths: 71
NETHERLANDS
Confirmed cases: 2,056
Deaths: 58
AUSTRIA
Confirmed cases: 1,646
Deaths: 4
JAPAN
Confirmed cases: 1,619
Deaths: 37
Speculation is mounting as to whether the 2020 Olympic Games, which begin on July 24 in Tokyo, will be cancelled as a result of coronavirus.
While organisers, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and International Paralympic Committee (IPC) have all insisted cancellation is not being considered, one of the IOC’s most senior members said that the future of the Tokyo Games is largely out of the IOC’s hands and depends on the course the virus takes.
Dick Pound, the committee’s longest-serving member, estimated there is a three, possibly even two, month window to decide the fate of the games, meaning a decision could be put off until late May.
NORWAY
Confirmed cases: 1,591
Deaths: 6
BELGIUM
Confirmed cases: 1,486
Deaths: 14
SWEDEN
Confirmed cases: 1,301
Deaths: 10
DENMARK
Confirmed cases: 1,115
Deaths: 4
MALAYSIA
Confirmed cases: 790
Deaths: 2
CANADA
Confirmed cases: 727
Deaths: 9
PORTUGAL
Confirmed cases: 642
Deaths: 2
AUSTRALIA
Confirmed cases: 568
Deaths: 6
Australia now has nearly 400 confirmed cases of coronavirus, with warnings that up to 1.5 million people could be infected in NSW alone.
University of Sydney Professor Robert Booy said the best-case scenario is just 20 per cent of people getting COVID-19.
The worst-case scenario is that half the population comes down with the virus.
A state of emergency has been declared in Victoria to deal with the spread of the virus, following Scott Morrison’s announcement that while schools would remain open, public gatherings of more than 500 people should be cancelled. Mr Morrison also announced that Australia would adopt the same strict travel restrictions as New Zealand has imposed.
Now, anyone who has returned from overseas must self-isolate for 14 days.
NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian said that anyone caught ignoring the new restrictions would face a hefty fine and potential time in prison.
Six people have died so far from the disease: three women and two men in Sydney and one man in Western Australia.
BRAZIL
Confirmed cases: 529
Deaths: 4
CZECH REPUBLIC
Confirmed cases: 522
QATAR
Confirmed cases: 452
ISRAEL
Confirmed cases: 433
GREECE
Confirmed cases: 418
Deaths: 5
IRELAND
Confirmed cases: 366
Deaths: 2
FINLAND
Confirmed cases: 359
SINGAPORE
Confirmed cases: 313
PAKISTAN
Confirmed cases: 307
Deaths: 2
POLAND
Confirmed cases: 287
Deaths: 5
SLOVENIA
Confirmed cases: 286
Deaths: 1
ROMANIA
Confirmed cases: 260
ESTONIA
Confirmed cases: 258
BAHRAIN
Confirmed cases: 256
Deaths: 1
ICELAND
Confirmed cases: 250
Deaths: 1
SAUDI ARABIA
Confirmed cases: 238
CHILE
Confirmed cases: 238
INDONESIA
Confirmed cases: 277
Deaths: 19
THAILAND
Confirmed cases: 212
Deaths: 1
EGYPT
Confirmed cases: 210
Deaths: 6
LUXEMBOURG
Confirmed cases: 203
Deaths: 2
PHILIPPINES
Confirmed cases: 202
Deaths: 19
TURKEY
Confirmed cases: 191
Deaths: 2
INDIA
Confirmed cases: 169
Deaths: 3
IRAQ
Confirmed cases: 164
Deaths: 12
ECUADOR
Confirmed cases: 168
Deaths: 3
HONG KONG
Confirmed cases: 155
Deaths: 4
RUSSIA
Confirmed cases: 147
PERU
Confirmed cases: 145
KUWAIT
Confirmed cases: 142
LEBANON
Confirmed cases: 133
Deaths: 4
SAN MARINO
Confirmed cases: 119
Deaths: 11
SOUTH AFRICA
Confirmed cases: 116
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES
Confirmed cases: 113
ARMENIA
Confirmed cases: 110
PANAMA
Confirmed cases: 109
Deaths: 1
SLOVAKIA
Confirmed cases: 105
Deaths: 1
TAIWAN
Confirmed cases: 100
Deaths: 1
ARGENTINA
Confirmed cases: 97
Deaths: 2
MEXICO
Confirmed cases: 93
COLOMBIA
Confirmed cases: 93
BULGARIA
Confirmed cases: 92
Deaths: 2
SERBIA
Confirmed cases: 89
CROATIA
Confirmed cases: 57
URAGUAY
Confirmed cases: 79
VIETNAM
Confirmed cases: 75
ALGERIA
Confirmed cases: 74
Deaths: 7
LATVIA
Confirmed cases: 71
COSTA RICA
Confirmed cases: 69
Deaths: 1
BRUNEI
Confirmed cases: 68
ALBANIA
Confirmed cases: 59
Deaths: 2
HUNGARY
Confirmed cases: 58
Deaths: 1
CYPRUS
Confirmed cases: 58
JORDAN
Confirmed cases: 56
MOROCCO
Confirmed cases: 54
Deaths: 2
ANDORRA
Confirmed cases: 53
BELARUS
Confirmed cases: 51
SRI LANKA
Confirmed cases: 51
MALTA
Confirmed cases: 48
NORTH MACEDONIA
Confirmed cases: 42
OMAN
Confirmed cases: 39
BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA
Confirmed cases: 38
GEORGIA
Confirmed cases: 38
MOLDOVA
Confirmed cases: 36
Deaths: 1
VENEZUELA
Confirmed cases: 36
CAMBODIA
Confirmed cases: 35
AZERBAIJAN
Confirmed cases: 34
Deaths: 1
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Confirmed cases: 34
Deaths: 2
LITHUANIA
Confirmed cases: 33
SENEGAL
Confirmed cases: 31
TUNISIA
Confirmed cases: 29
NEW ZEALAND
Confirmed cases: 28
LICHTENSTEIN
Confirmed cases: 28
GUADELOUPE
Confirmed cases: 27
WEST BANK & GAZA
Confirmed cases: 26
MARTINIQUE
Confirmed cases: 23
Deaths: 1
AFGHANISTAN
Confirmed cases: 22
BURKINA FASO
Confirmed cases: 20
FAROE ISLANDS
Confirmed cases: 18
UKRAINE
Confirmed cases: 16
Deaths: 2
JAMAICA
Confirmed cases: 15
Deaths: 1
UZBEKISTAN
Confirmed cases: 15
BANGLADESH
Confirmed cases: 14
Deaths: 1
MALDIVES
Confirmed cases: 13
CAMEROON
Confirmed cases: 13
BOLIVIA
Confirmed cases: 12
REUNION
Confirmed cases: 12
PARAGUAY
Confirmed cases: 11
CUBA
Confirmed cases: 10
Deaths: 1
MACAU
Confirmed cases: 10
KAZAKHSTAN
Confirmed cases: 10
HONDURAS
Confirmed cases: 9
RWANDA
Confirmed cases: 8
NIGERIA
Confirmed cases: 8
MONACO
Confirmed cases: 7
KENYA
Confirmed cases: 7
GHANA
Confirmed cases: 7
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO
Confirmed cases: 7
GUYANA
Confirmed cases: 7
Deaths: 1
ETHIOPIA
Confirmed cases: 6
GUATEMALA
Confirmed cases: 6
Deaths: 1
MONGOLIA
Confirmed cases: 6
SEYCHELLES
Confirmed cases: 6
ARUBA
Confirmed cases: 4
CONGO
Confirmed cases: 4
EQUATORIAL GUINEA
Confirmed cases: 4
TANZANIA
Confirmed cases: 3
SAINT LUCIA
Confirmed cases: 2
NAMIBIA
Confirmed cases: 2
KOSOVO
Confirmed cases: 2
SUDAN
Confirmed cases: 1
Deaths: 1
LIBERIA
Confirmed cases: 1
BENIN
Confirmed cases: 1
SOMALIA
Confirmed cases: 1
BAHAMAS
Confirmed cases: 1
ESWATINI
Confirmed cases: 1
ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA
Confirmed cases: 1
BHUTAN
Confirmed cases: 1
CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC
Confirmed cases: 1
IVORY COAST
Confirmed cases: 1
GABON
Confirmed cases: 1
GUERNSEY
Confirmed cases: 1
GUINEA
Confirmed cases: 1
CAYMAN ISLANDS
Confirmed cases: 1
MAURITANIA
Confirmed cases: 1
NEPAL
Confirmed cases: 1
SURINAME
Confirmed cases: 1
ESWATINI
Confirmed cases: 1
TOGO
Confirmed cases: 1
VATICAN CITY
Confirmed cases: 1
GIBRALTAR
Confirmed cases: 1
SAIN VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES
Confirmed cases: 1