Thursday, May 8, 2003

Russia, Citing First SARS Case, Curtails Travel to China

New York Times by Michael Wines:

Moscow -- Russia halted some airline flights to and from China and crimped entries along the 2,624-mile Chinese border today after the authorities said they had tentatively logged the nation's first known case of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, or SARS.

8:38:33 PM    comment []  

The Silent Birth Of A Killer Virus

The Japan Times by Chris Taylor:

BEIJING -- Is it the "big one" -- the indestructible one? Perhaps not. Either way, China's inability to tell the truth has made it a threat to all of us.

In mid-2001, a Hong Kong magazine ran a front-page story about how the world's next flu pandemic would hatch in southern China and infect the rest of the world via Hong Kong. The story espoused the theory that the Spanish flu of 1918, which eventually claimed 20 million lives, had leaped from pigs to humans in southern China and traveled with Chinese laborers to the trenches of World War I.

It was no more than a theory, but on two crucial counts the magazine was deadly accurate: the two other killer pandemics of the last century, which killed about 2 million people, sprang out of China and so will the next.

This is a critical look at how China's lack of openess contributed to the SARS epidemic.

-Tim
1:35:00 PM    comment []  


China Tackles SARS Damage

BBC News:

China's cabinet has announced a series of measures aimed at minimising the economic impact of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS).

State-run news agency Xinhua said the government had issued orders to local officials to ensure that crops were harvested and measures were taken to help tourism.


8:36:59 AM    comment []