Quarantined passengers disembark coronavirus-hit ship in Japan

Two Israelis are among at least 500 passengers of the Diamond Princess cruise liner that have been docked near Tokyo for the past 2 weeks; the other 10 Israeli nationals to be freed late Thursday

Reuters, Ynet|
Hundreds of people began disembarking a quarantined cruise ship off Japan on Wednesday, including two Israeli nationals, who did not test positive for the deadly virus and who haven't been in direct contact with one of the infected passengers.
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  • Around 500 passengers were to disembark the virus-hit Diamond Princess docked at Yokohama near Tokyo, public broadcaster NHK said, ending an ordeal that began on Feb. 3 after a former passenger was diagnosed with the virus in Hong Kong. The cruise liner has become the biggest concentration of infections outside of China, with more than 540 people infected out of about 3,700 passengers and crew who were initially on board.
    3 View gallery
    חלק מהנוסעים מספינה "דיימונד פרינסס" מתחילים להתפנות ממנה
    חלק מהנוסעים מספינה "דיימונד פרינסס" מתחילים להתפנות ממנה
    Passengers leave the ship on a special bus
    (Photo: Getty Images)
    The other 10 Israelis who tested negative for the virus and who have not been in direct contact with at least one of the 540 passengers infected, are set to be released on Thursday evening Tokyo time.
    Three other Israeli nationals who were infected with the COVID-19 virus will remain in Japan. They are believed to be held in military hospitals somewhere near Tokyo.
    "We are happy to get out of the ship," said one of the two Israelis released. "We still worry about the rest of the Israelis. During the release process we went through many medical tests until we got to the bus.”
    The passengers who tested negative for the virus but had been in contact with one of the infected will to go through a second quarantine period.
    The United States has already flown back over 300 American evacuees from the ship and other countries are queuing up to collect their citizens, including an Australian flight due to arrive in Japan later on Wednesday.
    "We were lucky. We booked a room with a balcony and a lounge area, but after being confined to this cabin. I am very keen to get off this ship," Australian passenger Vicki Presland said.
    Many of those infected have been transferred to hospitals and those passengers and crew who had shared a room with people testing positive would have to stay on board longer, Japanese officials said.
    FEVER MEDICATION CHECKS
    The latest figures bring the total number of cases in China to over 74,000 and the total death toll to 2,004, three quarters of which have occurred in the Hubei provincial capital of Wuhan. Six people have died outside mainland China, including a new fatality announced on Wednesday in Hong Kong.
    Chinese state media reported that Hubei province would adopt more forceful measures to find patients with fever to help contain the epidemic, on top of steps already taken to isolate the province.
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    חלק מהנוסעים מספינה "דיימונד פרינסס" מתחילים להתפנות ממנה
    חלק מהנוסעים מספינה "דיימונד פרינסס" מתחילים להתפנות ממנה
    Buses with passengers leave the ship
    (Photo: EPA)
    The province will check records of all fever patients who have visited doctors since Jan. 20, and people who have bought over-the-counter cough and fever medications at both brick-and-mortar and online drug stores, Xinhua reported.
    Chinese officials have said the apparent slowdown in infection rates is evidence that such strict measures are working to bring the virus under control, but global health officials say it is too early to predict how the epidemic will play out.
    The number of new cases in mainland China excluding Hubei has now fallen for 15 straight days. The number of new infections ex-Hubei totalled 56 on Feb. 18, down from a peak of 890 on Feb 3.
    The head of a leading hospital in Wuhan, where the virus is believed to have originated, died of the disease on Tuesday, the seventh health worker to have succumbed to the disease, known as COVID-19.
    The World Health Organization's (WHO) emergencies programme chief, Mike Ryan, said China had success with "putting out the fire" first in Hubei and ensuring that people returning to Beijing from the Lunar New Year holiday were monitored.
    "Right now, the strategic and tactical approach in China is the correct one," Ryan said.
    Ryan also said there were no indications the new coronavirus was infecting people in North Korea. Some South Korean media outlets have reported multiple cases and possible deaths in the secretive North.
    GLOBAL REPERCUSSIONS
    Despite global concerns about the economic impact of the disease, China's ambassador to the European Union said on Tuesday this would be "limited, short-term and manageable" and that Beijing had enough resources to step in if needed.
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    חלק מהנוסעים מספינה "דיימונד פרינסס" מתחילים להתפנות ממנה
    חלק מהנוסעים מספינה "דיימונד פרינסס" מתחילים להתפנות ממנה
    The Diamond Princess cruise liner
    (Photo: AP)
    Chinese state television quoted President Xi Jinping as saying China could still meet its economic growth target for 2020 despite the epidemic.
    In a vote of confidence that the virus would not inflict lasting long-term damage on China's economy, a source said a Chinese fund attracted about 120 billion yuan ($17.1 billion) of subscriptions on Tuesday, 20 times the target.
    The mutual fund, which can invest up to 95% of assets in stocks, aimed to raise 6 billion yuan, but the marketing campaign was cut short by the outpouring of interest.
    Even so, the short-term impacts are playing havoc with trade and business around the world.
    Foreign ministers from China and Southeast Asia will meet in Vientiane, Laos, on Thursday to explore ways to cooperate in dealing with the outbreak, Malaysia's foreign ministry said.
    China is the biggest trade partner for many Southeast Asian economies that are hurting badly because of the epidemic.
    Data this week from Japan and Singapore indicated those economies are on the brink of recession, while South Korean President Moon Jae-in said his country's economy is in an emergency situation.
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