Coronavirus: China Says Disease 'Curbed' in Wuhan and Hubei
President Xi
Jinping has visited the city of Wuhan, the centre of the coronavirus outbreak,
sending a message that Beijing has the situation under control.
His visit
comes as China recorded its lowest number of infections, just 19 on Tuesday,
all in Wuhan apart from two who had arrived from overseas.
China has
seen 80,754 confirmed cases, 3,136 of whom have died.
The visit
was Mr Xi's first trip to the city since the outbreak began.
According to
state media, Mr Xi arrived in Wuhan on Tuesday to inspect epidemic prevention
and control work in the province.
Wuhan and
its province, Hubei, have been locked down in order to prevent the spread of
the disease. The president visited a community in the city currently in
self-quarantine.
During his
visit, Mr Xi declared that the spread of the disease had been "basically
curbed" in Hubei province and Wuhan.
"Initial
success has been made in stabilising the situation and turning the tide in
Hubei and Wuhan," he said.
Chinese
state media quoted analysts as saying Mr Xi's visit had sent a "strong
signal to the entire country and the world that China is ascending out of the
darkest moment amid the outbreak".
The
president also visited Huoshenshan hospital, a temporary facility that was
completed in 10 days. Images from his visit show the president speaking to
staff and patients via video link.
Shortly
after his visit, state media confirmed that all 14 of the temporary hospitals
in China had now been closed.
It is
unclear how long Mr Xi will stay in the city.
Zhang Ming,
a professor at Renmin University, told Reuters news agency: "He is there
now to reap the harvest. His being there means the Communist Party of China
(CCP) may declare victory against the virus soon."
Images of
Communist Party General Secretary Xi Jinping visiting Wuhan will be seen as
more than just reassuring to the people of China that the coronavirus emergency
is now pretty much under control.
It is also
like a nationwide green light.
It is a way
of sending out a signal that the return to "normality" should carry
on apace.
After all,
if the most important person in the country now feels that it is safe enough to
enter the belly of the monster then surely others can return to work in their
own cities, most of which have seen zero new infections recently.
True, when
Xi Jinping "visited" patients at the newly built Huoshenshan
quarantine ward this was done via video link. However, you would hardly expect
the country's leader to go up and give them a hug.
To see him
just being in the city probably means that parts of Hubei will be opened up
very soon with a resumption of transport links at least within the province,
along with more shops opening their doors. Elsewhere in China, things are going
to start moving much more quickly.
Mr Xi has
been notably absent from Chinese state media coverage of the virus. However,
CGTN said on Tuesday that Mr Xi had been "personally directing the disease
prevention and control work".
His deputy,
Vice President Li Keqiang, visited Wuhan in January. Last week, Vice Premier
Sun Chunlan visited a Wuhan housing community where she received a hostile
reception from residents who claimed the area had been cleaned up for her
visit.
As the number
of infections rapidly decreases, there are signs that life in China is slowly
returning to normal.
In Qinghai
province, the first batch of 144 senior schools and secondary vocational
schools reopened on Monday.
On Monday,
state media said Tianhe Airport in Wuhan was preparing to reopen but no
official date had been set.
Disneyland
Shanghai says it has partially reopened. The main theme park is still closed
but the shops and restaurants have reopened.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-asia-china
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