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    Coronavirus outbreak batters economies, raises fear of spread

    Agencies
    tOKYO, MARCH 1 :
    Amid fears about where the next outbreak of a fast-spreading new virus would appear, infections and deaths continued to rise across the globe Sunday, emptying streets of tourists and workers, shaking economies and rewriting the realities of daily life.
    Panic-buying of daily necessities emerged in Japan, tourist sites across Asia, Europe and the Mideast were deserted, and governments closed schools and banned big gatherings.
    Amusement parks have been shuttered and concerts cancelled.
    In Paris, priests stopped placing sacramental bread in worshippers’ mouths.
    While the new coronavirus has extended its reach across the world, definite geographic clusters of infections were emerging, with Iran, Italy and South Korea seeing rising cases.
    The United States, meanwhile, recorded its first death, a man in his 50s in Washington state who had underlying health conditions but who hadn’t travelled to any affected areas.
    “Additional cases in the United States are likely, but healthy individuals should be able to fully recover,” President Donald Trump said at a Saturday briefing, where officials announced heightened warnings about travel to certain regions of Italy and South Korea as well as a ban on travel to Iran.
    China on Sunday reported a slight uptick in new cases over the past 24 hours to 573, the first time in five days that number has exceeded 500.
    They remain almost entirely confined to the hardest-hit province of Hubei and its capital, the epicenter of Wuhan.
    The list of countries touched by the virus climbed to nearly 60, with Ireland and Ecuador reporting their first cases Saturday.
    More than 86,000 people worldwide have contracted the virus, with deaths topping 2,900.
    Islam’s holiest sites were closed to foreign pilgrims, while professional baseball teams played in deserted stadiums in Japan and officials in France advised residents to forgo customary greeting kisses.
    UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres recommended that a meeting March 9 where about 10,000 people were to commemorate the 25th anniversary of a U.N. conference on women’s rights be drastically scaled back because of the spread of COVID-19. Many cases of the virus have been relatively mild, and some of those infected apparently show no symptoms at all.

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