Mainland China sees rise in new coronavirus cases

This is from Thompson Reuters

Big Al says: “so much for some of the Weekend Comments accusing China of utilizing a chemical weapon”

* 30 new cases reported on Saturday vs 19 day earlier

* 5 new local transmissions reported, all in Guangdong

* China remains worried about second wave of infections (Adds details on new cases in mainland China, background, bylines)

By Yilei Sun and Se Young Lee

BEIJING, April 5 (Reuters) – Mainland China reported 30 new coronavirus cases on Saturday, up from 19 a day earlier as the number of cases involving travellers from abroad as well as local transmissions increased, highlighting the difficulty in stamping out the outbreak.

The National Health Commission said in a statement on Sunday that 25 of the latest cases involved people who had entered from abroad, compared with 18 such cases a day earlier. Five new locally transmitted infections were also reported on Saturday, all in the southern coastal province of Guangdong, up from a day earlier.

The mainland has now reported a total of 81,669 cases, while the death toll has risen by three to 3,329.

Though daily infections have fallen dramatically from the height of the epidemic in February, when hundreds of new cases were reported daily, Beijing remains unable to completely halt new infections despite imposing some of the most drastic measures to curb the virus’ spread.

The so-called imported cases and asymptomatic patients, who have the virus and can give it to others but show no symptoms, have become among China’s chief concerns in recent weeks. The country has closed off its borders to almost all foreigners as the virus spread globally, though most of the imported cases involve Chinese nationals returning from overseas.

The central government also has pushed local authorities to identify and isolate the asymptomatic patients.

The health commission said 47 new asymptomatic cases were reported in the mainland on Saturday, compared with 64 a day earlier.

(Reporting by Yilei Sun and Se Young Lee; Editing by Richard Chang)

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