Lebanon confirms first coronavirus case as death toll hits 4 in Iran

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Lebanon's Minister of Health Hamad Hasan and Iman Shantiki, WHO representative in Lebanon, attend a news conference, after the country's first case of the novel coronavirus was confirmed, in Beirut on Feb. 21, 2020. (REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir)
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People wearing face masks walk outside Beirut's Rafik Hariri hospital, where Lebanon's first coronavirus case is being quarantined on Feb. 21, 2020. (REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir)
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Updated 22 February 2020
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Lebanon confirms first coronavirus case as death toll hits 4 in Iran

  • Found in 45-year-old Lebanese woman who travelled from Qom in Iran
  • Kuwait Airways announced it would suspend all flights to Iran as Kuwaitis were advised not to travel to Qom

BEIRUT: New coronavirus cases surged across the Middle East on Friday, after a rapid spread in Iran, where authorities say the death toll from the virus has hit four, prompting alarm and travel bans. 

Since December, the SARS-like virus has killed more than 2,200 people in China, the epidemic’s epicenter.

In the Middle East, two elderly men in Iran were the first confirmed deaths from the virus, which has also spread to the UAE, Egypt, Israel and Lebanon.

 

Iran’s Health Ministry on Friday reported two more deaths among 13 new diagnosed cases of the COVID-19 virus, doubling the total number of deaths in the country.

Hours later, Lebanon confirmed the first case. “The plane that arrived from the Iranian city of Qom was carrying 150 passengers,” a source from the medical emergency team that was formed to deal with the case told Arab News. 

“Lebanon received a warning from its embassy in Tehran about a plane carrying potential coronavirus cases, coming from the region in which Iranian authorities have monitored several infections,” the source said.

“A medical team hurried to the plane, Mahan Air flight W5115, as soon as it landed in Beirut on Thursday night. Passengers were all tested, and as 45-year-old Souad Sakr showed symptoms, she was taken directly to isolation and provided with all the medical requirements.”

Israel on Friday also confirmed its first case in a citizen who flew home from Japan. 

Kuwait Airways announced it would suspend all flights to Iran. Kuwaitis were advised not to travel to Qom. 




Young women wearing protective masks walk outside Beirut's Rafik Hariri University Hospital, where a woman is treated for coronavirus, on Feb. 21, 2020. (AFP / JOSEPH EID)

The UAE said a Filipino and a Bangladeshi were infected with the virus, bringing to 11 the number of cases in the country. More cases monitored

The Lebanese team is monitoring two other potential cases. Lebanese Health Minister Hamad Hassan told a press conference: “A floor in the government hospital in Beirut was allocated to receive any potential cases. There’s no need for excessive panic.

“The medical team is following up on passengers who were taken to their homes, and any person who shows symptoms will be taken to the hospital.

“People who arrived from Iran less than 14 days ago are asked to remain isolated until we make sure they haven’t been infected,” he added.

The COVID-19 outbreak first appeared in Iran on Wednesday.

Tehran has now confirmed a total of four deaths and 18 infections by the SARS-like virus, which first emerged in China in late December.

Thousands of Lebanese travel to Iran every year to visit Shiite holy sites in Qom and other cities.

(With AFP)

 


UN says Yemen’s Houthis seized telecoms equipment, vehicles

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UN says Yemen’s Houthis seized telecoms equipment, vehicles

  • The Houthis have repeatedly targeted UN agencies and detained dozens of its staff
  • The actions threaten to worsen access to humanitarian services and aid in Houthi-controlled areas

SANAA: Yemen’s Houthi militants have confiscated telecommunications equipment and vehicles from unstaffed United Nations offices in Sanaa, the world body said in a statement Friday, decrying potential disruptions to its humanitarian work.
The Houthis have repeatedly targeted UN agencies and detained dozens of its staff as part of a crackdown on alleged Israeli espionage rings since the start of the war in Gaza.
The actions threaten to worsen access to humanitarian services and aid in Houthi-controlled areas, where most of Yemen’s impoverished population lives.
On Thursday, the Houthis “entered at least six UN offices in Sanaa, all of which are currently unstaffed, and removed to an unknown location most of the telecommunication equipment in these offices and several UN vehicles,” the office of the resident and humanitarian coordinator for Yemen, Julien Harneis, said in a statement on X.
The Iran-backed group did not inform the UN why it had taken the assets, the statement said.
The development came a day after a UN official told AFP that the World Food Programme was ending the contracts of all 365 staff in Houthi-controlled Yemen, citing funding challenges and an unsafe environment for employees.
The statement said the militants had also prevented the UN Humanitarian Air Service from flying to Sanaa for more than a month, and to a government-held area not far from the capital for even longer.
“This decision further constrains the delivery of humanitarian assistance in these areas,” it said.
Around 19.5 million people in Yemen — more than half the population — were in need of humanitarian assistance in 2025, according to UN figures.
In November, the WFP and the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization named Yemen as one of the countries with populations at “imminent risk of catastrophic hunger.”
“This confiscation of UN assets and the blocking of UNHAS flights... comes at a time when humanitarian needs in Yemen, particularly in areas under their (Houthi) control, are increasing. This will make the humanitarian situation worse in those parts of Yemen,” the resident coordinator’s office said.
It added the actions were taken “without discussions with the UN, and therefore without any opportunity to find mutually acceptable arrangements for the delivery of assistance.”