BAD
NEWS: Lead Chinese
Virologist Says European
Victory Over Covid-19 Is
Several Years Away
23
March, 2020
One
of China’s leading virologists, Zhang Wenhong, head of the Shanghai
COVID-19 expert group, said European countries should not expect a
quick victory over coronavirus.
During
a videoconference organized by the Chinese Consulate General in
Dusseldorf, Germany, the expert expressed the opinion that Western
countries may require up to two years for this.
“It
will be perfectly normal for the virus to appear and disappear, and
it will last one or two years,” Zhang said.
“I
can say: forget that the pandemic will end in Europe in the near
future,” the Chinese virologist specified his pessimistic forecast.
The
scientist has no doubt that the COVID-19 pandemic will drag on for
some time and will depend only on the general efforts to contain it
when it succeeds in taking control: this summer or the next.
“To
solve the problem in a short period of time, measures must be
extremely radical,” said Zhang Wenhong.
According
to him, a pandemic could be defeated relatively quickly only if it
were possible to stop all movement around the world for four weeks.
However, he immediately added that it was “difficult for him to
even imagine” that this was possible in the modern world.
Zhang
Wenhong explained that China was helped in the fight against
coronavirus by the fact that almost all institutions, enterprises and
educational institutions were closed in the country at the very
beginning of the epidemic due to the “Spring Festival”.
Coronavirus
in Europe
As
of Monday morning, March 23,
59,138
patients with coronavirus were detected in Italy,
29
909 in Spain,
24
873 people were infected in Germany,
16
246 people were sick in France,
7
724 in Switzerland,
5
745 in the UK ,
4,217
infected were detected in the Netherlands,
3,627
in Austria,
3,401
in Belgium
and
less than three thousand infected in Norway, Sweden and Denmark.
The
largest number of deaths from coronavirus also in Italy – 5 476
people, 1 813 people died from COVID-19 in Spain, 674 people – in
France, 281 – in the UK, 179 – in the Netherlands, 98 – in
Switzerland, 94 patients died from complications in Germany, 75 in
Belgium, 21 in Sweden.
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