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BANGKOK, Thailand -- In China, officials have cancelled air flights
	and trains out of Wuhan, a city of 11 million people which is the
	epicenter of a deadly coronavirus that has killed at least 17 people
	and sickened 557.
	
	All 17 deaths and most of the infections appeared in Hubei province,
	including the capital Wuhan.
	
	Other victims fell ill to the disease while visiting foreign
	countries, including Thailand, Taiwan, South Korea, Japan and the
	United States.
	
	"We have it totally under control," President Trump told CNBC in
	Davos, Switzerland, during the World Economic Forum.
	
	"It’s one person coming in from China, and we have it under control.
	It’s going to be just fine."
	
	Elsewhere in China, cities with confirmed cases of people who have
	fallen ill from the mysterious virus include Guangdong near Hong Kong,
	the capital Beijing, Shanghai which is downriver from Wuhan, and a
	handful of other places.
	
	In Wuhan, all public transportation including taxis, buses, and subway
	and ferry systems are also no longer operating, in an effort to limit
	the movement of people and hinder the spread of the virus.
	
	Panic buying, albeit under control, with long lines at supermarkets
	and other supply shops have appeared in Wuhan because people do not
	know how long the city will be under quarantine.
	
	Gauze facemasks are mandatory when in public in Wuhan, officials said.
	
	Fear is escalating in Wuhan because not only is the food available to
	customers now running scarce, but people are also realizing that with
	their city cut off from the outside world, fresh supplies of food and
	other basic items will be difficult to arrange.
	
	Transportation in and out will be hampered, making it cumbersome to
	restock empty shelves in supermarkets and other shops, especially if
	the quarantine continues for an extended time.
	
	Many of the frightened people feeling increasingly trapped in Wuhan
	are in the city on vacation, visiting relatives and friends at the
	start of a one-week Lunar New Year holiday which runs from January 24.
	
	Now they cannot easily go home.
	
	At airports throughout China, Southeast Asia and increasingly
	worldwide, health authorities have set up medical gates, questioning
	arriving passengers about their current condition and scanning
	vulnerable people with a handheld device to determine their
	temperature and check for fever.
	
	Sanitation at airports, train stations and other popular areas has
	also been stepped up.
	
	Across China, Southeast Asia and at other holiday sites, millions of
	Chinese tourists have already started to travel to celebrate the New
	Year, resulting in long lines of incoming passengers from China.
	
	Authorities in tourist destinations are concerned that it is difficult
	to immediate determine if a traveler is infected because the onset of
	the pneumonia-like disease often takes several hours to emerge.
	
	International health experts meanwhile have praised China for its
	rapid response to the outbreak.
	
	Unlike Beijing's slow, secretive reaction when the Severe Acute
	Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) killed 774 people in 37 countries during
	2002 and 2003, China has now moved very quickly to warn the world of
	the outbreak, sequenced the virus' genome and made the results public.
	
	Beijing has also rapidly mobilized medical workers throughout the country.
	
	China has the advantage of lessons learnt from previous outbreaks, and
	has since constructed modern facilities to deal with viruses,
	quarantine and treat victims, and move into vector sites with
	investigators and cleanup crews.
	
	The latest theory, about how this coronavirus began, is focusing on
	snake meat, sold in Wuhan's Wholesale Seafood Market.
	
	That market also sells edible live wild animals and carcasses,
	including chickens, donkeys, sheep, pigs, camels, foxes, rats,
	hedgehogs and reptiles.
	
	One theory being pursued is that the virus appeared in bats which were
	then eaten by snakes.
	
	Customers then bought snakes live or dead to eat because snake meat is
	popular among Chinese and other Southeast Asian people, especially in
	winter when it is believed that it keeps people "warm" if eaten.
	
	The earliest cases in Wuhan appeared among workers at the market and
	customers who purchased meat there.
	
	Unfortunately for investigators, the market was quickly shut down and
	sanitized, making it difficult to determine what animal spread the
	disease.
	
	Scientists also want to find out how the virus was able to adapt from
	cold-blooded reptiles to warm-blooded mammals and humans.
	
	There is no known medication to cure the disease from the virus.
	
	Differing mutations have resulted in a varying degree of severity,
	with some people falling ill for several days and recovering, while
	others have died.
	
	"With at least 17 deaths in more than 500 cases, the virus does not
	seem to be as deadly as SARS -- which killed an estimated 11% of the
	people it infected," Nature.com reported.
	
	Despite the international praise Beijing received for its speedy
	response, China's political rivalry with the neighboring island of
	Taiwan has caused a serious medical danger concerning the virus.
	
	China has used its diplomatic power to keep Taiwan out of the World
	Health Organization's immediate medical alert system and database,
	according to the Wall Street Journal.
	
	"Taiwanese officials and medical professionals say they can still
	receive information discussed at WHO meetings through informal
	channels, thanks to nongovernmental groups and friendly governments,"
	the Wall Street Journal reported.
	
	"But they don't necessarily get it in a timely manner, which could be
	critical during public-health emergencies."
	
	More than 2.7 million Chinese from mainland China visited Taiwan in
	2018, according to government statistics.
	
	At least one ill person in Taiwan has tested positive for the virus.
	
	"Taiwan's 23 million people, as in other corners of the Earth, could
	face health risks at any time," Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen said
	at a news conference on January 23.
	
	"I again urge the WHO not to exclude Taiwan over political factors."
	
	In Thailand, four people were treated for the virus, including a
	woman, 73, who became stricken with a fever after arriving from Wuhan.
	
	"We can control the situation," Public Health Minister Anutin
	Charnvirakul told reporters.
	
	"There have not been cases of human-to-human transmission in Thailand,
	because we detected the patients as soon as they arrived."
	
	Three other Chinese citizens who displayed symptoms in Thailand were
	treated, recovered, and sent back to China.