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Xinhua News Agency/PA Images

Two Diamond Princess passengers die as Britain announces repatriation flight

Both passengers, who were in their 80s, were taken off the ship last week and were being treated in hospital.

LAST UPDATE | 20 Feb 2020

TWO ELDERLY JAPANESE passengers who contracted the Covid-19 virus onboard the Diamond Princess cruise ship in Japan have died. 

Japan’s NHK public television said both were Japanese and in their 80s. A Health Ministry official only confirmed that they had been previously taken to hospital in serious condition and had existing chronic diseases.

Hundreds of passengers began leaving the ship yesterday after the end of a much-criticised two-week quarantine that failed to stop the spread the coronavirus among passengers and crew.

Results were still pending for some passengers who had been tested for the coronavirus that has infected tens of thousands of people in China and more than 540 on the ship.

Some passengers said on Twitter they received health check forms asking if they had symptoms such as a headache, fever or coughing.

Passengers who tested negative and had no symptoms still had to have their body temperature checked before leaving.

Two Irish citizens have tested positive for the virus. The couple, who have dual citizenship with another EU country, were moved from the ship to a hospital in Japan where they are currently being treated.

Tanáiste and Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney confirmed that six Irish citizens were on board the Diamond Princess cruise ship. 

Britain, meanwhile, is preparing to evacuate passengers stuck on the ship docked off the coast of Japan, Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab has said.

Raab said information has been provided to those registered for the flight, due to leave tomorrow, but he urged “other British nationals still seeking to leave to contact us”.

He added: “We will continue to support British nationals who wish to stay in Japan.”

There were 78 British passengers on the cruise liner when cases of the coronavirus strain known as Covid-19 started to emerge.

Four British cases have since been confirmed by the Foreign Office.

It is understood only healthy passengers with no symptoms of the virus will have a seat on the plane, with all to spend 14 days in quarantine. 

Japan’s government has been questioned over its decision to keep people on the ship, which some experts have called a perfect virus incubator. Some medical experts who observed the quarantine process on board also raised caution over lax protective measures on the ship.

Kentaro Iwata, an infectious diseases expert at Kobe University Hospital who boarded the ship as part of a medical relief team earlier this week, said in a YouTube video that he was alarmed by the lack of control measures, including distinction between clean and contaminated zones, and the inadequate use of protective gear.

He called it “chaotic” and said it made him scared of getting infected himself.

Iwata, currently in self-imposed quarantine at a hotel, said the Japanese Health Ministry-led operation implemented some measures, but “to me it was not good enough, because there were exchanges of dirty and clean”.

He said Japan should follow the example of the US and other countries requiring an additional two-week quarantine for passengers brought home from the ship.

Meanwhile, South Korea has reported its first death from coronavirus, as officials in one major city urged its 2.5 million residents to avoid going outside as cases spiked.

The Korea Centres for Disease Control and Prevention did not immediately provide details of the death, but authorities earlier said the country had confirmed a total of 82 cases of the Covid-19 virus.

The death was reported as the mayor of Daegu asked all citizens to stay indoors and pleaded for help from the central government.

Kwon Young-jin made the request in a televised news conference after the south-eastern city and nearby towns reported 35 additional cases of infection with Covid-19 today. 

Kwon also asked Daegu citizens to wear masks even indoors if possible. He expressed fears that the rising infections will soon overwhelm the city’s health infrastructure and called for urgent help from the central government in Seoul.

Korea. Medical workers move a patient to Kyungpook National University Hospital in Daegu. PA Images PA Images

According to reports from mainland China there have been 2,004 deaths and 74,185 confirmed infections of the virus.

New cases have fallen to less than 2,000 per day for the past two days but officials and analysts have warned that the threat of a more serious outbreak remains as people gradually return to work following a prolonged Lunar New Year holiday.

While the overall spread of the virus has been slowing, the situation remains severe in Hubei province where the virus is thought to have originated.

Meanwhile, the European Commission has announced the EU will be financing the repatriation of citizens from any of the EU27 still stuck on the Diamond Princess.

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    Mute Braonain Proinseas
    Favourite Braonain Proinseas
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    Feb 20th 2020, 8:01 AM

    Why bring them home? We don’t want the virus.

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    Mute Stuart
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    Feb 20th 2020, 8:09 AM

    @Braonain Proinseas: they will be in quarantine for 2 weeks. We have to look after Irish citizens.

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    Mute Sea Graham
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    Feb 20th 2020, 8:24 AM

    @Braonain Proinseas: because they are citizens and the state is duty bound to do so. Pretty sure you’d be roaring and shouting if it was your family members and the government said, feck off we don’t want you back.

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    Mute Ed
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    Feb 20th 2020, 8:27 AM

    @Sea Graham: They are already being treated in a Japanese hospital for the virus. It would be madness to bring them here. They don’t even live in Ireland anyway.

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    Mute Paraic
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    Feb 20th 2020, 8:38 AM

    @Stuart: Surely it would make sense to quarantine them nearby rather than fly them halfway around the globe and risk contaminating aircraft, medical staff and causing an outbreak here. It would only take one slip up. I mean a taxi driver in Japan who carried passengers from the Diamond Princess has now tested positive. His fare was presumably “virus free”.

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    Mute David Harries
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    Feb 20th 2020, 8:40 AM

    @Braonain Proinseas: Clown

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    Mute Feardorcha Ó Maolomhnaigh
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    Feb 20th 2020, 11:34 AM

    @Paraic: Can you reference that statement regarding the taxi driver? It sounds a bit Facebooky.

    It seems a very short period of time from alleged infection to being tested positive

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    Mute David Jordan
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    Feb 20th 2020, 11:52 AM

    @Feardorcha Ó Maolomhnaigh: “A male Japanese taxi driver in Tokyo has tested positive for the new coronavirus, health ministry officials and other sources said Thursday.

    The 72-year-old man developed a fever on Jan. 29 and was hospitalized on Feb. 6, the sources said.”

    He belive was subsequently linked to passengers on the Diamond Princess. He wasn’t the only taxi driver who’s infection was linked to sick tourists.

    https://www.nippon.com/en/news/yjj2020021301158/japanese-taxi-driver-tests-positive-for-coronavirus.html

    And the US just put 61 Americans on the Federal no fly list, normally used for terrorism, these passengers were released from the Diamond Princes yesterday after testing negative (note the PCR test cannot detect people incubating the virus when viral titers are still very low, so some maybe incubating the virus).

    Also, South Korea announced 51 new cases in one day, most linked to a church group. They have overtaken Japan for the most cases outside of China (excluding the ship). South Korea and Japan are at the same stage as China was in early January, this time there won’t be a draconian crackdown so I do expect to see a major epidemic in both countries in the next few weeks. As cases in Asian countries increase it will become harder to keep the virus out of Europe.

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    Mute Paraic
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    Feb 20th 2020, 12:07 PM

    @David Jordan: Yes and “A Japanese man in Aichi Prefecture and a taxi driver in Yokohama, both in their 60s, were also reported as infected, according to local authorities.” https://english.kyodonews.net/news/2020/02/26acf5d217e4-virus-hit-diamond-princess-passengers-to-disembark-from-wed.html
    And “NAHA — An Okinawan taxi driver who drove at least one passenger from the quarantined Diamond Princess cruise ship earlier in February has tested positive for the new coronavirus”
    https://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20200214/p2a/00m/0na/005000c

    So that seems to be 3: Yokohama, Okinawa, Tokyo.

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    Mute Shane Cormican
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    Feb 20th 2020, 1:07 PM

    @Stuart: nah we will let the Brits bring them back on their plane and let them treat them for 2 week – sure that’s what we do to be sure

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    Mute Feardorcha Ó Maolomhnaigh
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    Feb 20th 2020, 2:21 PM

    @David Jordan: Thanks for that. Yes there have been a few taxi drivers infected, which is a worry for the Japanese.
    The link to infected passengers on the Diamond Princess is a bit tenuous though.

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    Mute David Harries
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    Feb 20th 2020, 2:46 PM

    @Braonain Proinseas:

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    Mute David Stapleton
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    Feb 20th 2020, 9:14 AM

    Is it some kind of political faux pas to not give details of the dual nationality? All that’s being said is “another European country”…

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    Mute Cathal McCourt
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    Feb 20th 2020, 11:15 AM

    @David Stapleton: it’s probably to protect their identity. If they released names there could be backlash against the people who contracted this disease in their communities if they return.

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    Mute David Stapleton
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    Feb 20th 2020, 2:34 PM

    @Cathal McCourt: Perhaps, but who would specifically know “two Irish people with an Irish and German dual nationality”, for example….

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    Mute Neil Reilly
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    Feb 20th 2020, 4:33 PM

    @David Stapleton: do you not know the Gruber-O’Flaherty’s?

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