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Pakistan Shuts Schools, Suspends Iran Flights to Curb Coronavirus Spread

State Department Named 5 Chinese Media Outlets as Foreign Missions, but Not CCTV

The U.S. State Department recently required five Chinese state-owned media outlets in the United States to be registered as foreign missions. However, it did not require China Central Television (CCTV) to do so. CCTV is a Chinese state-owned media outlet and official propaganda mouthpiece of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). CCTV has 50 channels, and its Channel 9 (CCTV-9) was rebranded as CGTN (China Global Television Network) in 2015. CGTN is owned and operated by CCTV. While the U.S. State Department required CGTN to be registered as a foreign mission, CCTV itself has not had to undergo this registration. CCTV Channel 4 (CCTV-4) has been operating in the United States and providing Chinese-language broadcasting directly to Chinese-American communities. Other CCTV channels have an online presence for Chinese-speaking communities in the…

Pakistan Shuts Schools, Suspends Iran Flights to Curb Coronavirus Spread

ISLAMABAD—Pakistan on Thursday shut schools in several areas and suspended flights to and from Iran to try to stop the spread of the coronavirus, after reporting its first cases of the infection, officials said.

The South Asian nation bordering China and Iran, both of which have been hit hard by the virus, reported its first two cases on Wednesday.

Both people had recently traveled to Iran as part of large groups of pilgrims from Pakistan’s Shi’ite Muslim community. Health officials have said both were “stable.”

Authorities shut schools in the southern province of Sindh, including the country’s largest city Karachi where the first case was reported, and the southwestern province of Baluchistan, which borders Iran. They also began to trace nearly 8,000 pilgrims who recently returned to the country from Iran.

Pakistan’s Civil Aviation said it was suspending all flight operations with Iran starting from Thursday evening till further notice. “We have decided to close the flights with Iran,” the aviation’s spokesman Sattar Khokhar told Reuters.

Three Iranian carriers run seven flights a week to and from Pakistan.

Pakistan closed its border with Iran on Sunday following the outbreak in the neighboring country. Twenty-two people have died so far from the new coronavirus in Iran, the official news agency IRNA reported in a chart.

Sindh’s Provincial Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah said the 28 pilgrims whom the first cases were part of had been traced and would be scanned and monitored.

“We’re going to the next step,” he told a news conference in Karachi, adding that the Sindh government was out to trace all the 1,500 people who had returned to his province from Iran in the month of February. There are a total 8,000 such pilgrims across the country, he said.

“We’re locating each one of them,” Shah said, adding they will go through 15 days of strict monitoring before being allowed to leave their homes. Shah said all these people and anyone who had got in touch with them had to be isolated.

The authorities, who have kept more than 200 of the pilgrims in quarantine at the border, have stepped up scanning measures at airports and other border crossings, including western Afghanistan, said government health adviser Zafar Mirza.

He called on the people to not panic. “We don’t need to worry unnecessarily. We shouldn’t create any kind of panic,” he told a news conference Wednesday night. The health ministry has launched a media campaign to educate people, urging them to cooperate with authorities to help identify any suspected cases.

Pakistan, like most South Asian countries, is not well equipped to deal with any large scale emergency in case of the virus spread.

By Asif Shahzad

This article is from the Internet:Pakistan Shuts Schools, Suspends Iran Flights to Curb Coronavirus Spread

House Democrats Argue Against Diverting Ebola Funding to Coronavirus Response

House Democrats argued against diverting funding for the new coronavirus from preparing for the Ebola virus as they said that the $2.5 billion the White House wants for combating the new virus isn’t adequate. The White House submitted an emergency request to Congress on Feb. 24, asking for $2.5 billion to combat the new coronavirus, which causes the COVID-19 disease. The money was meant to help research vaccines, boost the surveillance network, and other efforts, Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar told a congressional committee in Washington on Wednesday. Part of the proposal featured moving $535 million from the Ebola preparedness account. Lawmakers on the聽House Appropriations Subcommittee told Azar that they didn’t appreciate that part of the proposal. Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.), the chairwoman, said that shifting the…