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Manhunt for Beijing taxi drivers with SARS-infected passenger
Jerusalem Post ^ | Apr. 22, 2003 | ASSOCIATED PRESS

Posted on 04/22/2003 1:22:15 PM PDT by yonif

BEIJING (AP) _ The urgent radio message went out over the Beijing airwaves: "Taxi drivers who had a middle-aged male passenger dressed in a long green military-style coat should contact transportation authorities immediately."

The reason for the urgency: The customer had the SARS virus and officials were fearful that the contaminated cars could spread the deadly bug around the huge city that's already struggling to contain an outbreak.

A 24-hour manhunt ensued for two drivers who picked up the man who was later hospitalized, the official Xinhua News Agency reported Tuesday, the latest sign of how jittery officials have become about the threat of severe acute respiratory syndrome.

About 35,000 taxis matched the rough description the patient gave of the cabs he rode in and nearly 295 taxi agencies use such vehicles, Xinhua said, citing Beijing's Transportation Bureau. It said about 40,000 drivers are licensed to drive the taxis.

After 13 hours of searching, officials found one driver on Sunday, Xinhua said. Four hours later, the second one was located, said the agency, which didn't provide details about how the drivers were found.

Phone calls to the Transportation Bureau went unanswered on Tuesday afternoon.

Xinhua said the Transportation Bureau's chief, Ding Baosheng, has added a new item to the SARS prevention to-do list, which already includes washing hands frequently, avoiding crowded places and wearing a mask.

Ding urged the public to be sure to get a receipt at the end of taxi trips so that cars that might be SARS-infected can be tracked down quickly.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: beijing; china; sars; taxi
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1 posted on 04/22/2003 1:22:15 PM PDT by yonif
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To: yonif
If this is true, well,

HOLY CRAP!
2 posted on 04/22/2003 1:24:31 PM PDT by Frank_Discussion (It's not nice to fool Mr. Rumsfeld!)
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To: yonif

Why is there a "manhunt" for a taxi? Things are very series, indeed.

3 posted on 04/22/2003 1:24:59 PM PDT by jriemer (We are a Republic not a Democracy)
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To: yonif
One of the problems in Beijing is that the cab drivers hold multiple licenses, with multiple IDs. They make New York cab drivers look like choir boys. I remember my cab driver getting stopped for speeding returning from the Great Wall into the outskirts of the city. The policeman took his license away and said "You can get it back when you come to the station to pay your fine". After the cop departed, the cab driver laughs, and says, "Not a problem, I have many more!" and he showed me about 7 or 8 additional licenses, all with the same picture, but all with different names. One of my most memorable events in China.
4 posted on 04/22/2003 1:44:47 PM PDT by TommyDale
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To: yonif; CathyRyan; Mother Abigail; Dog Gone; Petronski; per loin; riri; flutters; Judith Anne; ...
Military SARS victim? Connection with all the cases in military hospitals?
5 posted on 04/22/2003 2:16:03 PM PDT by aristeides
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To: yonif
I am going to be really pissed if Jackie Chan gets this virus. He's one of the few folks making movies that me and my five year old can watch together.
6 posted on 04/22/2003 2:24:36 PM PDT by vetvetdoug
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To: per loin; Mother Abigail; Dog Gone; Petronski; riri; EternalHope; Domestic Church; aristeides; ...
Beijing still reluctant to divulge Sars toll

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-655812,00.html
7 posted on 04/22/2003 2:48:32 PM PDT by CathyRyan
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To: aristeides
How come no media person asks Rummy at his news conferences if it is a "Matter of National Security" and therefore secret , if any American military member has it?
8 posted on 04/22/2003 3:36:51 PM PDT by Betty Jo
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To: TommyDale
"One of my most memorable events in China."

I would have thought the cab ride itself would have been memorable enough. If you can drive in China, you can drive anywhere.

After my first cab ride in China, I was happy to walk around for quite awhile. (just dont ask for directions..lol)
9 posted on 04/22/2003 3:49:45 PM PDT by Enemy Of The State (Kim Jong makes me 'ill')
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To: yonif
"Taxi drivers who had a middle-aged male passenger dressed in a long green military-style coat should contact transportation authorities immediately."

Well, that certainly narrows it down some...


10 posted on 04/22/2003 3:50:04 PM PDT by Chad Fairbanks (For mad scientists who keep brains in jars, here's a tip: add a slice of lemon for freshness.)
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To: yonif
Hmmmm..I wonder if there will soon be a massive purging of taxi drivers?
11 posted on 04/22/2003 3:51:19 PM PDT by Enemy Of The State (Kim Jong makes me 'ill')
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To: yonif
officials found one driver on Sunday, Xinhua said. Four hours later, the second one was located

Yeah, right.

A few years ago we chatted with a Chinese scientist here in the states. I asked him if he was present during the uprising in Tiennemin (sp) Square, since he was a student then.

He was afraid to answer outright but responded, "The state came to the college and had each student write a paper stating where they had been. I wrote that I was in a room studying. Later, the government gathered all the papers from all the students and made a public pronouncement that THE UPRISING DID NOT OCCUR because no students were present."

Then he smiled at me. HA!

12 posted on 04/22/2003 4:20:09 PM PDT by Humidston (Do not remove this tag under penalty of law)
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To: Enemy Of The State
LOL! You got that right! The cab driver drove worse than
a North Carolinian in Boston.
13 posted on 04/22/2003 4:25:33 PM PDT by TommyDale
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To: aristeides
Most likely not. The vast majority of those who wear military coats in Beijing are migrant workers. Cheap military surplus.
14 posted on 04/22/2003 5:37:51 PM PDT by Kaiwen
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To: TommyDale
And, they loan their cars to their buddies on some days, so their friends can make a little extra cash.
15 posted on 04/22/2003 9:56:36 PM PDT by Ma Li (Never confuse excess of information for freedom of information)
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To: Humidston
Classic!!!! Thats a good one... :o)
16 posted on 04/22/2003 10:06:02 PM PDT by maui_hawaii
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To: yonif
What in hell is going on over there????
17 posted on 04/22/2003 10:07:18 PM PDT by lawgirl (Inifinite Rider on the Big Dogma)
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To: Semper911; TommyDale; Fitzcarraldo; the rifleman; aristeides; blam; CathyRyan; Mother Abigail; ...
Today in rural Hubei, China

Today, the schools begain taking the temperature of all the students because "someone is ill."

Today the people everywhere began wearing masks, and No 2 hospital was declared the SARS hospital.

Today the line continued that in our town there is no SARS, and that in our province there is only one case, in the capital. The only danger admitted is from people who were on a train from Shanxi province, which carried a SARS victim who died. The people in his car were quarantined, but on a train people walk from car to car all the time, and use the bathrooms in other cars if theirs is full.

Today I received several panicked e-mails from a Chinese friend studying at a university in our capital. They stated that she and her boyfriend knew of 40 people who had died of SARS in that city, and that they, with others, were fleeing to all parts--including our city--doubtless carrying the virus with them. (Don't forget the official number of dead in China is supposed to be less then 100). It doesn't matter much to her--the university closed, anyway.

Today in our city, small, remote and in an "unaffected province" evening adult classes were cancelled, shopkeepers wore their masks, and children were pulled from primary schools.

Today SARS is not contained, is not prevalent only in the cities, and the government bans and restrictions on travel are worse then useless.


18 posted on 04/23/2003 6:26:22 AM PDT by Ma Li (Never confuse excess of information for freedom of information)
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To: Ma Li
Thanks for the update. I don't see how this will have a good ending.
19 posted on 04/23/2003 6:39:07 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Ma Li
Thousands Flee Beijing, SARS

April 23, 2003

By KOMO Staff & News Services


BEIJING - China ordered all public schools in its capital closed Wednesday, leaving almost 2 million students to study at home following a major jump in the number of reported SARS cases in the city.

The closure begins Thursday and lasts for two weeks through what would have been the May Day school holiday, said an official of the Beijing Municipal Education Commission who would give her name only as Miss Cui.

Cui wouldn't give a reason, but Beijing newspapers cited a government notice that said the move was meant to prevent the spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome, which has killed at least 28 people in the Chinese capital. The closure will effect about 1.7 million students.

On Tuesday, Hong Kong reopened most secondary schools three weeks after they were closed to help contain the ailment.

China's health ministry said on Sunday Beijing's number of infections had surged nearly tenfold from 37 to 339. More triple-digit increases were announced Tuesday and Wednesday, raising Beijing's total cases to 588.

Thousands of nervous people in white gauze masks gathered in train stations in China's capital to get out of town.

"We're really afraid to ride this train to go home," said one girl from the eastern city of Hangzhou, who would give only her surname, Shi. "We just don't know how dangerous this SARS is."

Nationwide, China has reported 106 deaths from SARS and says it has more than 2,100 people infected. Six new SARS deaths were reported in Hong Kong on Wednesday, pushing the territory's toll to 105.

An estimated 4,000 people worldwide have been infected by SARS, and about 250 have died, mostly in Asia. The United States has reported just 38 probable cases and no deaths.

Most of mainland China's deaths and infections are in Guangdong, the southern province where the disease is suspected to have originated. But new cases are being reported daily in areas ranging from central China to its northwestern desert regions and northern grasslands.

Beijing's mayor was replaced Tuesday after the city government was accused of mishandling the outbreak. The World Health Organization said city officials failed to trace patients who might have been exposed, which the U.N. agency said could let the disease spread.

Elsewhere, the eastern city of Hangzhou has called off community programs in school facilities and closed school playgrounds and sports fields to outsiders, newspapers reported.

They said schools throughout the country have been ordered to step up work on disinfecting their facilities and teaching students hygiene, but no other closures were immediately reported.

In Beijing, an infrared body temperature scanner has been set up at the capital's airport to check passengers for fever, a SARS symptom, news reports said. They said similar devices are to be set up at train stations and airports in Shanghai, the county's biggest city.

In Hong Kong, the World Health Organization said it had doubts about a government report blaming sewage leaks and personal contact for a huge outbreak at an apartment complex. More than 300 people caught the disease at the Amoy Gardens apartments, and 14 have died.

Studies by Hong Kong researchers showed the SARS virus can survive for at least 24 hours on a surface coughed on or touched by a victim, longer than the three hours some had previously thought.

"The virus is very obstinate. It is very difficult to kill," microbiologist John Tam of the Chinese University of Hong Kong said in a radio interview broadcast Wednesday.

The Mormon Church said Wednesday it has temporarily stopped sending missionaries to Hong Kong as a precaution against SARS, and those already on the streets here are wearing masks and avoiding contact such as handshakes. None of Hong Kong's 30,000 Mormons are known to have caught SARS.

Hoping to ease the economic strains from SARS, Hong Kong officials said they will temporarily cut taxes, lower some charges and guarantee bank loans as part of a $1.5 billion assistance package.

In Canada, the SARS death toll rose by one on Tuesday, to a total of 15. Experts from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention arrived in Toronto to help officials figure out how to stop the spread of SARS within hospitals.

Australia's most populous state, New South Wales, said it will allow authorities to quarantine suspected SARS sufferers. Australia has had just three probable cases of SARS, all members of one family who have recovered.

Hawaii, which receives many visitors from Asia, so far seems safer than many locales, the incoming director of the WHO said Tuesday. There are only five suspected cases of SARS in Hawaii, two of which are designated "probable" infections.

20 posted on 04/23/2003 6:54:17 AM PDT by CathyRyan
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