The Wall Street Journal - 18.03.2020

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THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Wednesday, March 18, 2020 |A


THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC


now, the outbreak will peak in
early April, leading to an esti-
mated 12,000 deaths. If they
refuse to cooperate, Iran’s
strained medical system will
be overwhelmed, and the peak
will occur in June, causing as
many as 3.5 million people to
die, the study said.
Iran isn’t alone in attempt-
ing to stem the tide of wor-
shipers to holy sites—and con-
taining the risks such mass
congregations pose in spread-
ing the virus.
On Tuesday, Grand Ayatol-
lah Ali al-Sistani, the para-
mount spiritual authority in
Iraq, who also commands loy-
alty among millions of Shiites
across the world, issued a reli-
gious edict designating the
fight against the coronavirus a
collective duty.
Mr. Sistani likened the work
of medical workers to that of
“heroic fighters” and said those
who fell in the line of duty
should be considered martyrs.
Both the Shiite and Sunni au-
thorities have instructed all
mosques under their authority
across Iraq to be closed.
Saudi Arabia also on Tues-
day suspended all mass
prayers, including Friday
prayer, in all mosques, with
the exception of the two holy
mosques in Mecca and Med-
ina, the official Saudi Press
Agency reported.
In Iran, authorities on Mon-

day closed four important reli-
gious sites after weekslong
calls to shut shrines and
mosques to avoid mass gath-
erings. The Masoumeh shrine
in Qom and the Imam Reza
Mosque in the eastern city of
Mashhad are two of the coun-
try’s holiest sites. Authorities
also closed the Shah-Abdol
Azim shrine in Tehran and the
Jamkaran Mosque in Qom.
While Iranian authorities
say Qom is the source of its

Covid-19 epidemic, they hadn’t
until Monday restricted travel
or closed religious sites in the
city, although local authorities
had banned hotels and guest
houses from taking travelers.
The Imam Reza shrine in
Mashhad attracts up to 25 mil-
lion Iranian and non-Iranian
pilgrims a year. The Astan
Quds Razavi, which runs the
shrine, is one of Iran’s wealthi-
est and most politically pow-
erful foundations.

Some Iranian conservatives
have for decades resisted gov-
ernment interference in reli-
gious practices. A video circu-
lated on social media showed
a worshiper on Monday out-
side the Masoumeh shrine in
Qom accusing Iran’s Ministry
of Health of obeying orders
from the World Health Organi-
zation, which he said didn’t
believe in religion.
“If you are a true believer,
this door must be opened to-

of more than 10 people, as in-
fections and deaths outside
China exceeded those inside.
Its guidance expanded on ear-
lier restrictions that banned
most inbound travel from Eu-
rope and the U.K.
Millions of people in the
San Francisco Bay Area were
ordered to remain at home for
three weeks and restrictions
on bars and restaurants were
expanded beyond New York
City and Los Angeles to Min-
nesota and Kentucky.
In addition, Germany un-
veiled broad restrictions on
travel and public life, while
France ordered a nationwide
quarantine.

The growing tally of infec-
tions globally is also forcing
new steps in parts of the world
that had appeared to have a
handle on the virus’s spread.
Taiwan reported its first
case in early January and
moved quickly to enforce quar-
antine rules on arrivals from
China, Hong Kong and Macau.
This kept the island’s daily
new infection counts to single
digits for two months—until
the center of the pandemic
shifted from Asia. The past
three days have brought more
than 30% of Taiwan’s total
cases, most of them involving
travelers returning from vaca-
tions in places like Europe.

antines for residents and
short-term visitors from
Southeast Asia. They also
strongly discouraged citizens
from traveling overseas and
recalled exchange students
who are studying abroad.
Hong Kong leader Carrie
Lam said arrivals from all for-
eign countries would be
placed under home quarantine
for two weeks beginning
Thursday—extending a quar-
antine rule that had previously
affected travelers from hot
spots like China, Iran, Korea
and parts of Europe.
“From now on, I would say
the majority of arrivals in
Hong Kong will be put under

home quarantine or medical
surveillance of some form,”
Mrs. Lam said at a press con-
ference on Tuesday.
Elsewhere in the Asia-Pa-
cific region, the disruption and
number of cases continued to
mount. National Australia
Bank, vacated its headquarters
in Melbourne after an em-
ployee tested positive for the
virus. The building will be
“pandemically cleansed,” NAB
Chief Executive Ross McEwan
said in a letter to staff posted
online Tuesday. Johns Hopkins
data show Australia has 377
confirmed cases of infection.
—Rachel Yeo
contributed to this article.

Source: Johns Hopkins CSSE

Note: Scale varies each country to show the daily change in the country.

15,
Mainland China

Malaysia

200

Australia

80

Singapore

20

Hong Kong

10

Thailand

30

Philippines

50

Indonesia

30

Vietnam

10

Jan. Feb. March

Taiwan

10

Shifting Threat
ManyAsia-Pacificcountriesareexperiencingarecentincreasein
coronaviruscases,incontrasttomainlandChina,where
infectionshaveslowed.
Daily new cases

“You can see from the cur-
rent situation—compared with
the previous wave—it came
much more quickly,” Taiwan
Minister of Health and Welfare
Chen Shih-chung said Monday.
The recent clusters of Tai-
wanese patients included nine
people returning from a vaca-
tion in Turkey with the same
tour group, provoking a social-
media outcry about leisure
travel in the wake of the
global pandemic.
“If you know a friend who
is still traveling for fun, please
immediately break up with
him—Right now!” one Twitter
user wrote.
On Tuesday, Taiwan ex-
tended its self-quarantine
rules to cover travelers com-
ing from Washington state,
New York and California, as
well as Japan and a number of
countries in Southeast Asia.
Mr. Chen, the island’s top
health official, strongly ad-
vised citizens to avoid unnec-
essary travel to those places.
He said people who knowingly
ignore the travel warning
won’t be eligible for govern-
ment subsidies during their
14-day quarantines and their
names would be made public.
Singapore closed its bor-
ders to Chinese travelers on
Feb. 1, about a week after
China said it would lock down
the city of Wuhan, where the
first coronavirus infections
were reported. It set up a na-
tional task force to coordinate
its response, ran detailed con-
tact-tracing searches and im-
posed strict quarantines.
In the past week, after im-
ported cases rose, authorities
restricted entry for visitors
from many European coun-
tries, South Korea and Iran
and imposed two-week quar-

Singapore, Taiwan and
Hong Kong are witnessing
fresh waves of coronavirus in-
fections, as the growing num-
ber of cases around the world
test their successful early de-
fenses against the disease.
Singapore reported 23 new
cases late Tuesday, its highest
daily count since the epidemic
started. Taiwan recorded a
single-day high of 10 cases of
infection, bringing its total to



  1. Hong Kong added five new
    cases—a day after it recorded
    nine—the most since Feb. 9.
    Singapore, Taiwan and Hong
    Kong, which were hit early by
    the fast-spreading coronavirus
    because of their close eco-
    nomic and social ties with
    China, have been lauded for ef-
    fectively controlling initial out-
    breaks with fast and aggres-
    sive responses. Now, they face
    fresh challenges as coronavirus
    cases soar in Europe and the
    Middle East and returning
    travelers bring back new risks.
    “The trouble with this virus
    is that it is very unpredictable.
    We do not know who will be
    at the center of a super-
    spreading event,” said Paul
    Anantharajah Tambyah, the
    president of the Asia-Pacific
    Society of Clinical Microbiol-
    ogy and Infection. “We are not
    safe in any place until every-
    one all over the world is safe.”
    Globally, cases of infection
    rose to more than 182,000 on
    Tuesday and the number of
    deaths hit 7,155, according to
    Johns Hopkins University. The
    fast rise has set off more lock-
    downs and travel halts.
    The Trump administration
    urged Americans to put off
    traveling and avoid gatherings


BYLIZALIN
ANDJOYUWANG


A Second Wave of Cases Grips


Singapore, Taiwan, Hong Kong


Malaysian Curbs
Spark Panic Buying

News that Malaysia
would implement severe in-
ternational border restric-
tions until the end of the
month led to a wave of panic
buying in Singapore’s super-
markets.
Singaporeans were seen
cleaning out trays of fresh
vegetables, poultry and toilet
paper within an hour of the
announcement, which came
late Monday night.
“Everybody is afraid the
Malaysian border closures
would mean we’ll end up
with limited fresh vegetables
and eggs,” said Linus Lim, a
45-year-old Singapore infor-
mation-technology executive,
who stopped by a large su-
permarket with his two col-
leagues, hoping to buy some
fresh poultry.
They found empty shelves

and only one or two packs of
chicken.
Trays containing fresh po-
tatoes, broccoli and carrots
were bare and shoppers were
picking over the last packs of
green beans.
Mr. Lim left with ice
cream and milk instead.
A store assistant who
was manning the poultry
counter at the supermarket
said the crowd started com-
ing in at 8 a.m. and had
cleaned out coolers of fresh
pork and chicken by mid-
morning.
By Tuesday afternoon, the
supermarket had started to
limit purchases of meat, in-
stant noodles and toilet pa-
per.
The government sent out
a statement later Tuesday to
try to reassure citizens that
Singapore had an adequate
supply of food and essentials
and the country wouldn’t be
affected by Malaysia’s border
shutdown.

night,” the instigator said,
adding that for 1,400 years no
Iranian ruler had managed to
shut the shrine.
Iranian politicians criticized
attempts to breach the
shrines. Prominent reformist
Mostafa Tajzadeh called the
rioters an irresponsible minor-
ity, while lawmaker Ali Motah-
hari said they should be prose-
cuted for spreading the virus
and defaming Islam.
The Iranian government has
urged people to minimize travel
around the country and those
with symptoms to stay home,
but it has refrained from im-
posing quarantines, even during
the two-week Persian New Year,
which begins March 20.
Iranian police on Monday
banned the annual fire festival,
slated for Tuesday, which is
part of the New Year celebra-
tions, but police chief Hossein
Ashtari blamed “enemies” of
Iran for spreading rumors
about a quarantine with the aim
of causing panic buying and a
shortage of essential goods.
The government’s opposi-
tion to lockdown measures
stems partly from fears over
the potential damage to a
fragile economy, which has
been the source of recent un-
rest. As U.S. sanctions have
hammered Iran’s economy, do-
mestic tourism—particularly
to religious sites—has pro-
vided a lifeline.

TEHRAN—Iranian worship-
ers have attempted to break
into holy shrines and mosques,
defying Iran’s leaders who are
trying to bar access to reli-
gious sites as they struggle to
stem a soaring death rate
caused by the new coronavirus.
Police in the central city of
Qom on Tuesday apprehended
11 rioters who the night before
clashed with mosque guards
as they tried to enter one of
Iran’s holiest sites, the
Masoumeh shrine, the Qom
prosecutor told state televi-
sion. The same night in the
city of Mashhad, worshipers
tried to enter the largest reli-
gious site in the country, the
Imam Reza shrine. The shrine
remained shut on Tuesday.
President Hassan Rouhani is
trying to balance demands from
some Iranians for mass quaran-
tines with pushback from those
who oppose restrictions on reli-
gious and economic activities.
The tension comes as some ex-
perts warn that fatalities in Iran
from Covid-19 could reach into
the millions if public disregard
for official guidelines continues.
The acts of the worshipers
in Qom went against not just
the central government, but
also against Supreme Leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who
has urged all Iranians to fol-
low the measures introduced
by the Health Ministry.
Mr. Khamenei last week said
medical personnel who die af-
ter contracting the coronavirus
should be considered martyrs,
a title usually reserved for
those who perish in war. On
Tuesday, the supreme leader
issued a religious ruling pro-
hibiting unnecessary travel
during the outbreak.
Iran is battling one of the
world’s worst outbreaks of
Covid-19. The Health Ministry
on Tuesday logged 135 deaths
over the previous 24 hours,
bringing the number of fatali-
ties to 988. More than 16,
people have been infected
from the illness caused by the
new coronavirus in Iran.
Some are warning that
Iran’s death toll will continue
to soar—and just how high
will depend on compliance
with public-health advice.
In a new study, cited by Ira-
nian state media, researchers
at the renowned Sharif Uni-
versity of Technology in Teh-
ran said if the Iranian popula-
tion begins fully cooperating
with advice from authorities


BYSUNEENGELRASMUSSEN
ANDARESUEQBALI


Devout Iranians Defy Tehran’s Call to Avoid Shrines


Worshipers, above, prayed at the closed door of Masumeh shrine in Qom on Monday, while on Sunday a militia handed out packages containing precautions against the disease.

MEHDI MARIZAD/EPA/SHUTTERSTOCK

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES
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