THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. **** Friday, February 21, 2020 |A
corridors of eastern Canada.
Firms fortunate enough to
secure a truck to ship are pay-
ing premium rates. Some, such
asCKFInc., a maker of pack-
aging for food products, are
paying the increased costs for
now to keep customers satis-
fied. A logistics broker said
freight rates for trucks have
climbed as much as 20% since
protests began.
The blockades “have caused
some supply-chain chaos in
Iran Reports Two
Coronavirus Deaths
TEHRAN—Iran closed
schools and imposed emer-
gency measures in a central
province near the capital after
two people who tested positive
for the coronavirus died, the
first fatalities in the Middle
East from the disease.
Five people so far have
been diagnosed with the
Covid-19 virus, Iran’s health
ministry said Thursday. Four of
them in the city of Qom, one of
the country’s main pilgrimage
sites about 75 miles south of
Tehran, where the two elderly
patients died a day earlier.
Another case, a doctor, was
diagnosed in Arak, 70 miles
southwest of there.
Iran said the infected were
all Iranian, but didn’t explain
how the disease might have
reached the country. The two
people who died in Qom hadn’t
had a trip abroad, authorities
said. China is a major trading
partner of Iran and several
other countries in the region,
and is one of the last remain-
ing customers for Iranian oil.
Iran’s economy has been bat-
tered by a slump in Chinese de-
mand.
It wasn’t immediately clear
how widespread the virus out-
break is in Iran. Iranian Presi-
dent Hassan Rouhani ordered
the establishment of a national
coronavirus prevention commit-
tee, government spokesman Ali
Rabiei said Thursday.
The deaths came as Iran
prepared for parliamentary
elections on Friday.
—Aresu Eqbali
TOKYO—Japanese officials
defended their handling of
cruise-ship virus victims after
the first two passenger deaths
were reported—one a woman
in her 80s who had a fever for
a week before getting to a
hospital.
South Korea, meanwhile, re-
ported its first death from the
Covid-19 coronavirus, while
confirmed cases began to
mount in Beijing and Iran an-
nounced emergency measures
Thursday to stem the spread of
the virus there after two peo-
ple diagnosed with the illness
died in the central city of Qom.
Japan’s Health Minister
Katsunobu Kato told parlia-
ment the two fatalities from
the Diamond Princess cruise
ship “received the best medi-
cal treatment” but couldn’t be
saved after catching the coro-
navirus on board. As of Thurs-
day, 634 passengers and crew
members were diagnosed with
the virus out of 3,063 tested.
Slightly more than half have
no symptoms at all, officials
said, and many of the remain-
der have only mild fever or a
cough. On Thursday, 28 virus-
positive patients were re-
ported in serious condition.
Doctors have said the virus
can be particularly harmful in
elderly patients, and one of
the two fatal cases from the
Diamond Princess, a Japanese
man in his 80s, had pre-exist-
ing bronchial asthma and had
been treated for angina. The
other, a Japanese woman in
her 80s without underlying ill-
nesses, came down with a fe-
ver on Feb. 5, according to
health ministry officials. The
next day, she started suffering
from diarrhea and saw a doc-
tor on board.
She wasn’t taken to a hos-
pital until Feb. 12 when she
started suffering shortness of
breath. Her virus test came
back positive, and despite
treatment with antiviral drugs,
she died Thursday.
Asked about the woman’s
case, health ministry official
Hiroshi Umeda said, “I believe
it was handled promptly.” He
said the ship was a difficult
environment for medical staff
but they worked day and night
and tried to prioritize the
most serious cases.
The ship, which docked in
Yokohama after a two-week
tour of East Asia, had 3,
passengers and crew aboard
when it arrived in Japan but is
gradually emptying out. The
U.S., Australia, and other
countries have laid on flights
repatriating some of their citi-
zens. Those diagnosed with
the virus have been brought to
hospitals, mostly in the Tokyo
area, while more than 700
passengers who tested nega-
tive for the virus and didn’t
have symptoms disembarked
on Wednesday and Thursday.
Crew members remain on
board the Diamond Princess,
apart from those who have
tested positive, and some pas-
sengers are still quarantined
on board if they shared a
room with someone who
tested positive.
Kentaro Iwata, a Kobe Uni-
versity infectious-diseases spe-
cialist, drew widespread atten-
tion on Wednesday when he
said the ship should be evacu-
ated more quickly and criti-
cized the government’s han-
dling of quarantine procedures
on board.
On Thursday, he took down
two YouTube videos in English
and Japanese in which he de-
scribed the situation on board
as scary, saying the govern-
ment responded to his criticism
by clarifying the demarcation
between potentially contami-
nated “red zones” and noncon-
taminated “green zones.”
Concerns are growing in
South Korea about the spread
of the virus there after a surge
in infections centered on a
church in the southern city of
Daegu, which had dozens of the
country’s more than 200 cases
as of Thursday.
In mainland China, 75,
people had been confirmed as
infected as of Thursday, in-
cluding 2,236 deaths, China’s
National Health Commission
said.
Wang Chen, a respiratory
expert and vice president at
the Chinese Academy of Engi-
neering, said in an interview
with state broadcaster China
Central Television on Wednes-
day that the new virus could
circulate much as the flu does,
and for longer than the SARS
virus did in 2002 and 2003.
Most of the cases and
deaths globally have been in
China’s central Hubei province,
where the epidemic began.
Nearly 60 million people re-
main quarantined in Hubei.
Companies won’t be allowed
to restart work until March 11
unless their business is tied to
basic needs such as infrastruc-
ture, producing medical equip-
ment and providing food, the
provincial government said
Thursday. That pushes back
the previous resumption date
of Feb. 21, likely adding to the
pain felt by many auto makers
that have production sites in
Wuhan, Hubei’s capital, includ-
ingGeneral MotorsCo. and
Honda MotorCo.
Outside Hubei, many export-
ers started to resume produc-
tion Feb. 10 after an extended
Lunar New Year holiday, the
Commerce Ministry said.
Foxconn Technology
Group,Apple Inc.’s biggest
iPhone assembler, said Thurs-
day that it expects the epi-
demic to reduce its revenue.
Earlier this week, Apple
warned that it won’t meet its
revenue projections for the
current quarter, saying the
coronavirus epidemic was lim-
iting iPhone production and
reducing demand in China.
—Suryatapa Bhattacharya,
Fanfan Wang, Grace Zhu,
Liyan Qi and Raffaele Huang
contributed to this article.
WORLD NEWS
BYMIHOINADA
ANDERINMENDELL
Japan Defends Response to Virus
A passenger peering out from a bus as she left the Diamond Princess ship in Yokohama.
KIM KYUNG-HOON/REUTERS
our company,” said Ian Ander-
son, president of family-owned
CKF, which employs 800 peo-
ple and makes everything
from disposable plates to
packages for eggs. “We will
have to see how big this gets
and how long this lasts, and
what the consequences are.”
Canadian National said it
was forced to halt its eastern
network to ensure the safety
of its employees and of the
protesters. The main block-
age—near the town of Belle-
ville in Ontario—has cut off
freight traffic from Montreal
and Halifax, Nova Scotia, to
central Canada, and vice versa.
“This situation is regretta-
ble for its impact on the econ-
omy and on our railroaders as
these protests are unrelated to
CN’s activities, and beyond our
control,” the company said.
Canadian National handles
more than 250 billion Cana-
dian dollars ($189 billion) of
goods annually.
Via Rail Canada said that in
addition to its temporary lay-
off notices, it has suspended
nearly 600 trains since the
blockades began, affecting an
estimated 111,000 passengers
Some service hit by the block-
ades resumed Thursday.
“We have done everything
to mitigate the impact on our
employees and our passen-
gers,” said Cynthia Garneau,
Via Rail’s chief executive.
Canadian Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau said Wednes-
day that the layoffs were un-
acceptable and that his Liberal
government was “doing every-
thing we can to resolve this
peacefully and quickly.”
Canadian National has ob-
tained court orders to have
the protesters removed. Mr.
Trudeau, however, said “ele-
vating the temperature and
going in forcefully” could trig-
ger a new round of protests.
Dennis Darby, president of
Canadian Manufacturers & Ex-
porters, said his group’s esti-
mate is that up to C$450 mil-
lion of goods a day are being
left stranded because of the
freight rail interruption.
Three-quarters of Canada’s
manufacturing capacity is in
eastern Canada.
“This has gone from serious
to critical,” Mr. Darby said.
Todd Karran, chief execu-
tive ofNova ChemicalsCorp.,
said the petrochemicals maker
has yet to scale back produc-
tion levels and has found a
temporary workaround by
changing routes and using
trucks.
“This is definitely more
costly,” said Mr. Karran, whose
company has annual sales of
$4 billion.
Canada’s economy was ex-
pected to rebound in early
2020 after a weak fourth
quarter—weighed down in
part by an eight-day labor
strike at Canadian National.
OTTAWA—Canada’s econ-
omy is facing a blow from two
weeks of protests that have
blocked multiple railway lines,
stranding shipments and
snarling supply chains in key
commercial corridors.
In the latest fallout from
the blockades, Via Rail Can-
ada, the passenger rail opera-
tor, issued on Wednesday tem-
porary layoff notices for 1,
workers, a day afterCanadian
National RailwayCo. said it
would temporarily lay off 450
workers of its own. Factories
in central Canada could be
next in sending workers home,
said the head of a national
lobby for manufacturers and
exporters.
Economists said the stop-
pages threaten to shave 0.1%
to 0.3% from output in Febru-
ary, adding that the damage
could be greater the longer
the interruption drags on.
Protests obstructing lines in
central Canada started Feb. 6,
after police began enforcing a
court order to remove people
who were trying to prevent
construction of a natural-gas
pipeline in British Columbia. A
group of indigenous leaders
oppose the pipeline on envi-
ronmental concerns.
While one blockade has
been resolved in British Co-
lumbia, others show no signs
of ending in the important
BYPAULVIEIRA
Canadian Rail Blockades Snarl Supply Chains
Sources: Scotiabank Economics; Association of American Railroads
Total intermodal units
All other
Metallic ores
82thousandcarloads
Petroleum products
81
Chemicals
81
Grain
54
Coal
42
Vehicles and parts
38
Gravel and sand
31
Farm products ex grain
25
Lumber and wood products
20
Pulp and paper products
18
Food products
18
Primary metal products
15
Grain mill products
12
Nonmetallic products
9
Stone, clay and glass products
8
Coke
8
Primary forest products
7
Iron and steel scrap
7
10
Shipment of goods at risk because of Canada rail blockades
2019 through Feb. 19
Sameperiod
474K 474K
WORLD WATCH
UNITED KINGDOM
Suspect Is Arrested
In Attack at Mosque
A 29-year-old man was ar-
rested on suspicion of at-
tempted murder after a person
was stabbed in a London
mosque Thursday, according to
British police.
Police said the suspect was
believed to be attending prayers
and said detectives didn’t believe
the attack was terror-related.
They said that they had
made the arrest after being
called to the mosque, near Re-
gent’s Park in London. The vic-
tim, a man in his 70s, was
treated on the scene before be-
ing taken to a hospital. His con-
dition isn’t life-threatening, the
police said.
Photographs posted on Twit-
ter showed a man in a red top
and bare feet being pinned down
by police on the floor of the
mosque, before being hand-
cuffed and marched out.
The London Central Mosque
is one of the U.K.’s largest and
most iconic mosques. It can ac-
commodate up to 5,000 wor-
shipers.
—Max Colchester
ISRAEL
Gantz’s Start-Up
Faces Investigation
Israeli prosecutors on Thurs-
day announced the opening of a
criminal investigation into the
failed start-up of Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu’s challenger.
The announcement didn’t say
whether Benny Gantz is a sus-
pect, but it came less than two
weeks before the March 2 elec-
tion and during a campaign in
which Mr. Gantz’s Blue and White
party has painted itself as a clean
and scandal-free alternative to
Mr. Netanyahu, who is to go on
trial for corruption next month.
According to Israel’s state
comptroller, the police may have
violated acquisition laws by grant-
ing the Mr. Gantz’s cybersecurity
company a multimillion dollar con-
tract without a public tender. Mr.
Gantz has denied any wrongdoing.
—Associated Press
SOUTH SUDAN
Rivals Agree to Form
A Ruling Coalition
South Sudan’s rival leaders on
Thursday said they have agreed
to form a coalition government
just two days before a deadline, a
breakthrough after months of de-
lays and a major step in the emer-
gence from a five-year civil war
that killed nearly 400,000 people
in the world’s youngest nation.
The rival leaders had twice
missed deadlines in the past year
to form the transitional govern-
ment.
President Salva Kiir said the
new government will be formed
on Saturday and he will appoint
opposition leader Riek Machar
as his first vice president, or top
deputy, on Friday.
—Associated Press
TOKYO—The $500 million
cruise liner that became an in-
cubator for the novel corona-
virus will resume service again
soon with its next group of
holiday makers, according to
its operator, though only after
a thorough cleaning.
At its dock near Tokyo, the
Diamond Princess still houses
some passengers and crew un-
der quarantine for the virus,
two weeks after their voyage
was scheduled to have ended.
A barrage of publicity about
the ship and its more than 600
coronavirus patients made it
one of the most famous, or in-
famous, cruise ships in the
world. Two passengers, both
in their 80s, have died, offi-
cials said Thursday.
Nonetheless, operator Prin-
cess Cruises said the 116,000-
ton pleasure vessel will be
ready to return to service on
April 29, ahead of Japan’s an-
nual Golden Week holidays.
“The expectation is that the
ship would be fully sanitized
and then taken into dry dock
for a period of time,” said
Negin Kamali, public-relations
director for Princess Cruises.
She said the ship would re-
main based in Japan, where it
was built.
Ships that have been hit by
outbreaks of illness are usually
kept in service, reflecting the
large investment for each ves-
sel. The Diamond Princess
sailed its first cruise in 2004,
putting it about halfway
through a typical cruise ship’s
lifespan of around 30 years.
Outbreaks of gastrointesti-
nal illness or more serious dis-
ease are an occasional hazard
for cruise companies and their
passengers. In 2019, groups of
passengers on 10 cruises suf-
fered gastrointestinal illnesses,
mostly from the spread of no-
rovirus, according to the Cen-
ters for Disease Control and
Prevention. A type of pneumo-
nia called Legionnaires’ dis-
ease also has made passengers
sick on cruise ships.
“Normal practice in the
case of norovirus or Legion-
naires’ disease is to pinpoint
and isolate the source of the
illness, then cancel or post-
pone the next cruise and thor-
oughly disinfect the ship from
top to bottom once all the pas-
sengers are off,” said Andrew
Coggins, a cruise expert and
professor of management at
Pace University in New York.
CarnivalCorp., the parent
company of Princess Cruises,
owns another ship in Asia that
reported cases of the corona-
virus. Carnival has canceled
several other planned cruises
because of the epidemic.
On Feb. 12, Carnival said it
couldn’t determine the full fi-
nancial impact of the virus but
if it had to suspend all of its
operations in Asia through the
end of April, it would cut its
fiscal 2020 financial perfor-
mance by 55 cents to 65 cents
a share. In December, the com-
pany said it expected earnings
for the year through November
of $4.30 to $4.60 a share. For
the year ended November 2019,
the company had net income of
$3 billion, or $4.32 a share.
Ross Klein, a professor at
Memorial University in Canada
who tracks health problems on
cruise ships, said he doesn’t
expect any impact on bookings
for the Diamond Princess. He
said sales for another Carnival
cruise liner held up when it
re-entered service after be-
coming stranded in 2013 with
its sewage systems overflow-
ing inside the ship.
Shinji Motegi, administra-
tive director of the Japan Pest
Control Association, said the
Diamond Princess could even-
tually be considered virus-
free. Unlike mold, viruses
won’t multiply and spread
without a host—such as a hu-
man or an animal, he said.
—Miho Inada
contributed to this article.
BYALASTAIRGALE
Ship Set
To Return
To Service
In April
Diamond Princess
still houses some
passengers and crew
under quarantine.
Norwegian cancels Asia
cruises until fall........................ B