Saturday, August 8, 2009

PenYakiT BaRu le PuLak

GEMPAR : PENYAKIT MERBAHAYA BARU TURUN KE BUMI Berita rangkaian 107, pukul 7.00 petang, sebentar tadi memaklumkan satu lagi penyakit sangat merbahaya yang baru turun ke sebuah daerah di negeri China.

Penyakit tersebut bermula dari seekor anjing yang memakan bangkai seperti tikus. Penyakit tersebut hanya disebut (mungkin sementara) sebagai Pneumonia dan boleh berjangkit melalui udara. Pesakit, jika tidak dirawat dalam masa 24 jam maka ia akan mati.

Maksudnya, jika melalui udara maka ia cepat, meluas dan akan mengelilingi dunia dalam masa yg terdekat.

Laporan lengkap berita ada dibawah,

BEIJING — Residents of a remote farming town in western China say people have been seeking to flee in defiance of a lockdown by authorities to prevent the spread of highly infectious pneumonic plague which has claimed three lives in the area.

Police have set up checkpoints around Ziketan in Qinghai province, a town of 10,000 people, which has been put under quarantine after at least a dozen people caught the lung infection that can kill within 24 hours if untreated.

Some people tried to leave the quarantined area Monday evening, mostly by foot, after the third death was reported, two residents reached by The Associated Press said. A lot of people ran off last night when they heard that another person died of this plague. They are mostly from other provinces," a local food seller, surnamed Han, said Tuesday. "They headed back home with food, water and their donkeys."

A Tibetan woman named Xiumaocuo, a migrant construction worker from another village in Qinghai, said there were very few people on the streets.

"I've heard the migrant workers who build projects went home last night," she said by telephone. "My boss told me that more than 50 of the 100 construction workers on our project left homes already."

It was unclear if the people who headed out of the town made it past the police checkpoints, which residents say have been set up in 17-mile (28-kilometer) radius around Ziketan, which lies more than 300 miles (480 kilometers) west of Beijing.


No comments: