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  • Justus.

  • The Corona virus outbreak appears to be stabilizing in China.

  • Each day's news cycle bring stories of new nations and new types of patients impacted.

  • Islam's holiest site, Mecca, shut to Pilgrim's Japan, which has ordered all schools closed till the end of spring vacation in early April.

  • They're now wondering whether to stage next summer's Tokyo Olympics.

  • Here in France, of health authorities scrambling to figure out how victims who had no contact with the most infected area came down with covert 19 two months after the detection of the first cases is, it's still too early to draw conclusions.

  • How solid is the signs?

  • Just how much is the world coming together?

  • As worries grow and stock markets tumble, the French president happens to be in Naples for long scheduled summit, with the north of Italy reeling from this continent.

  • Worst outbreak.

  • What precautions?

  • What helped for a nation whose industrial heart line and tourist trade could be crippled?

  • How much of a test for Europe and for the world at a time When go it alone, nationalism is on the rise.

  • Can humanity come together with coordinated, credible crisis management and effective collaboration to face what may or may not be on already out of control pandemic Today in the Friends 24 debate.

  • How to counter a potential pandemic.

  • Joining us Dr Jean Jacket Zumba Levski professor of public health manager.

  • Paris's University of Dick Outta.

  • How are you?

  • I'm fine, thank you.

  • Wanna welcome as well?

  • She's been on the front lines of the Ebola outbreak in Congo.

  • Dr.

  • Sanchez mean sing is with Doctors Without Borders.

  • Midsouth, soften Tell Thank you.

  • Matt Yogis Alberti, editor in chief of Push Media.

  • Good evening.

  • Thank you.

  • Which media, which is?

  • It's an independent media French based.

  • All right, Thank you for being with us.

  • Yon Cedric Hanson, Secretary general of the Global Health Security Alliance, joins us from the Normandy capital of Hall.

  • Thank you for joining us.

  • Creating the France 24 debate on Facebook and Twitter hashtag f 24 Debate.

  • Let's start in Geneva, The head of the World Health Organization coming closer, still toe laboring with a pandemic.

  • He's still holding back, though for now our message continues to be that this virus has pandemic potential.

  • Once again, this is not a time for fear.

  • This is a time for taking action now to prevent infections and save lives.

  • Now doctors Ambrosius.

  • But if it makes message, there is talk about pandemic potential, and then he's saying, Don't be afraid.

  • It's not a time for fear.

  • Potential doesn't mean at all that there is a panda meat going on.

  • Okay, So define for our viewers what a pandemic is it might be, but it might well not be.

  • Nobody knows for the moment, and there is a kind of uncertainty there, whether it will turn into what is called the panda me, or whether it will remain and a new type of virus having unordinary epidemics.

  • Is it a semantic nuance or an important distinction, whether or not it's rather like a kind of a new else?

  • Although the precautions and the size and the number of people involved, and the capability of the health authorities and the health power everywhere might not be involved the same way, the more the millions of people suspected of having the virus with them, the more it will be difficult to control that so it can be a pandemic, be the name itself means everybody.

  • While the epidemic is dozens of people, thousands of hundreds of people.

  • Julie the flu in France's 10,000 people at least go to the hospital for that reason in France annually, and nobody cares.

  • So it's just more than the purely a question of vocabulary, a question of level of also, And I put it to you, Dr Young Cedric Hanson.

  • What we're asking is, is it out of control already?

  • No, it doesn't seem to be out of control.

  • It's trading.

  • It's a natural thing for a virus to spread the overpopulation, and it is using the way that it signed through the population movement and things like that.

  • It would be out of control if our hospitals everywhere would be overcrowded by patients looking for treatment and with large amount of people with a long disease and rest.

  • Respiratory distress is and is not the case right now, so it is not out of control on DDE.

  • What we need is to have every citizen to be concerned about how to protect himself on the others, and this is the barrier missions.

  • Wash your hands at wear a mask, avoid to be in crowded places that this would help to stop the spread of that disease and also one of things that's been talked about is thinking twice before going to the emergency room course.

  • Yes, think twice, because right now the best treatment is the fruit treatment and home care.

  • The best treatment if you're touched by that virus, is to take aspirin or acetaminophen or very basic drugs that you can have without prescription to decrease the fever and two to decrease the sore.

  • So basically most of the people might even be contaminated or infected without notice, because it seems that most of the cases are actually a symptomatic, which means there's no symptoms, no, not even fever or maybe some shivering.

  • And that's it.

  • So so the the part off the mind side off the disease, it's a certainly broader than we can proceed it right now we're for accusing on people with symptoms and the people with the severe.

  • And they are our concern right now with a respiratory distress that those are concerned.

  • The others.

  • That's okay.

  • The others it's okay.

  • Yeah, well, I think this is a few things there that I that I would just interject with.

  • So I think first of all, the I you know, I agree with some of Dr Hanson's comments that you know that it's not out of control, that it's a natural phenomenon of a virus to be spreading on dhe.

  • Certainly that's what we have seen.

  • Of course, it is a concern that there is a new virus that that is still being studied and and is causing some you know, significant morbidity In some places, however, it is important to remember, like, Dr Hensen said, that there are a lot of cases that that have minimal symptoms or that have very mild symptoms.

  • In fact, the data suggests that it's about 80% of cases that are reported and diagnosed a mild, and they're probably others that are still milder than that.

  • But I don't agree with the with the advice to that, every woman should wear a mask.

  • There's actually no evidence that that wearing a mask in the community is helpful, and I think giving that message is probably just going to spread more fear and panic on they, obviously, for health care workers that are in contact with patients and in close proximity where there is, you know, coughing and respiratory droplets, then it is useful.

  • But there's after a lot of systematic reviews.

  • There's no evidence that that people just in the community should be wearing a mask.

  • Doctors Ambrose.

  • I just wanted to insist on your question about going to the emergency room, because if you have, if you do are, are infested with this cove in 19 which is actual name of this virus.

  • And if you start splitting and and shaking the ends off everybody in the or just being close to those people, then you will have more people infested.

  • So the good thing is, in countries like France, for example, who said call an emergency special called Center and they will tell you where to go, who to see and how to manage.

  • Because the worst thing if you do have an infects infection with this virus is too, go anywhere and and spread it all over.

  • So in some countries you have no other possibility to see a doctor degree with doctor saying that I'm wearing.

  • I'm wearing a mask in most cases because most of the mosque are useless.

  • I mean, it can prevent you from receiving a split from somebody else, but it doesn't.

  • Uh, um, if you are having the virus, it will not prevent the others from catching it from you.

  • And this is probably what happened to those people who whom you don't know what was the source of the virus.

  • Those people in the surroundings of Paris, probably They met someone whom who you know.

  • It's the story of a man.

  • You met the man you met, the man who saw the bear, right?

  • Nobody knows.

  • We'll talk more about that in a moment.

  • We heard at the outset the head of the W H.

  • O, saying, It's not a time for fear.

  • Fear is certainly something that's contagious.

  • It also sells newspapers, the Daily Mail reporting how the pope canceled an event in Rome due to what the Vatican calls a slight illness.

  • This one day after he was seen blowing his nose and coughing during Ash Wednesday celebrations.

  • However, it's obviously not that serious, since the spokesman said that Francis would continue with the rest of his days.

  • Business matter, yogis Alberti.

  • I'll turn to the only other lay men on this panel besides me, you know, you go through the day oscillating between being reassured and being really worried.

  • Well, actually if I consider what is, do what my country is doing.

  • So Italy.

  • I'm very worried because Italy unfortunately showed how you don't have to do with a crisis like this because way so that the first be viewed when we get to the first news from China the government's tops, the flights to M from China.

  • And then when China protested because they considered that this measures was was to stronger Ah, well, the government said Okay, we don't need to do any quarantine And, uh, if you want, if you feel sick, please stay at home.

  • But it was leave to the volunteer of the people.

  • So, uh, everybody was it was, ah authorized to go everywhere and so And when I heard that the Prime Minister saying that the hospital in Caledonia, which is one of the best of them, the panda me epidemic, saying that it was, ah, their behavior, who was which was wrong because they contaminated a lot of people.

  • Yes, I said, okay.

  • But at the same time, the government say everybody is free to do what he wants, because it's not so s not so big.

  • Mr.

  • Big Mistake and a big hell to two if you if you catch this.

  • Ah, sick.

  • I think I'm just a just a step in there.

  • So you get some of what you say I think is quite valid that, you know, there was a bit of, you know, potential misinformation through through like media sources, and that differs from what people are told, like from government sources.

  • However, I think we have to stick with what we know with this virus is that you know there is potential transmission before people you know have significant symptoms.

  • So there might have very mild symptoms or even during an incubation period.

  • I think it's important t remember that, You know, closing borders and making really restricted travel restrictions.

  • It's it's not really going to change practice.

  • I think the virus is out there, and I think we wait No, no, no.

  • What I'm saying is that I mean, this happens with many different illnesses that happens with influenza on dhe, you know, viruses that they spread.

  • And we shouldn't be in this strict sort of containment mode, because what we're seeing now is that you know, these really strict border policies, and it's it's really affecting a lot of it has a lot of flow on effects and and we in MSF of a little bit concerned that this is going to have quite significant impacts on things like essential surgery.

  • We're new places where we work, like in Yemen and in the DRC.

  • They already struggle out.

  • Ministry of Health colleagues struggled to deliver, you know, essential surgeries in care, you know, already in with it without a covert context and the fact that now you know global supply of masks and essential surgical items and drug production could be affected because of thes strict importation and border closes.

  • And and and then the socio economic effects that it has on populations and people's livelihood is actually could be quite a lot more significant than the Let me bring in the young Cedric Hanson.

  • You agree that the minuses outweigh the positives when it comes to travel bans.

  • Oh, yes, Definitely Banning the travel is not a solution that the virus will spread anyway, so it's Ah, the point is we should not consider catching them Barris as a magic thing.

  • We should consider that when we catch the virus, it's because there is a load off thyroid particles in our clothes environment that is sufficiently high to a trigger the disease inside our body.

  • So when you cross someone for a few seconds industry, there's no fear.

  • Even if that person shred some virus particles it very, very little chance you catch the disease.

  • So So let me ask you.

  • On that point, Dr Hansen was Leo rightto host of Juventus in the Champions League wins.

  • Well, as I mentioned on the French side off Fransman Cata, it was not wise to have all those people traveling by bus is because during the travel by bus is that you increase the chances that some of them get infected.

  • But why they were in the watching the match in the in the place, it's open.

  • There's lots of wind.

  • It's the The virus is diluted, the virus particles of value diluted.

  • So it's not that dangerous to be in a crowd where you have lots of air and and the air is renewed.

  • So the important there, it's there's no black on white answers.

  • Oh, yes, I'll know it's It's very subtle, so it's not wise to travel impact environment, but it's not wise to prevent people from traveling that dust upon because the virus will go everywhere.

  • No matter.

  • We have to learn to leave with that virus and to protect ourselves in the individual.

  • I just want to make, especially coming to dr saying, When I was mentioning wearing a mask, I was talking about the patients to protect the others.

  • Up and off course has professionals for our practice masks, and it's different.

  • Yeah, that's that's something very brief, everybody.

  • Not everybody should wear hats in the streets, that's for sure.

  • Matilda's Alberti, Just Berryessa.

  • And eventually, yes, I agree with the doctors, but I'm not.

  • Ah, doctor.

  • The point is that I so in Italy Ah, very, very bad decisions because ah, yes, that's true that we can't stops.

  • We can close the borders, but we can check the people over.

  • We can inform them.

  • For example, we said some minutes ago that it is important not to go to the emergency rooms.

  • Well, in Italy we went.

  • A lot of people went there because we didn't understand what to do after the changing of the decision of the governmental and and then so, um, I think that it would be better before to check and say to the people, Yes, please.

  • Ah, do this behavior or have these behaviors instead of, Ah, let them go everywhere and let them decide what to do.

  • I think that in this moment in Italy, we have a lot of self made.

  • The solutions to protect them.

  • There isn't there isn't a holistic holistic, not policy is what you're saying.

  • We're gonna pick up on this point when we come back.

  • How far do you go in trying to contain the disease?

  • You're watching the France 24 debate.

  • Welcome back are welcome.

  • If you're just joining us, it's the France 24 debate and we're, ah, sorting fact from fiction when it comes to the Corona virus outbreak.

  • Doing so as it on its 50th day seems to be stabilizing in China but spreading elsewhere around the globe with Dr Jones.

  • Erica's on Borovsky teaches at Paris's Dick Out University.

  • Welcome back as well, too.

  • Doctor Sash, mincing with the epidemics team of MSF France.

  • That's Doctors Without Borders, joining us as well.

  • Matty Yogis Alberti, editor in chief of Push Media and from War France, Yon Cedric Hanson, who is secretary general of the global health security alliance.

  • Yet from next Monday till the end of spring break at the start of April, Japan announcing it will be shutting all schools.

  • There are many efforts being taken to stop.

  • The spread of infections among Children in various regions of the next couple of weeks will be an extremely important periods.

  • So shutting schools, doctors am Bielski Well, we said that in France, in some schools, parents should not bring their Children to school if they can in some of the schools to this.

  • But all this is politics.

  • All this is precautions.

  • If, which is it, is it precautions or politics?

  • It's both.

  • It's a political precaution if, if I may say so, because there is no scientific evidence and for the moment there is no Children who died from the disease, even in China.

  • But But it's uncertain.

  • And until we know the last people with whom we would like to take any kind of risk are probably Children.

  • So but all the most of the death, if not all of them, apart from the 16 years old man who died in France, were all people with a lot of what we call calm abilities, which is other disease from chest or from the heart from diabetics and so on.

  • So normally, a sound child or a sound adult as a valued of the risk and the symptoms it will have will be those oven ordinary flu.

  • I mean, there are.

  • It's important to remember that all these like closing the borders, and some are what I call political precautions.

  • But what would be the reproach to the politicians or the legislators if they would not do that?

  • And if anything happened, as we said at the beginning of the conversation, we don't know if it will be a pandemic or nothing but a new kind of virus with unordinary epidemics.

  • But you've heard their matter gives Alberti criticizing Italy's government for crisis management.

  • That's clumsy.

  • Is that from characterizing?

  • So what do you do for your neighboring state?

  • And you're faced with a country that is sending mixed messages were not going to close the border with Italy.

  • We're not going to close the border with Spain with Germany, with Belgium with Luxembourg.

  • Uh, we work together.

  • We have a lot of exchanges all their long, and I think the policies over there are reasonable, and now the Italian policy seems to be more reasonable than on the very first hours.

  • They probably were wrong in the very first hospital.

  • They probably did not warn enough took enough precautions.

  • But no days they do.

  • And the meeting the Europe and ministers add together is precisely there to set a common you polish.

  • I don't know.

  • I'm not meaning that in Middle East or in Africa, what the risk exists as well as hear or even in Japan, which is not that far from the core.

  • Off the infects, the infection, the same policies would be any valid.

  • Probably not matter.

  • He's Albert, of course.

  • We've heard the far right leader in Italy, Matt herself, and he liked the far right leader here in France talking about closing borders.

  • Yes, actually, the point is that there was a mix on ah, political and precaution Ah, topics in Italy.

  • And ah, when Mr Salvini said, please Ah, take care of the situation and decided some quarantine.

  • Well, the government say there's something very political.

  • No, you are racist.

  • No, we can't do this, uh, measures because take these measures because it ah way to, ah, to be racist against the Asian people or Chinese people, especially the communities who are living in near Florence, which are very, very big.

  • But the point it was not political.

  • It was just a measure to save people and to making safety people.

  • So I think that the problem is that the Italian government mixed with political problems.

  • They air political problems with the same in France.

  • The right party, the Marine Le Pen's party, took that close, the borders that took the precautions.

  • It's the principle of the principle of precaution, which has no medical sense.

  • I mean, that can go into politics where they want.

  • I mean, it's up to them their opinion.

  • But it has no scientific evidence at all.

  • All right, As you said earlier, it's early days.

  • Yet for the data such mincing.

  • According to statistics I saw from the Reuters news agency, they think it's 3.4% less in cases that are lethal.

  • Arliss perhaps less.

  • We're not sure you've been working in Congo with Ebola, where the mortality rate is much higher.

  • How does containment work?

  • We have an outbreak like this, but I guess it's a good point that you brought up about the about the You know, we kind of have to keep things in a little bit in in in context as well.

  • So I mean, the Democratic Republic of Congo's in them, like still in the midst of a novel epidemic.

  • Onda.

  • Also in just I think it's really important to mention that they're also in the biggest epidemic ever off measles with you, no significant morbidity, particularly in at malnourished Children.

  • And it's a huge epidemic.

  • Um, in places where we work where, you know, we do have a lot of experience in being able to, like, ramp up quickly infection control measures.

  • So, for example, from an MSF perspective, what we've been doing with our field teams is really encouraging, going back to basics with the infection prevention and control procedures that we've already discussed about good hand washing.

  • Um, you know, a good cleaning of hospitals and really things that I should be done, that they're not specific to Corona virus.

  • We also put in place.

  • Yes, Yes, of course it does.

  • Yeah.

  • So I think what we find actually is during and this happened during, like SARS and it happens during big influenza outbreaks.

  • But you know, all over the world you encourage good.

  • I peek at what we call a piece a infection prevention and control measures, and then we sort of see a reduction in other illnesses like gastrointestinal illnesses, because people are paying really good attention to simple things like hand washing.

  • But way we d'oh, we've you know, we've provided some preparedness planning to our field.

  • We've like on and ask them.

  • Ask our field teams to approach the local ministries of health, office and support and simple trainings.

  • And to really help the like this I won't use the word containment because, as we've discussed them, you know, these viruses do spread quickly and we might not necessarily be able to contain them.

  • But really to prevent illness, prevent the spread, particularly toe up.

  • It's sick people that are presenting to hospitals with other infections.

  • The closest disease in terms of symptoms is flu.

  • Ordinary flu with a virus we'd with no enough for years.

  • The mortality of the flu infection in our countries is one out of 1000.

  • The mortality of the cove in 19 Cook Corona Rover virus seems to be one out of 100 not 3.5.

  • We're reducing the figures now.

  • 21 for every screen there's more.

  • 1 10 times more.

  • Um, no.

  • Yet the measures and the symptoms are just the same.

  • And the people who died died from the same kind of severe respiratory syndromes and on.

  • And so this malfunction.

  • No, The question is, how do we control those people who have something that looks like a flu clinically and that I've been infested?

  • And how were they infested?

  • And to scale up to what we called a zero case or the case zero, which is the origin the source of the virus, from the market in Wuhan, in China to them, including in Italy.

  • And the gentle reproach we can have to the people in this hospital in Italy where the patients came from China is Why didn't you let just ring the bell when they're admitted?

  • Discretion coming back from this group of patients coming back from China and said they have a probability or a possibility and done that.

  • The test.

  • The test is available now, everywhere in all of our country's again.

  • I'm afraid I cannot discuss it off the capability of your men you mentioned or or or on DDE?

  • What about?

  • And now put this tea.

  • Dr Yang.

  • Cedric Hanson.

  • What about all the talk of searching for a vaccine?

  • Because we don't have one yet, does it?

  • At this point in time when you listen, Thio, Jack, Sam, brewski.

  • Is it urgent?

  • Or is that not the biggest priority at this point?

  • Well, it's always interesting to work on different solutions.

  • But right now, as you mentioned the vaccine, my com late The natural history of epidemics is to one point it slows down, and maybe by the time the back sign would come, the actual outbreak would dampen.

  • But it would be interesting to have it for next would break.

  • So it's important to work on that.

  • What is more important is to work on the symptomatic treatment because that is what is the most in holding right now.

  • How to control the lungs, disease and how to control.

  • Because that Corona virus has a specific trop isn't what means it likes to invest in fact, the heart of the people And because it weaken your learns and your heart, it kills you when it comes to frailty people age, elderly, freight, e elderly's.

  • But if we we can use against that virus, we may on, we should try the antivirus that are already available because we've made tremendous progress in killing or treating viral disease.

  • And there is lots off armamentarium regarding these now with antiviral drugs.

  • So maybe among them there might be some good candidates as well.

  • Yeah, authorities in China Authorities in China expressing hope in the use of and you mentioned it, Cora Queen.

  • The antimalarial treatment agreed, says French virologist deejay out.

  • His team at Marseille's Mediterranean Institute of Infectious Diseases has been touting the virgins of chloroquine for 10 years, he says, a za kind of excitement, a need to find new medicines.

  • We have to find new vaccines.

  • If you tell them.

  • Look, you can just take chloroquine.

  • It's easy.

  • It's not expensive.

  • You don't want to take it.

  • You're cutting the ground from under the feet from a whole host of people who think they're going to win the Nobel Medicine Prize for a new medicine or a new vaccine against Corona virus.

  • When you look at the number of new vaccines are being marketed, the past 30 years, the chances of making a vaccine that can be marketed is close to zero.

  • So so is here's the question session, saying Right now the scramble for ah treatment, either a vaccine or or palliative care for or some kind of or treat treatment for the disease Is there this callous race to, ah, win prizes and make a lot of money going on?

  • I think that's a bit of a cynical view.

  • And but no, I think with I like there are some really interesting things that came out of the West African epidemic of Ebola, for example, so and and also from SARS.

  • So you know, having these big, sudden epidemics that do cause you know, a lot of distress and also kind of brings in a lot of investment into into health care and health sciences.

  • And so what we do see is a rapid sort of progression off off technologies on Dhe.

  • There you've got an investment in research is what I just wanted to say with the Corona viruses.

  • That there was already is like a mechanism in place where, um, you know, there's a group that's been around since the 2017 to respond to new and emerging diseases.

  • When you when you hear doctor would say, Why are we looking for all this stuff when we've got Clara Green?

  • Yeah.

  • I mean, I think I don't think we've got good evidence so that that works.

  • There are sum's encouraging results on on on a few tests and there are some clinical trials.

  • More than a dozen clinical trials on on the go in China at the moment, you know, looking at several different antiviral medications that could be promising.

  • But yeah, I mean, I think I think I think the research into therapeutics and vaccines is really important.

  • But But I want to come back to the, you know, the basics of, you know, preparing this and and and thinking about the bigger picture thinking about the bigger picture.

  • Young Cedric Johnson.

  • Yeah, well, the Factory.

  • The Twerking story.

  • It's a very real product of very interesting treatment.

  • It has anti inflammatory and fever killer properties, so it there's lots off confusion in the use of that products.

  • It's maybe it's just a side effect that it actually dampen because of the disease, rather than cure the disease, so that we should to be very cautious and the publications available are not exactly scientific articles.

  • They are more.

  • I do believe that I have noticed that.

  • But this is so We should be cautious on that claim about the Clarkie.

  • What Dr Seem just said, working on different kind of solution and options and see what we're works.

  • The best is more relevant on and again, prevention is more.

  • It's more interesting to invest in prevention and mitigation off the disease rather than to cure it.

  • Because as doctors numbers, he said, it's just like a flu.

  • Even off the severe cases are more likely to die.

  • The mild cases are just like a fruit, all right, before we go because we're running short on time, we must talk about how it's Ah spooking citizens and markets of the ah stock Exchanges continue to tumble.

  • Wall Street down 9% this week the Paris exchanges into what investors call correction territory more than 10% proof of how interconnected the world is at the epicenter of the outbreak in Italy.

  • The lumber T town of Caledonia, which is under lock down.

  • It's home to an electronics manufacturer that supplies Fiat Uno and German carmakers.

  • 60 of the factory's 600 employees have been allowed back in thanks to a special dispensation.

  • They'll be staying under quarantine while working to keep the plan running.

  • Otherwise, it's assembly lines across the continent that might shut, they say.

  • The French finance minister, he says, the Corona viruses forcing a complete rethink of supply chains and how our economies run.

  • I really think that we have to take the situation of the epidemic to ask ourselves about our strategic dependence in terms of supply for certain industrial sectors.

  • Have you talked about the car industry?

  • I also want to talk about the health industry.

  • You know that 80% of raw materials for active components for medicines come from China or from Asia.

  • It's obvious, and the epidemic shows that this could bring about problems on sanitary independence.

  • In the medium or long term, we have to respond to this challenge and this risk, so he's good.

  • So is that a valid point we're hearing from Bogota male, or is this political flag waving, saying we gotta make in Europe or make in France rather than in Asia or China?

  • Well, actually, I think that Ah situation with Italy is different from the China relations economical relations among China and France.

  • Because, Tilly, first of all these clothes to France and then we have a lot off industries that which are strictly connected not only financial one because many Italian banks are controlled by French one.

  • And so if the activities stops, French activity could have ah, uh could tumble.

  • And that's why markets are dropping, right?

  • Yeah, yeah, but But there are a lot off fields which are interconnected.

  • For example, if you consider foods, for example, a luxury, but also a few nurturers Ah, which are produced in in Italy and Selden in France.

  • Well, there's a lot of, ah, things that could be affected in the next week.

  • So So what do you think?

  • The Finance Minister saying we have to have shorter supply chains for everything, not just cars.

  • Yeah, Actually, I think that well, in some fields, it will be harder to to find a new way to to produce and to have another logistic system.

  • But I think that's a yes cars.

  • Ah, could that factor Hardly the economy.

  • Zantovsky, You know the world has shrunk in the recent decades.

  • And so, for example, all of a car can be manufactured in Germany or in Italy or in the UK, but a bolt.

  • A screw might be coming from China.

  • And for you know the story for want of a nail, that's it.

  • And the kingdom was lost all that for horseshoe nail.

  • That's a bit of an English poetry.

  • What is exactly the same for want of a screw?

  • You could be missing how to terminate a car or a piece of factory, or a new electric device or even a camera in a TV channel.

  • So we are depending from one from the others.

  • It's true that the total dependence we have towards China in the recent years might be a problem which this epidemics or whatever it is, is really revealing.

  • So having some kind of manitou have a supply chain which will not be totally depending on the, uh, boats sailing out of China might be worth, but you cannot improvise is just making a vaccine.

  • It will take months, if not years, to repatriate, uh, to to come back Thio Europe.

  • Some things like antibiotics, the components of which are all made in in China or sometimes in India.

  • So it's a real issue.

  • We might dialogue with the Chinese people and see what we can do because the European factories comma new factories in China, had to close and reopen, as your correspondent just said.

  • But the other way around is true as well.

  • Some components in the purely French maid car or Italian cars come from China.

  • Andi.

  • And wait.

  • If that would be long, there might be some Rick for the economy.

  • It's said that the rate of the economy the GDP might decrease by 0.1% in the next year due to this crisis.

  • If it ends in the next two or three months, we'll see what happens after.

  • It's just very busy.

  • Yon Cedric Benson.

  • We're almost out of time part Sorry.

  • Okay to bed.

  • No, I was just gonna just gonna do it tonight.

  • Just very quickly.

  • Glad I wanted to say Yeah, the global health security.

  • Alan's was created just because the point is that health can impact any aspect off the society.

  • And and there is an interdependency between health, economic politics, and we try to analyze and figure out the nexus off all those components off the society through the house.

  • Point a standpoint, because their house, Stemple can sometimes.

  • And we're fitting that impact the complete society.

  • And here it's a global society.

  • We're talking to it, and then the converse is true as well.

  • So, like the socio economic economic factors have a huge impact on health.

  • And it's really important to remember that when when coming up with these ideas of closing borders and it's really effect gonna be affecting health and have secondary effects so serene, saying, I want to thank you so much I want to think is well.

  • Sean Jackson Borowski Matilda's Alberti Yon Cedric Hansen for being with us from wall stay with US Media watches next and we say loaded James creating I Francois Look at the French media coverage of off the ongoing krone virus epidemic.

  • It's made the front pages again today.

  • Lucrezia Frantz.

  • It's now France's turn to feel the pressure.

  • And of course, there was up first fatality on indeed, Emmanuel Macron, saying today that really were looking towards an epidemic.

  • We also saw the Carnival's in Nice and other festivities in Montel cancels, of course, down near the Italian border of particular concern in the south of France that that contamination is more likely.

  • Headlines such as this as well.

  • Talking about the Corona virus being China's globalization.

  • Chernobyl, in other words, an event almost as big in terms of the impact or the knock on effect of the domino effect as Chernobyl laws for the USSR.

  • Certainly as trust really knew that years later, with hindsight, that right that it was gonna bring down the Soviet.

  • Exactly.

  • There you go.

  • So that's the sort of language being used in headlines and an editorial pieces.

  • This is in lope in you also in the French press here they're being a little bit ironic about the what they call the police or swap kind of it.

  • What would you say?

  • Folding looking inward or a regressive thinking if you like.

  • So they talk about the homo, the homo, Khurana, verus, you kind of.

  • It's a reference going, a basic man on there saying a mammal marked by its inward looking and tribal ist nature on dhe Remmy.

  • Gordo goes on to write that everywhere nationalists are rubbing their hands with glee and unless unless they want to, unless the government wants to add fuel to the fire off far right anti immigrant rhetoric.

  • They would have uninterested, not allowing their talking points to be contaminated by catastrophe ist discourse.

  • Quite colorful language there.

  • But I think that the warning that this could be a ah gift really too far right thinking and closing of borders and what not a measured and responsible approach is the best one against the epidemic, says that piece there even imagining here what would happen if Emmanuel Macron got infected by the virus.

  • Now that seems completely crazy.

  • Except we know that the deputy health minister of Iran was coughing and spluttering on her because he did get hurt himself.

  • So it's not completely impossible scenario, but they sort of, you know, things were getting quite a Roman.

  • Ask if you like, and Theis Hobart, 2 10 2000 was looking at that.

  • The health history of various French presidents in the past and those were hospitalized and what would happen.

  • Of course, manual macron would have to be quarantined like everyone else, but he would be able to probably continue with his job to some extent.

  • Anyway, we saw the demon he's not in the ageless cattle?

  • No, that was also mentioned.

  • At 40 to his health, he be likely to be fine.

  • Most of the deaths have been older people.

  • I guess in any case, we saw that he did speak to hospital staff today at PTSA.

  • Typically, air.

  • And of course, he did get a lot of criticism because they've been they've been taking kind of industrial action in recent weeks and months.

  • So this was an opportunity to tell him exactly what they think the health care health system needs for to fight pandemics or whatever else.

  • No, there's a lot more to be said on the way in which three grown a virus is impacting on the political sphere.

  • It's become a political football in the U.

  • S.

  • And elsewhere.

  • Even Democrats were being accused of distorting the U.

  • S.

  • The readiness of the U.

  • S.

  • For the Corona virus.

  • You're seeing lots of common, such as at this.

  • And weeks ago we were all going to die from World War Three because Trump killed Sally money.

  • But now we're all going to die from the crown of ours.

  • The left is becoming a doomsday cult.

  • So even if there is a degree off disinformation or exaggeration, and it's being taken on board as a conspiracy theory.

  • Father.

  • I think you could say Remember, Anyway, there's lots, lots more on that.

  • But criticism as well for Donald Trump's appointment of Mike Pence as across the Corona viruses are given his.

  • I just read it out.

  • Pence doesn't believe in science fueled the worst AIDS outbreak Indiana in Indiana's history while governor, etcetera, etcetera.

  • I'll just finish very quickly with the falling sales of Corona beer.

  • This'll is a real thing, really?

  • Yes, grown a beard.

  • These air about the antidote know and unfortunately from their marketing point of view, is going down.

  • Some people saying as well that this Mexican beer, from the US perspective perspective that perhaps a border wall needs to be built in order to keep illegal Mexican beer out.

  • Stick to real American beer.

  • So a touch of humor, but also, I suppose, referring to the fact that some people would like to see Borders go back up in the midst of all this.

  • All right, we'll discuss the relative virtues of Bud Light and another time, many thanks James Creek.

Justus.

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