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WHO to hold soon MERS emergency meeting

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The World Health Organization said Friday it would soon call an emergency meeting on the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) as the death toll from the virus rises in South Korea.

South Korea has suffered the largest outbreak of the virus outside Saudi Arabia.

A 72-year-old woman became the latest fatality on Friday after being infected by a MERS patient at a hospital, the health ministry said, taking the death toll in the country to 11.

So far, 126 cases have been recorded in South Korea since May 20 when the first case surfaced.

South Korean soldiers check the body heat of visitors entering the Defence Ministry in Seoul on June...
South Korean soldiers check the body heat of visitors entering the Defence Ministry in Seoul on June 9, 2015 amid fears over the spread of the MERS virus
Jung Yeon-Je, AFP

Currently, 3,680 people are under quarantine. A total of 1,249 people have been released from quarantine.

WHO's "emergency committee will meet soon" to discuss the crisis, spokesman Tarik Jasarevic told reporters in Geneva, without specifying a date.

He stressed that "the number of new cases is decreasing," but warned: "we have to monitor the situation."

The committee will determine whether the current outbreak "constitutes a global health emergency crisis," he said.

Maps locating hospitals in South Korea where patients have contracted MERS  with the caseload now st...
Maps locating hospitals in South Korea where patients have contracted MERS, with the caseload now standing at 108, including 9 deaths
-, AFP Graphic

MERS symptoms range from flu-like aches and pains to pneumonia and kidney failure.

The virus is considered a deadlier cousin of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), which appeared in 2003 and killed more than 800 around the world.

Globally, about 1,200 people have been infected with MERS and some 450 have died since the virus first emerged in 2012.

The World Health Organization said Friday it would soon call an emergency meeting on the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) as the death toll from the virus rises in South Korea.

South Korea has suffered the largest outbreak of the virus outside Saudi Arabia.

A 72-year-old woman became the latest fatality on Friday after being infected by a MERS patient at a hospital, the health ministry said, taking the death toll in the country to 11.

So far, 126 cases have been recorded in South Korea since May 20 when the first case surfaced.

South Korean soldiers check the body heat of visitors entering the Defence Ministry in Seoul on June...

South Korean soldiers check the body heat of visitors entering the Defence Ministry in Seoul on June 9, 2015 amid fears over the spread of the MERS virus
Jung Yeon-Je, AFP

Currently, 3,680 people are under quarantine. A total of 1,249 people have been released from quarantine.

WHO’s “emergency committee will meet soon” to discuss the crisis, spokesman Tarik Jasarevic told reporters in Geneva, without specifying a date.

He stressed that “the number of new cases is decreasing,” but warned: “we have to monitor the situation.”

The committee will determine whether the current outbreak “constitutes a global health emergency crisis,” he said.

Maps locating hospitals in South Korea where patients have contracted MERS  with the caseload now st...

Maps locating hospitals in South Korea where patients have contracted MERS, with the caseload now standing at 108, including 9 deaths
-, AFP Graphic

MERS symptoms range from flu-like aches and pains to pneumonia and kidney failure.

The virus is considered a deadlier cousin of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), which appeared in 2003 and killed more than 800 around the world.

Globally, about 1,200 people have been infected with MERS and some 450 have died since the virus first emerged in 2012.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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