Evacuation of Britons from Wuhan delayed as death toll hits 170

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Around 200 British nationals remain stranded in the Chinese city at the epicentre of the escalating coronavirus outbreak due to delays to a
planned evacuation flight organised by the UK government.The Foreign Office had expected to have started flying back Britons still stuck in
Wuhan in the province of Hubei, however the plane arranged to bring them home as not been able to take off.It is understood that the
required permissions from the Chinese authorities are yet to come through, although other governments including the US and Japan have been
able to evacuate hundreds of their own citizens.Image:A patient is taken off an ambulance in Wuhan - the epicentre of the
outbreakImage:Medical staff in WuhanIn a statement, a Foreign Office spokesperson said: "We are doing everything we can to get British
people in Wuhan safely back to the UK
A number of countries' flights have been unable to take off as planned."We continue working urgently to organise a flight to the UK as soon
as possible
We remain in close contact with the Chinese authorities and conversations are ongoing at all levels."Once they do make the journey back to
Britain, Sky News understands that the passengers will have to agree to an isolation period of 14 days and receive whatever treatment is
recommended by experts.While there is no vaccine for the coronavirus, which has surpassed China's SARS outbreak of 2002 and 2003, countries
around the world are doing all they can to limit its spread.The number of dead continues to rise in China, now standing at 170, with 7,711
confirmed cases, including the first one in Tibet - meaning all regions and territories are now affected.Most of the confirmed cases are in
Hubei, where several cities remain locked down, but the impact of the outbreak has been becoming more widely felt across the country this
week.Image:Passengers arrive back in Los Angeles International AirportImage:The masks are becoming a common sight at airportsOn Thursday,
IKEA said it was closing all 30 of its stores in China and the Chinese Football Association announced domestic matches had been indefinitely
postponed.The World Athletics Indoor Championships in Nanjing have also been postponed until March 2021.The Chinese National Health
Committee has only reported 26 cases across Hong Kong, Macao, Taiwan and Tibet, although that has not prevented some degree of panic setting
in among the locals.People in Hong Kong have been forming enormous queues to buy protective masks, and in Macau a purchase limit is being
imposed to ensure they do not sell out too quickly.Image:Protective masks spotted in Chinatown in New YorkImage:There have been relatively
few cases outside ChinaWhile there are relatively few cases outside mainland China and its territories, other countries remain on high
alert.Singapore confirmed three new coronavirus patients on Thursday, taking the total there to 10, while there are seven cases in
Australia, five in the US, and four each in South Korea, France, Germany and the UAE.Canada has three confirmed cases, Vietnam has two, and
health officials have reported just one case in each of Cambodia, Nepal, Finland, Zambia and Sri Lanka.Image:Queues for protective masks at
a drugs store in SingaporeImage:Singapore has the most cases outside China - but only has 10With many governments advising their citizens
against travel to China, airlines including British Airways and German carrier Lufthansa have started suspending flights to the mainland.BA
operates daily flights to Shanghai and Beijing from Heathrow but has cancelled services until 31 January, and no bookings are being taken
for direct flights to the mainland until 1 March.Anyone who has returned to the UK from Wuhan in recent weeks has been urged to
"self-isolate"for two weeks, although the Department of Health says 130 tests carried out on potential patients have come back
negative.Image:Advice about the coronavirus is on display at HeathrowImage:Many airlines have suspended flights to ChinaDespite the
precautionary measures being enforced all over the globe, the World Health Organisation (WHO) has been reluctant to declare an international
public health emergency.But it could finally make the call during an emergency committee meeting on Thursday.Dr Michael Ryan, executive
director at the WHO health emergencies programme, said on Wednesday: "The whole world needs to be on alert now, the whole world needs to
take action and be ready for any cases that come, either from the original epicentre or from other epicentres that become established."