INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
An elderly Chinese man has died from coronavirus, the first fatality from the infection in Europe.The 80-year-old tourist died from a lung
infection at Bichat-Claude Bernard Hospital in northern Paris.Image:The man died at Bichat-Claude Bernard Hospital in northern ParisFrench
Health Minister Agnes Buzyn confirmed the death - which marks Europe's first coronavirusfatality.The man, who was from the Chinese province
of Hubei, had been receiving treatment in the French hospital since 25 January.He had been kept in isolation while receiving treatment, but
his condition is said to have deteriorated rapidly.He had arrived in France on 16 January.His case is one of 11 French cases of COVID-19,
which is the medical name for the acute respiratory disease caused by the virus.Five of those cases are British nationals who caught the
virus from "superspreader" Steve Walsh after coming into contact with him in the French Alps during a skiing holiday.His daughter was also
treated for coronavirus in the same hospital, but has now recovered according to authorities.Ms Buzyn warned: "Our health system must be
prepared to face a possible virus spreading across the country."She says she will be meeting with medical authorities on Tuesday to discuss
the issue.This is the fourth death to be reported outside mainland China
The virus has so far spread to more than two dozen countries.The World Health Organisation has now sent a team of 24 health experts to China
to investigate how the virus is spreading and its severity.The death comes as:A total of 1,527 people have died from COVID-19, the disease
caused by the virus - most in mainland China but one each in Hong Kong, the Philippines and Japan67,091 cases have been confirmed since the
virus started in mid-December in Wuhan, with 66,496 in mainland China, according to data collected by Johns Hopkins University and the World
Health OrganisationThere were 5,090 suspected new cases recorded in mainland China, Chinese authorities said on FridayTemporary hospitals
have been set up in gymnasiums and public buildings across the Hubei province of China to facilitate early testing and treatment.Meanwhile
285 cases of the virus have been confirmed on a quarantined cruise ship in Japan.The Diamond Princess in Yokohama, near Tokyo, has around
3,700 passengers in total, including tourists from Britain, America and Australia.