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Deaths in Ukraine fuel swine flu fears

Slovakia shuts Ukraine border crossings amid flu scare: report
Slovakia will close two border crossings with Ukraine after flu and respiratory problems killed 67 people in the neighbouring country, the interior minister said Monday. According to SITA news agency, pedestrian border crossings in Velke Slemence and Ubla will be closed as of Tuesday and random medical checks will be introduced at other border crossings with Ukraine, Robert Kalinak said. Ukraine has so far reported 255,000 cases of flu and acute respiratory illness among the country's population of 46 million.

Romania bars all hospital visits over swine flu
Romania is forbidding people from visiting patients at all hospitals due to a surge in swine flu cases, a health ministry official said Monday. The official, Dr. Adrian Streinu-Cercel, said 174 new cases of A(H1N1) were recorded in the past week alone, bringing the national total to 555. None of them was fatal. Five schools were closed due to the virus, he said. "Given the fast spread of the virus in the communities of children and youngsters, including in Bucharest and in three departments in the south and north-east, the ministry decided to close five schools, two in the capital," Streinu-Cercel told a news conference.

"Hospitals are also quarantined, visiting patients being forbidden," he said. Romania will start swine flu vaccinations in December, targeting first health workers, employees of essential services and students from Bucharest and the northeast city of Iasi, where the two main flu outbreaks were identified. The border police working at the frontier with Ukraine, a country particularly affected by the virus, are also to be vaccinated. In order to prevent the spread of swine flu, local authorities also decided to distribute free masks and disinfectant to the schools in Bucharest. On Sunday, health officials closed a hotel in the mountain resort of Sinaia, about 120 kilometres (75 miles) north of Bucharest, after 40 tourists contracted the virus, most of them students taking part in an international congress.

by Staff Writers
Kiev (AFP) Nov 2, 2009
Ukraine raised its death toll from flu and respiratory problems on Monday, while Kiev's mayor suggested a Champions League match should be played without spectators amid a swine flu scare.

Kiev made an urgent appeal to world powers for help battling the spread of the A(H1N1) virus on Sunday, after declaring 60 people had died of respiratory complications and flu.

The health ministry raised this figure to 67 on Monday, without detailing when the deaths took place or explaining the jump in the toll.

"Sixty-seven people have died," Deputy Health Minister Vasyl Lazoryshynets said, adding that this figure "did not differ much" from previous years.

He said 255,000 cases of flu and acute respiratory illness had been registered among the country's population of 46 million. Of those 15,000 people were hospitalised, he said.

Kiev's mayor suggested the Champions League match between Inter Milan and Dynamo Kiev later in the week should take place in a stadium empty of football fans to prevent further infection.

Ukraine's neighbour Poland wrote to the European Union urging swift action to help fight the spread of flu.

Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said it was in EU members' interests to send medical help to Ukraine.

Elsewhere, Slovakia closed two pedestrian border crossings with Ukraine and ordered spot medical checks at others, according to the SITA news agency.

The Ukrainian government's announcement last week that it was implementing the toughest measures yet in Europe to combat swine flu led to panic, sparking a run on pharmacies.

Authorities in Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region have ordered employees of medical centers, shopping centres and public transport to wear masks over the next three days, Interfax news agency reported Monday.

Alarm over swine flu has become a political issue in Ukraine as the country gears up for January's presidential election, with rival candidates seeking to take the initiative in battling the disease.

Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko ordered a three-week shutdown of schools and universities, while her rival, President Viktor Yushchenko, asked the United States, the European Union and NATO for drugs and equipment to fight the spread of the virus.

On Monday Tymoshenko denounced the panic as being created "by the unscrupulous statements of certain politicians", and said the country was suffering an epidemic of normal flu with a few cases of A(H1N1).

According to the health ministry, only 22 cases, including one death, have been confirmed as the A(H1N1) virus, widely known as swine flu. The country's National Security Council however puts the number of dead at four.

Ukraine has also ordered 16 tonnes of the antiviral drug Tamiflu from Switzerland.

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