www.theasianstar.com
Vol 19 - Issue 6
Saturday, March 7, 2020
BC Woman who went to India is in critical condition with Coronavirus
8 more cases of Coronavirus identified in BC including 1 of unknown origin
A woman in her 80s is fighting for her life in a Vancouver hospital after contracting the novel coronavirus, COVID-19. The woman, who lives within the Vancouver Coastal Health region, was part of a group tour in India alongside other Canadians who returned to regions outside B.C. last week, provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry confirmed on Wednesday. While she didn’t show any symptoms while travelling, she fell ill a few days after arriving back home, Henry said. As her symptoms progressed, she was taken to the emergency room of a local hospital. She remains in the intensive care unit. This is the 13th confirmed case in B.C. “The risk is changing day by day globally and we are continuing to monitor carefully,” Henry said. “Within BC the risk still remains very low.”
Canadians urged to avoid all travel to Iran as Coronavirus spreads Travel Canada is urging Canadians to avoid all travel to Iran over the novel coronavirus outbreak. In an updated travel advisory issued Thursday, the Canadian government said it is becoming “increasingly difficult” to leave the country. The government says other risks include the “volatile security situation, the regional threat of terrorism and the possibility of arbitrary detention.” “Canadians, particularly dual CanadianIranian citizens, are at risk of being arbitrarily questioned, arrested and detained. Iran does not recognize dual nationality and Canada will not be granted consular access to dual Canadian-Iranian citizens,” the advisory reads.
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British Columbia has identified eight more presumptive cases of the novel coronavirus, including one involving a woman who has no recent travel history. This is B.C.’s first apparent case of the COVID-19 virus spreading in the community. The woman, who is in her 50s and lives in the Fraser Health region, has not had contact with other coronavirus patients or people returning from disease hot spots. She tested positive for COVID-19 after visiting her doctor with what she assumed was influenza. Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said officials have launched a detailed investigation into how the patient was infected — a process she described as “disease detective work.” “There’s likely at least one other person out there who has this disease or had this disease, and we need to find them,” she told reporters at a press conference Thursday. Continued on page6
Man who helped wife’s killer flee to India gets only 2 years jail When his wife was brutally killed on New Year’s Eve 1986, a Vernon man immediately suspected his brother of the murder. But he never informed police of his suspicions. In fact, he lied to them, and in so doing helped his brother flee the country. Paramjit Singh Bogarh told police his two-year-old son, who was in the home at the time of the murder, said a “white man” had killed his mother. Bogarh pleaded guilty Thursday to being an accessory after the fact of murder. He was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment for his role in the cold case murder of Saminder Kaur Bogarh after a joint submission from the Crown and defence. “Mr. Bogarh chose to serve his murderous brother’s interests at massive prejudice to the interests of his own son,” B.C. Supreme Court Judge Martha Devlin said in
passing sentence. Bogarh’s sentence brought a partial end to the 33-year-old murder investigation of Saminder, who was 26 and pregnant with her second child at the time she was killed. But Bogarh’s brother, Narinder Singh Bogarh, remains in India. Authorities are trying to have him brought back to Canada to face murder charges. Thursday’s proceedings in the Kelowna courthouse drew a large crowd of the murder victim’s relatives, including her son Manpreet Nahal, now 35. “I have been haunted since I was not able to do a single thing to help her,” Nahal said in an emotional victim impact statement. “Did she not escape because she refused to leave me? . . . I’ll never be able to wake up from this nightmare.” Continued on page 8
How deadly is the coronavirus? It may take months to find out
On Sunday, March 8, turn your clocks 1 hour ahead as daylight saving begins.
The World Health Organization announced this week the COVID-19 fatality rate is higher than previously believed, leading to concerns about the potential implications as the new virus makes its way around the world. But public health experts say the fatality rate is merely a snapshot in time and that there’s good reason to believe
the actual figure is likely lower. On Tuesday, the World Health Organization director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the current fatality rate for COVID-19, the name of the disease caused by the new coronavirus, is 3.4 per cent. Previous estimates pegged the death rate between 1 per cent and 2 per cent.
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