Coronavirus: Final UK flight to bring home Britons from Wuhan

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Repatriation flight from Wuhan landing at RAF Brize NortonImage source, Ministry of Defence
Image caption,

Dozens of Britons flown home from the centre of the outbreak last week have been taken into quarantine

The UK government is chartering a final flight to bring British nationals back from the Chinese city at the centre of the coronavirus outbreak.

The plane will leave in the early hours of Sunday morning and land at RAF Brize Norton, the Foreign Office said.

It comes as Britons in mainland China have been urged to leave the country after the outbreak claimed more lives.

More than 100 UK nationals and family members have already been evacuated to Britain from Wuhan.

Between 150 and 200 Britons and their dependents remain in Hubei province, where the outbreak began, and about 100 have asked for help to leave, the Foreign Office said.

At least 427 people have died after contracting the virus and there have been more than 20,000 confirmed cases, most of them in China.

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said: "We have been working round the clock to help British nationals leave Hubei province, on UK, French and New Zealand flights.

"The Foreign Office is chartering a second and final UK flight with space to help all British nationals and their dependants remaining in Hubei to leave.

"I encourage all British nationals in Hubei to register with our teams if they want to leave on this flight."

British nationals in Hubei can contact the Foreign Office on two 24-hour telephone numbers: +86 (0) 1085296600 and +44 (0) 2070081500.

Image source, AFP/Getty Images
Image caption,

Passengers on a plane in Shanghai

On Friday, 83 UK citizens were repatriated on a flight out of Wuhan arranged by the UK government. Another 11 Britons joined them on Sunday on a French flight.

A further eight UK nationals and six of their family members left on a flight to New Zealand on Tuesday.

It has since emerged that a Belgian woman who was on Sunday's flight tested positive for the virus.

All of the Britons are now in quarantine at Arrowe Park Hospital in Wirral for 14 days - the incubation period of the virus - to ensure they are not infected.

One British passenger, Anthony May-Smith, who arrived in the UK on Sunday, was taken to hospital in Oxford to be tested for potential coronavirus.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock told BBC Breakfast the test came back negative but that Mr May-Smith has returned to quarantine at Arrowe Park "because the test… doesn't work until the coronavirus symptoms come through".

Mr Hancock advised anyone who thought they might have symptoms to not leave home and to call 111.

Mr Hancock said it was "low" risk that an infected person who was not yet showing symptoms could pass on the virus.

There have been two confirmed cases of coronavirus in the UK - a student at the University of York and one of their relatives. They are being treated at the specialist infectious diseases unit at Newcastle Royal Victoria Infirmary.

Meanwhile, one British man in China, who fears he contracted the virus in November, has been told he can return to the UK after the Chinese authorities gave him his passport back.

Jamie Morris, 23, from New Tredegar in South Wales had said he did not know when he might be able to return from Wuhan because he had submitted his passport in order to extend his residency permit.

He will now be able to join other British nationals on the final flight home.

On Tuesday, the Foreign Office advised Britons to leave China to minimise the risk of exposure to coronavirus.

The UK is also moving non-essential staff out from its embassy and consulates in the country.

The only two UK airlines serving China - British Airways and Virgin Atlantic - have suspended their flights between the countries because of fears about the spread of the virus.

But other commercial flights to the UK remain available in some parts of China.

Media caption,

David Abel, one of 3,700 people in quarantine aboard the Diamond Princess, speaking soon after the quarantine began

Meanwhile, at least 10 people on board the Diamond Princess cruise ship docked in the Japanese port of Yokohoma have tested positive for coronavirus.

Passengers and crew on the ship will now be quarantined for 14 days. British tourist David Abel is among the 3,700 people on board the ship.

He told the BBC he was supposed to return to the UK on Tuesday.

"We had a flight booked with BA on Tuesday morning and that has had to be cancelled. We've got no idea when we are going to be allowed off the ship," he said.

"All we have been informed [sic] is 14 days quarantine on the ship. That means we've got no interaction with other passengers, food is brought to the room. It's really basic food, nothing like we've enjoyed on the cruise at all."

The virus has now spread to more than two dozen nations.

However, the World Health Organization (WHO) said it does not yet qualify as a "pandemic".

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