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A new swine flu virus that has killed 149 people in Mexico was found further around the world on Tuesday and the spectre of a pandemic began to hit air travel. The United States, Canada and the European Union advised people to avoid non-essential travel to Mexico, and companies adopted wider travel restrictions to countries where cases have been confirmed.
-- Mexico death toll 149
-- WHO says all countries need to prepare for worst
-- New cases confirmed in New Zealand and Israel
The World Health Organisation said a pandemic - a global outbreak of a serious new illness - is not yet inevitable but that all countries should prepare for the worst, especially poorer developing nations. "They really get hit disproportionally hard," said WHO acting assistant director-general Dr Keiji Fukuda.
There are 52 cases in the United States and new infections were confirmed on Tuesday in Israel and New Zealand. Canada, Spain and Britain also have confirmed cases, and many other countries have suspected infections. US accounting firm Ernst & Young said an employee in its office in Times Square, had been diagnosed with swine flu, but later said that might not be true.
If confirmed, it would be the first case reported in New York's financial community. One of the mysteries of the outbreak is why the virus has killed scores of people in Mexico but all of the cases outside the country have been relatively mild. Experts say this may be simply a matter of where they have been looking to find it.
Still, officials have said they do expect to find deaths as the disease spreads and a pandemic could snuff out fragile signs of economic recovery around the world as travel, trade and manufacturing output would all be hit. The last flu pandemic was in 1968, when "Hong Kong" flu killed about 1 million people around the world.
Airline share prices continued to fall on Tuesday on fears that they could see a sharp drop in traffic. European and Asian stock markets retreated, but drug makers posted gains and US stock markets recovered from earlier losses and were little changed.
Oil dropped to below $50 a barrel and investors cut their exposure to riskier currencies. The virus is not caught from eating pig meat products but several countries, led by Russia and China, banned US pork imports. The EU said it has no plans to restrict pig meat products from the United States. "Markets are doing what they tend to do, taking fright," said Howard Wheeldon, strategist at BGC Partners in London. "But in my view, it's totally unnecessary."
TRAVEL ALERTS: Britain, France, Germany, Canada and the United States issued travel alerts for Mexico, which relies on tourism as a main source of foreign currency. Japan advised its citizens in Mexico to consider returning home soon.
UK travel firms Thomson Holidays and First Choice said they decided to repatriate their customers from Mexico and to cancel flights bound for Cancun on Tuesday. British Airways said it would continue to operate its services. Private companies stepped up precautions, restricting travel to Mexico and some other countries with confirmed cases and advising staff on how to protect themselves. China promised to disclose any cases promptly. State-run newspapers urged officials to be open and avoid the kind of cover-up that brought panic during the Sars epidemic in 2003.
Experts say that while it is impossible to stop the spread of the disease, efforts to slow its progress could buy crucial time for countries to procure essential drugs. While there is no vaccine for the flu and it is clearly spread between humans, it is not yet clear how virulent the swine virus is.
The WHO's Fukuda said a mild pandemic is possible but he also cautioned that a severe 1918 flu epidemic emerged from mild beginnings. World-wide, seasonal flu kills between 250,000 and 500,000 people in an average year. In Mexico, people from company directors to couriers wore face masks while airlines checked passengers for flu symptoms.
"We will defeat this threat," Mexico City Mayor Marcelo Ebrard said as several hundred people suspected to be suffering from the flu were treated in hospitals and life in the normally hectic capital took on an eerie hush. Mexico has shut all schools across the country until at least May 6 and in the capital, restaurants, bars, cinemas, stadiums have been ordered closed to stop the infection from spreading.
Unsure how worried they should be, people stocked up on food, drinking water, rental movies and surgical masks. Some opted to work from home. Facing damage to tourism and trade - motors of an economy that is already tipping into recession from the global downturn - Mexico said it would not order a mass closure of businesses. "Economic activity must continue," Labour Minister Javier Lozano said.
Mexican media have speculated the flu may have originated at a pig farm in the south-eastern state of Veracruz. But Health Minister Jose Angel Cordova said the first case that alerted authorities to a possible rogue flu strain was in the southern state of Oaxaca. It was too early to identify the cause or geographical source of the virus.

Copyright Reuters, 2009

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