| Coronavirus is China’s fastest-spreading health crisis, Xi Jinping says                                              China’s president said the epidemic was one of a historic magnitude. 
 
 
 
 By WILLIAM ZHENG | SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST
 
 02/23/2020 02:56 PM EST
 
 
 
 In a meeting on an unprecedented scale, Chinese President Xi Jinping said the  coronavirus epidemic was the country’s most serious public health crisis and promised more pro-growth policies to help
 According to state news  agency Xinhua, Xi’s address via teleconference on Sunday was open to  every county government and every military regiment throughout the  country.
 
 
 
 
 He said the epidemic was “the  fastest spreading, with the most infected and was the most difficult to  prevent and control” since the founding of the People’s Republic.
 
 “This is a crisis for us and it is  also a major test,” he said, acknowledging that the country needed to  learn from the “obvious shortcomings exposed” in its response, so it  could improve its ability to handle future crises.
 
 But Xi also told the Communist Party  cadres that “the party Central Committee’s assessment of the epidemic is  accurate, all the work arrangements are timely, and the measures  adopted are effective.”
 
 “The effectiveness of the prevention  and control work has once again demonstrated the significant advantages  of the leadership of the Communist Party of China and the socialist  system with Chinese characteristics,” he said.
 
 He said that  controlling the outbreak in the central Chinese city of Wuhan and the wider province of Hubei  as well as preventing the epidemic from spreading to Beijing, China’s  political center, were the country’s top two strategic goals.
 
 “First, [we must] resolutely curb the  spread of epidemic ... increase the rate of treatment and cure, and  reduce the infection and death rates effectively in Hubei and Wuhan,” he  said.
 
 
 
   Chinese President Xi Jinping. | Kyodo via AP Photo
 
 “Second, [we need to] make every  effort to prevent and control the spread in Beijing ... strengthen joint  defenses and control in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region, and cut off  the source of infection as much as possible.”
 
 Xi’s comments came as the number of  confirmed cases neared 77,000 in mainland China, with more than 2,400  people dead. Hubei province, the epicenter of the outbreak, accounted  for most of the cases and death toll.
 
 But there are signs of improvement.  Excluding Hubei, there were 18 new confirmed cases on Saturday, a new  low for this month, while 21 Chinese provinces said they had no new  confirmed cases including Beijing.
 
 As of Saturday, Beijing has 399  confirmed cases of coronavirus infection with four deaths and 189 people  discharged. Although there were no new cases reported on Saturday, a  string of hospital infections announced on Thursday hit hopes that the  capital would soon return to normal.
 
 According to footage aired by state  broadcaster CCTV, all those taking part in the meeting, either in person  or by video link, wore masks, except for Xi and six other members of  the Politburo Standing Committee, who sat on a stage away from other  participants.
 
 While also acknowledging the epidemic  would inevitably “have a considerable impact on the Chinese economy and  society”, Xi said “the fundamentals of China’s long-term economic growth  have not changed, and the impact of the epidemic is short term and  overall controllable.”
 
 While urging the various government  leaders to push for a return to work and production, depending on the  circumstances, Xi also promised more policies to stimulate economic  growth.
 
 “Fiscal policies will be more  proactive, [we will] continue to study and introduce targeted cuts in  taxes and fees in stages to help small, medium and micro enterprises  overcome difficulties. The prudent monetary policy should be more  focused on flexibility and moderation, [we should] make good use of  existing financial support policies, and introduce new policy measures  in a timely manner,” Xi said.
 
 Xi also vowed to stabilize foreign trade and investment.
 
 
 politico.com
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