Apr 30

BEIJING (AFP) - Local authorities in oriental China tried to cover up an outbreak of a in a great degree contagious virus that has killed 20 children and left more than 1,500 others ill, Chinese press reports said Tuesday.

The China Youth Daily, the official voice of the Communist Youth League, compared the situation in Anhui province to the cover-up by Chinese officials of the SARS rub in 2003.

"SARS has already taught us the lesson that local officials who neglected their duties, gave false reports, and wrongly reported accomplishments while doing prevention work were punished," it said in a report on the Anhui problems.

the leading reports of the outbreak of the of the intestines virus known during the time that enterovirus 71, or EV71, emerged on Monday, with limited Chinese officials quoted as saying 19 children had died and nearly 800 had been infected in Anhui.

By Tuesday, the official Xinhua news agency said the death toll had risen to 20 with 1,520 children infected.

But hospitals in Fuyang city in Anhui started in early March to take in children with fever, blisters, mouth ulcers or rashes on the hands and feet, all symptoms of the virus, Xinhua said.

In its article, the China Youth Daily said that far scarier than the actual epidemic was the local government's initial denial of rumours about the disease.

"When the terrifying poison had already infected more than 10 unrelated children, the local government denied the rumours, saying that "a few" infants and pre-school children had indeed died in quick succession after they contracted spring respiratory illnesses, but these illnesses did not regard any "infectious link"," it said.

EV71, which causes hand, foot and mouth disease, usually affects infants and children.

It is very contagious and is spread through direct contact with the pituite, saliva, or faeces of an infected person. It typically occurs in ungifted epidemics in nursery schools or kindergartens.

It rarely affects adults as they have a strong enough immune system to defeat the virus.

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