Suff wrote:Unlikely, if it were outside Southampton, the passengers would have been debarked, isolated and the ship decontaminated.
You know that for a fact? You know exactly where we would individually isolate some 3,300 people? You are certain that we have the facilities and the staff to treat them better than the Japanese could? You can guarantee that we would decontaminate the ship from top to bottom?
It saddens me to say it, but I do not share your optimism.
The Diamond Princess quarantine period ended yesterday and people are free to leave. The UK is now making arrangements to bring 74 of them home.... but having already been quarantined for the prescribed period they will have to be isolated for a further 14 days once they return home, as is the case with those returning to other countries.
Why?
They are clear, aren't they? Let the little darlings roam free. Let them mix with family and friends, go to the shops, the doctors, pubs and clubs and cinemas. Everything will be fine.
My daughter is stuck in a neighbouring country, Vietnam, where there is a lot of cross-border traffic. She is in the capital, Hanoi, in an urban population of 16 million people. Schools and businesses are closed, events have been cancelled and large gatherings banned. People are urged to self-isolate but if they are out on the streets they are stopped and randomly zapped with a temperature gun. The above measures are what the Vietnamese have taken in their attempts to keep a lid on things and for them, at least, they seem to be working. There have been 16 confirmed cases of Covid-19 and 14 of them have recovered.
We, on the other hand, would not have to worry. We are British, on an island, and we are brilliant and much better than anyone else at dealing with these sorts of things. All we have to do is man-up (or people-up if you're a bit PC) sing Jerusalem, wave a flag, and we'll be fine.