Airports in Thailand, Nepal and Taiwan have tightened health surveillance and passenger screening following a Nipah virus ...
Taiwan officially classifies Nipah virus—which kills 80–91% of infected people—as a Category 5 notifiable disease following India's outbreak, raising critical questions about media silence surrounding ...
The World Health Organisation (WHO) classifies Nipah as a priority pathogen due to the potential to trigger an epidemic.
It is thought that 100 people have been quarantined after the virus was found in a hospital. Health officials said that a ...
This includes 113 affected flights between Beijing and Osaka, as well as 13 flights between Shenzhen and Hokkaido.
Various Asian airports have introduced COVID-style health checks after the Nipah virus was reported in West Bengal. Thailand ...
In Nepal, the government has raised alert levels and intensified health checks at Tribhuvan International Airport in ...
Reports last year of Taiwanese going missing, being detained or interrogated, or having their personal liberties restricted in China were four times higher than the previous year, the Mainland Affairs ...
With a recent Nipah virus outbreak reported in West Bengal, India, several Asian countries have reinstated airport health ...
Airports across parts of Asia have begun tightening health surveillance and travel screening after an outbreak of Nipah virus ...
Ahead of the BTS's world tour, searches for trips to Seoul and Busan have surged dramatically compared to the previous weeks.
The Japan National Tourism Organization (JNTO) announced on January 21 that the number of foreign visitors to Japan in December ...