66 more perish in Mexico swine flu

The toll in Mexico's swine flu outbreak has risen to 66, officials said Saturday. With ,829 people being infected.
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MEXICO CITY: The toll in Mexico's swine flu outbreak has risen to 66, officials said Saturday.

Till date 2,829 people have been infected with the influenza A(H1N1) virus, also called swine flu. About three percent of those infected with the virus have succumbed to the disease.

Health secretary Jose Angel Cordova told reporters Friday that majority of the people who died contracted the disease before April 23.

He added that the schools and universities in the affected areas will remain closed for another week. Over 50 percent of the swine flu fatalities have been women, he said.

Japan confirms 1st swine flu

TOKYO :Japan confirmed its first case of swine flu caught within the country on Saturday, showing a massive effort to block the flu at the island nation's borders had failed.

The government ordered schools closed in parts of the port city of Kobe, where the Ministry of Health said a male high school student tested positive for the same strain that has killed more than 70 people worldwide, most of them in Mexico. Unlike the other cases confirmed in Japan so far, the student had not traveled abroad recently.

Two other students at the same school who also haven't left the country recently are also suspected of having the virus. They tested positive in tests done by the local government, but authorities were waiting for results from a national lab.

All three were recovering at medical facilities in Kobe, which is about 270 miles (430 kilometers) west of Tokyo. None of their names were released.

The confirmed case is Japan's fifth overall. The first four cases, three high school students and a teacher who had recently returned from a school trip to Canada, were detected as they entered the country at Narita Airport, Tokyo's main international hub. The health ministry did not release the location of their school.

The H1N1 swine flu virus is a new influenza strain for which people have no immunity. Health officials have warned that it could spark a pandemic, infecting millions of people.

Japan has until now sought to take advantage of its lack of land borders to stop the virus from entering the country.

Medical staff were sent to all of its international airports, where doctors in masks and biohazard suits conducted tests of passengers before they even left their planes.

But experts have noted that this flu seems to have a long incubation period — five to seven days before people notice symptoms.

Health Minister Yoichi Masuzoe said a health official had been dispatched from Tokyo to help investigate how the disease had spread to the student, who still has a cough and sore throat but is recovering.

Masuzoe said in a national television broadcast that schools in Kobe would be closed for seven days to try to prevent further spread. He urged people to remain calm.

"The most important thing at this stage is for citizens to act calmly based on accurate information," he said.

According to the World Health Organization, some 7,520 people in more than 30 countries have been sickened by the virus, mostly in the U.S. and Mexico.

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