Tens of millions placed in quarantine, ghost cities on lockdown, businesses shuttered and cruise liners refused permission to dock. Amid the unfamiliar scenes and disturbing statistics, it can be hard for anyone not directly affected to get a handle on the real-life fallout of the coronavirus.
Stella Ko's experience of traveling to Seoul — and what happened upon her arrival — offers rare personal insight on the epidemic and its emotional toll on millions across Asia.
Ko, who covered the virus outbreak in Hong Kong, flew home over the weekend on a routine trip to visit her parents, but almost didn't get there. A quarantine officer in full protective gear stopped her at the frontier after she recorded a temperature of 37.5 degrees Celsius (99.5 degrees Fahrenheit).
For the next 24 hours, Ko was kept in a temporary quarantine facility, her temperature taken and samples collected. She tested negative and was free to go. "Now I know that behind the virus case numbers we all check every morning is a person like me who probably feels scared, isolated and in need of a little compassion," she writes.
As governments weigh their responses, the experiences of average citizens like Ko will start to have political consequences.
— Alan Crawford
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