The deadly coronavirus outbreak that has already killed nearly 1,400 people in China is now claiming the jobs of top officials as President Xi Jinping moves to shield himself from public anger over the official response.
The purge of the top Communist Party chiefs in Hubei province, the epicenter of the crisis, and its capital Wuhan, the city bearing the brunt of the outbreak, came as the authorities announced the number of virus cases had skyrocketed by nearly 15,000 to almost 60,000 following a dramatic revision to counting methods.
Xi also has used the opportunity to try to tackle his other major crisis — Hong Kong - by appointing a man known for tearing crosses off the roofs of churches to head the agency overseeing the turbulent city.
But it's the response to the virus that may present the biggest challenge of Xi's tenure amid public pressure for transparency over the outbreak.
China isn't alone — Indonesia has reported no confirmed cases, drawing skepticism from experts who point to dozens of infections in nearby countries.
Ousting officials — and letting them shoulder blame — during an emergency isn't unprecedented. The central government fired more than 100 officials including the mayor of Beijing when China battled the 2003 SARS outbreak.
Amid worldwide alarm over the virus's spread — Japan confirmed 44 more cases on a quarantined cruise ship today — how Xi reacts to pressure for greater openness will be crucial to the global battle to defeat the disease.
— Karen Leigh
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