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China allows some firms to resume work at virus epicentre![]() China's Trip.com says no pay for top execs while virus rages Shanghai (AFP) March 10, 2020 - Top executives with Trip.com, China's leading online travel service, will accept no salaries starting from this month as the company copes with the impact of the coronavirus outbreak, its CEO has told employees. CEO Jane Sun said in an internal letter circulated on Monday that she and Chairman James Liang will forego compensation and other senior managers will voluntarily accept steep pay cuts of as much as one-half "until the situation improves". The memo was shared with AFP by a Trip.com spokesperson. Planned merit increases for "front-line service staff" will go ahead but those for other employees will be temporarily suspended. The spokesperson said compensation figures for senior management were not available. "In China, outbreak prevention efforts have led to a stable situation, with things already beginning to return to normal. Globally, however, the extent of its impact remains to be seen," Sun said in the memo. The coronavirus has devastated the travel sector, with major airlines slashing routes around the globe and a range of countries imposing restrictions on arrivals from China and other hard-hit areas. The International Air Transport Association (IATA) has said the outbreak could cost the global travel industry up to $113 billion in lost revenue in 2020. Share prices of major airlines have tumbled since the contagion first emerged in China in December and began rippling across the world in recent weeks. Nasdaq-listed shares of Trip.com -- which last year changed its name from Ctrip -- have fallen 30 percent since late January as the crisis mounted, plummeting 9.18 percent on Monday alone as global markets swooned, closing at $26.90. Trip.com had planned to release fourth-quarter earnings in late February, but postponed that to March 18 due to "the evolving situation brought on by the coronavirus." Trip.com has gained on other global industry leaders like Expedia and Booking.com thanks in part to surging travel by Chinese consumers.
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Key companies can resume work in coronavirus-hit Wuhan, China announced Wednesday, in another sign authorities are confident they are winning the battle against the epidemic as they seek to revive the economy.
The decision came a day after President Xi Jinping paid his first visit to the capital of Hubei province since it was placed under lockdown in late January after the outbreak became a national emergency.
The number of daily new cases has fallen steadily in Wuhan in recent weeks, while all other cities in Hubei have reported zero fresh infections for several days in a row -- prompting Xi to declare that the spread of the virus has been "basically curbed" in the province.
Hubei's quarantine measures, along with temporary closures of factories across the country, caused China's economy to come to a standstill but authorities have encouraged firms to resume work nationwide in recent weeks.
The Hubei provincial government said Wednesday that Wuhan businesses involved in providing daily necessities, prevention and control of the epidemic, or in the operations of public utilities, are among those that can resume work and production immediately.
Wuhan firms that are key to "global industrial chains" may do so as well, after getting approval, the government added.
Other companies are expected to resume production only after March 20.
Japanese carmaker Honda said on Wednesday that some of its staff have started going to work in its Wuhan plant.
Honda has also begun production of a "small number of vehicles" while checking on its production equipment starting Wednesday.
Nissan, another Japanese automaker, told AFP its Xiangyang plant in Hubei province and Zhengzhou plant in the neighbouring Henan province have "started preparations to restart operations this week".
A spokesman from Wuhan-based Dongfeng Motor Corporation, one of China's biggest auto groups, told AFP it is getting ready to resume working in Wuhan, but did not specify a time.
Similar rules apply to areas outside Wuhan that are considered high-risk, where companies involved in epidemic prevention, public utilities and providing necessities are among those that may get back to work.
In areas considered medium or low risk, there is a broader range of companies allowed to start up again.
Passenger flights, trains, cars, ships and city buses in middle and low-risk areas -- moving within the province and excluding Wuhan -- will "gradually resume operations" as well, although no timeframe was given.
But authorities said they will continue strict control measures on channels out of Wuhan and Hubei.
- Health codes -
The announcement came a day after Hubei authorities loosened travel restrictions, allowing people from medium and low risk areas to move within the province if their health code is labelled "green".
A mobile app will be used to give residents a coloured health code. Green indicates holders have no contact with virus cases, while those with yellow codes have close contacts.
Confirmed or suspected cases will get a red code, and must be quarantined.
Authorities added in the latest statement on Wednesday that outside of Wuhan, a "point-to-point" system will be adopted to send employees back to work, and help those stranded in Hubei to return home.
Schools will continue to be suspended in Hubei.
Wuhan city has been on lockdown since January 23 as China scrambled to contain the spread of the deadly coronavirus, which has now killed over 3,100 and infected nearly 81,000 in the country.
Other cities in Hubei soon followed suit, placing a total of around 56 million people under quarantine.
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