Chartered planes bring back stranded travelers overseas


WUHAN -- The first batch of charter flights sent by the Chinese government Friday evening brought back 199 stranded Hubei residents from overseas following the novel coronavirus outbreak in Wuhan, capital of central China's Hubei Province.
The two charter flights operated by Xiamen Airlines departed from Thailand's Bangkok and Malaysia's Kota Kinabalu and arrived at the Wuhan Tianhe International Airport at 8:53 pm and 10:32 pm respectively.
Passengers on board were tested if they had a fever. Those with the symptoms of fever will be quarantined immediately.
Gao Huilin, one of the passengers, was travelling in Malaysia and had been stranded there as the flight back to Wuhan was canceled on Jan. 27 amid the novel coronavirus outbreak.
Gao said the flight bringing them home made careful preparations including checking the passengers' temperature before boarding the plane, and safety precaution to reduce the risk of infection.
"I'm grateful to our country, which leaves no one behind," Gao said.
- China-Laos Railway handles over 60 million passenger trips
- Bangladesh's young boy recovering after undergoing specialized surgery in Hubei
- Shanghai pioneers music therapy committee to advance mental health care
- No casualties reported after 5.4-magnitude quake in China's Sichuan
- Village in Guangzhou announces subsidy for patients with mosquito-borne diseases
- Guangdong railways set passenger record during National Day holiday