When we had sars in our eyes
ONE OF THE NASTIEST flu bugs for years is now
doing the rounds of Asia, exactly five years after the region
was hit by SARS. In fact, it was five years ago today that a
friend of mine bustled her kids to the airport. "Adios," she
said. "I’m taking the kids home where it’s safer."
Now that’s a perfectly reasonable thing to say.
Except for one thing.
Her home was Brazil.
She left Asia because SARS was suspected of
having killed one person in her hometown. She moved to Brazil
where 55,000 people are murdered every year. (And that’s just in
the kindergartens.)
This week is the fifth anniversary of SARS. In
Singapore and Malaysia, people ate chilli to immunize
themselves. In Indonesia, lizards were the remedy of choice. In
South Asia, magic potions were prescribed.
I still have my reporter’s notebook for 2003, so
let me take you back to how it all started.
February 11: "Six dead of mystery virus in
Guangdong" a newspaper reported.
February 12: The new killer virus was deadly but
"not as serious as rumoured", a Guangdong health official said.
Only in China can virus be fatal but not serious.
February 13: I visit my local supermarket and
see people fighting to buy white vinegar, which is rumoured to
cure the mystery virus.
February 14: The Chinese press reveals there
have been no deaths from the virus but several people have died
trying to inhale white vinegar.
March 10: At home, this reporter’s infant
prodigy asks why a resident of our apartment block is now
wearing a mask. "Don’t worry, it’s just our neighbourhood bank
robber," I quip.
March 11: Widespread hysteria breaks out. Infant
prodigy informs me that her school has been taken over entirely
by bank robbers.
March 20: The Hong Kong government orders all
buses to jam windows open to improve ventilation and let germs
out.
March 22: Passengers suffer carbon monoxide
poisoning as they sit in ultra-polluted traffic jams in buses
bearing signs saying: "Windows open for health reasons."
April 1: Police arrest teenage prankster who
puts out fake news alert saying "Hong Kong to be isolated from
world".
April 2: World Health Organization orders that
Hong Kong be isolated from the world.
June 2: SARS disappears from Asia, having caused
fewer deaths than normal flu viruses.
Yes, it was a time of craziness. But looking
back on it, there were things to smile about. Here are the Five
Best Things About The Two Months When SARS Ruled Asia.
1. Most Asian government officials looked better
with masks on.
2. For a while, people with bad breath only
tainted themselves.
3. Elevator-users in Asia stopped jabbing the
"door close" button because they didn’t want to touch anything.
4. Mothers-in-law all over the world cancelled
plans to visit their offspring in Asia.
5. If you wanted more personal space, all you
had to do was cough.
I felt like a movie star whenever I travelled by
air. People in first class got seats 24 inches wide. Business
class passengers got seats 19 inches wide. In economy, I had the
whole cabin and all the stewardesses to myself.
And I wasn’t drinking white vinegar.
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Tomorrow: How Asians secretly "fix" Hollywood
movies
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Visit Nury at www.vittachi.com for a germ-free encounter