The United States, Canada and the European Union are telling people to avoid non-essential travel to Mexico, and Cuba suspended all flights to and from Mexico for 48 hours. -- PHOTO: REUTERS
MEXICO CITY - NEW swine flu infections were found around the world on Tuesday and the specter of a pandemic hit the travel industry as governments warned people to stay away from Mexico where 149 people have died.
The number of infections in the United States rose to 65, Canada has 13, and new cases were also confirmed in Israel and New Zealand.
M'sia wants travel ban from Mexico
Malaysia's government asked the World Health Organization to ban outbound travel from Mexico to stop the spread of swine flu.
'We have spoken to WHO officials and asked them to stop those in Mexico leaving the country,' Health Minister Liow Tiong Lai told Bloomberg news on Wednesday.
A BARRAGE of travel warnings by foreign governments and travel firms threatened to batter Mexico's tourism industry, a main source of foreign currency for the country.
UK travel firms Thomson Holidays and First Choice decided to repatriate their customers from Mexico and cancel flights bound for Cancun, although most airlines continued to operate their services.
The United States, Canada and the European Union are telling people to avoid non-essential travel to Mexico, and Cuba suspended all flights to and from Mexico for 48 hours.
Travel companies were also staying away. Carnival Cruises cancelled stops at Mexican ports for three of its ships on Tuesday and Canadian tour operator Transat AT postponed flights to Mexico until June 1.
The World Health Organisation said a pandemic - a global outbreak of a serious new illness - is not yet inevitable but that all countries should prepare for the worst, especially poorer developing nations. 'They really get hit disproportionally hard,' said the WHO's acting assistant director-general Dr Keiji Fukuda.
One of the mysteries of the outbreak is why the virus has killed scores of people in Mexico while the cases outside the country have been relatively mild and no one has died. Experts say this may be simply a matter of where they have been looking to find it and officials say they expect to find deaths as the disease spreads.
A pandemic could snuff out fragile signs of economic recovery around the world as travel, trade and manufacturing output would all be hit. The last flu pandemic was in 1968, when 'Hong Kong' flu killed about 1 million people around the world.
Seven countries have confirmed cases of the swine flu and a dozen others have suspected infections. Mexico City is at the center of the outbreak and many residents are staying in their homes while schools, churches, cinemas and restaurants have all been shut down.
Airline share prices declined again on Tuesday on fears that they could experience a sharp drop in traffic. -- REUTERS