The government action might have been 'a little drastic', but he also said: 'We cannot wait for the figures to get bigger before we make any decision. We have to make certain assumptions that if there are now deaths related to influenza, then we need to do something.' On Tuesday, a seven-year-old boy died and tested positive for a flu strain known as Type A or H1N1, a virus also found in a 21-month-old toddler who died last month. Two other children have also died after falling ill with flu-like symptoms. Mainland cities near Hong Kong, such as Shenzhen and Guangzhou, were watching the situation closely as well. Southern China has just entered its annual flu season, which falls between March and July. The WHO's Manila-based spokesman Peter Cordingley said the agency was monitoring the situation. 'What Hong Kong's dealing with is just basically seasonal influenza, but it's happening in a city which is always on the alert for infectious disease,' he told The Straits Times. 'The Hong Kong government, by closing the schools, can hope to break the line of transmission of the virus and clean the schools. 'They are showing they are responding to public concern and that is important when you're trying to handle something like this.' The WHO estimates that between 250,000 and 500,000 die from flu worldwide each year.
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