What's new

Coronavirus pandemic - World News

Most Colombian citizens will have to self-isolate from next week, President Ivan Duque announced in a televised address late Friday.

People will be required to isolate from 11:59 p.m. on Tuesday, March 24, for 19 days until midnight Monday on April 13. Duque called the measure "mandatory preventive isolation."

Many Colombians will only be allowed to go outside to access health services, purchase food and medicine, and to use the bank and post office.

Colombians had previously been asked to self-isolate, but the measure wasn't mandatory.

As of Friday evening, Colombia had reported 158 coronavirus cases and no deaths, according to the latest numbers by its Ministry of Health.

Source CNN
 
The numbers worldwide: More than 272,000 people have contracted the virus and at least 11,310 have died, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University

US death toll rises: More than 250 people have now died from the novel coronavirus in the United States

Source CNN
 
BBC - Sydney police have temporarily closed Bondi Beach after crowds exceeded Australia's outdoor gathering limit.

The country has banned outdoor gatherings of more than 500 people.

However, large crowds of people are still flocking to beaches across Sydney, flouting advice to stay inside.

Police were called to Tamarama beach after a large number of people refused to leave, despite being asked by lifeguards.

Health Minister Greg Hunt said the beachgoers' behaviour was "unacceptable" and called on local councils to step in to ensure people are complying with the social distancing advice.
 
Death toll passes 11,000, confirmed cases pass 275,000; nearly 90,000 recovered

One in five Americans soon to be under 'stay at home' order

Death toll in Italy rises by 627 in a day, reaching a record 4,032

Britain wakes up to shuttered pubs, restaurants and cafes

UK business leaders 'relieved' by government's wage pledge

China reports no new locally-transmitted cases for third consecutive day

Sydney closes its famous beaches, including Bondi, due to overcrowding

After months fighting the virus, Singapore reports first two deaths
 
The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has announced the deaths of two coronavirus patients, the first such fatalities to be reported in the country.
 
In Italy, deaths and funerals in isolation bring unknown pain

Rome, Italy - The image of Italian army trucks escorting coffins as a local crematorium was unable to cope with the number of bodies coming in shocked the citizens in Bergamo city this week.

The footage, which caught international attention and was shared widely on social media, was a stark reminder of how grave the coronavirus outbreak is in the northern region of Lombardy.

"If this keeps going for six months, we will have to prepare the plot for mass graves," Carlo Rossini, a worker at the Funeral Honours Agency La Bergamasca, told Al Jazeera.

Italy is Europe's epicentre of the coronavirus with more than 47,000 infected, and days after the truck images were circulated, the number of deaths in the country rose further, surpassing the toll in China, where the outbreak originated.

On Friday, Italian officials said death toll rose by 627 in 24 hours, to 4,032, the largest daily jump since the virus emerged in February.

With more than 5,150 people infected, the northern province of Bergamo has become the hotbed of the virus, taking over the areas where the infection broke out in the country.

Authorities disclose only regional data, so there is no specific count on the victims in the province.

The final death toll could be higher than the official statistics.

"There are significant numbers of people who have died but whose death hasn't been attributed to the coronavirus because they died at home or in a nursing home and so they weren't swabbed," Giorgio Gori, mayor of the town of Bergamo, told Reuters news agency.

Gori said there were 164 deaths in his city in the first 15 days of March this year, of which 31 were attributed to the coronavirus. That compares with 56 deaths over the same period last year.

In another video widely shared on social media, dozens of coffins awaiting burial are lined up along the walls of a local cemetery church.

"There are roughly 25 deceased that need [burying] and 25 whose wish was to be cremated, every day," Giulio Dellavita, the secretary of a local diocese, told Al Jazeera. "Even with the crematorium working 24 hours, we cannot take care of more than 40 per day."

Psychological wound: 'A beloved disappears suddenly'

Rossini's La Bergamasca agency, where he has worked for 10 years, offers funeral services in the whole province of Bergamo.

Neither he nor his elder colleagues have ever witnessed anything similar to the current pandemic.

Since the beginning of the month, Rossini has already buried 95 people. For all of them, there was no ritual whatsoever.

The lockdown enacted by the Italian government in Lombardy on March 8 banned any public solemnities.

"Funerals present the same risks as any other gatherings. I had patients who contracted the virus at a ceremony in Puglia," Alessandro Grimaldi, head of the infectious diseases unit of L'Aquila hospital, told Al Jazeera.

When an infected patient dies in the hospital, his body is sealed directly inside the coffin, and then delivered to the graveyard.

If the family has not been quarantined, they can join a local parish priest protected with gloves and mask and recite a short prayer before the burial.

Otherwise, they must wait until the crisis is over and the lockdown lifted to say their final goodbyes.

In an overwhelmingly Catholic country like Italy, this halt represents a significant disruption in the public and personal perception of death.

"A beloved one disappears all of a sudden, and this opens a deep psychological wound," father Giulio Dellavita said.

After relatives test positive for the coronavirus, anyone who had direct contact with them must enter a 15-day quarantine and notify local health authorities.

This means patients have no direct contact with the family. And if a patient's condition worsens, there might be no chance of meeting them alive any more.

For those who have lost their kin, the diocese has activated a phone line.

"Imagine: you are at home with your mother, who abruptly feels sick. The ambulance comes and picks her up. From now on, you will never see and hear her again. All of a sudden, you receive the address of her tomb," Dellavita said.

"People start wondering: what would she have thought? What should I have told her? You cannot properly digest this loss."

'We cannot pay tribute altogether'

Dellavita has the first-hand experience of the new way loss is being experienced.

Two weeks ago, one of his spiritual brothers fell sick. An ambulance took him to the local hospital.

Since the religious brothers all live together, Dellavita underwent a 15-day quarantine. His "sibling" died in the meantime.

"It was when I understood the pain of these families," Dellavita said.

"We were his community. And everyone had to pray for him on his own because we cannot even gather in the house to pay tribute altogether."

Like all the other victims, Dellavita's brother will have his proper ceremony only after the pandemic is gone.

Cries, worships and memories will have to wait until then.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...ation-bring-unknown-pain-200320144252146.html
 
WHO has tiptoed China’s line in this whole
scenario, they also said travel bans were not necessary.

Also they had time criticize Trump for calling it as Chinese virus.

Their handling of Ebola and this has dented their reputation.

The WHO DG is a Ethiopian politician.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Hong Kong says an influx of people returning from overseas is likely to lead to a community outbreak of COVID-19 and a surge in confirmed cases will paralyze the region's medical system</p>— Sky News Breaking (@SkyNewsBreak) <a href="https://twitter.com/SkyNewsBreak/status/1241320711744040962?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 21, 2020</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Spain's health ministry says the number of coronavirus cases has risen to 24,926 from 19,980 and COVID-19 deaths in the country have risen to 1,326 from 1,002
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Bravo!<br>South Korea &#55356;&#56816;&#55356;&#56823; has set up ‘phone booths’ that can test people for the coronavirus in just 7 minutes. The country has earned praise for its mass testing amid the Covid19 pandemic.<br><br> <a href="https://t.co/lQ47UPdiaz">pic.twitter.com/lQ47UPdiaz</a></p>— Erik Solheim (@ErikSolheim) <a href="https://twitter.com/ErikSolheim/status/1241259513212211200?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 21, 2020</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Death toll passes 11,000 worldwide, confirmed cases pass 275,000; nearly 90,000 recovered
Spain death toll jumps by more than 300 to 1,326, another grim record for the country
UK environment secretary gives briefing as government holds talks with supermarkets about panic-buying
One in five Americans soon to be under "stay at home" order
Britain wakes up to shuttered pubs, restaurants and cafes
China reports no new locally-transmitted cases for third consecutive day
Sydney closes its famous beaches, including Bondi, due to overcrowding
After months fighting the virus, Singapore reports first two deaths
 
The latest developments across the world

Spain's death toll rises to 1,326 - up from 1,002, says its health ministry

Hong Kong says an influx of people returning from overseas is likely to lead to a community outbreak

China gives Greece more than one million masks and other medical supplies

South Korea advises its citizens to stop socialising for 15 days and warns of consequences if the rules are broken

Ireland is reportedly considering a plan to pay up to 75% of workers' wages

Germany's southwestern state Baden-Wuerttemberg opens hospitals to patients from the neighbouring region of eastern France

Air raid sirens have echoed across Jordan's capital to mark the start of a three-day curfew

Mauritius confirms its first death from the coronavirus

Georgia's PM has asked the country's president to declare a one-month emergency
 
USA caseload now higher than both Iran and Germany.
 
UK to have 8000 more beds available from Monday.

If they can get to 20000 beds more in 3-4 weeks then I feel they will lift the quarantine
 
Surely the NHS has drafted in nursing students and pre-qualified doctors into the NHS for help?
 
Heard they're trying to bring in the retired ones.
They’ve got 20,000 to return actually which is very good.


But they would be better off throwing the 20-25 year old students into the deep end after giving them some fundamental basic training to deal with it.

That would be a massive injection of NHs staff help
 
Nigeria will close its two main international airports in the cities of Lagos and Abuja from Monday night, its civil aviation regulator said.
The number of coronavirus cases in the country almost doubled overnight from 12 to 22.
Three of the extra cases were in Abuja, the capital's first positive identifications.
 
A Bosnian man became the first to die of the coronavirus in the Balkan country, the manager of a hospital in the northwestern town of Bihac has said.
Bosnia has declared a nationwide state of emergency.
So far, Bosnia has reported 90 cases.
 
In Asia, Thailand reported 89 new cases - the biggest daily jump in the number of infections so far, taking its total to 411.
 
I have an M&S store next to my residential colony. They have 3 huge compartments, 1 for women’s cloathing, 1 for men’s and the 3rd for their supermarket/foods.

They would be smart by bringing in 3/4 massive lorries to remove the cloathing and stocking up the two compartments with more food. Would be great for their business also. They are so desperate at the moment that they have suits worth £120 cut down to £30
 
Iran's Rouhani says COVID-19 measures may be eased within weeks

In televised address, Iranian president says it is crucial for sanctions-hit country to resume economic production.

Iran's President Hassan Rouhani has said he expects measures taken to combat the spread of the highly infectious coronavirus, including social distancing, to be eased within the next two to three weeks.

Accusing "counter-revolutionaries" of attempting to shut down economic production, Rouhani said in a televised address on Saturday his country "has to do everything" to return economic activity back to normal.

Iran is one of the hardest-hit countries worldwide by the virus, with an official death toll only behind Italy and China. On Saturday, the health ministry's latest tally said the death toll had risen by more than 100 to 1,556, while the number of infected people stood at 20,610. A total of 7,635 people have recovered in Iran.

Al Jazeera's Zein Basravi, reporting from the capital, Tehran, said Rouhani tried to "strike a balance" between addressing the public health crisis and maintaining the country's economic and sociopolitical stability going forward.

"This is a country that has lost patience with its own government over a series of crises that the country has experienced in the last few months," he said.

Already reeling from years of economic sanctions following US President Donald Trump's 2018 withdrawal from a nuclear deal Iran had signed with world powers three years earlier, the country's inability to procure badly needed medical equipment from international markets has hampered its efforts to combat COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus.

Since announcing its first two COVID-19 deaths in the holy Shia city of Qom on February 19, Iran has taken a series of steps to contain the virus.

It has closed schools and universities until early April, as well as four key pilgrimage sites, including the Fatima Masumeh shrine in Qom.

Iran has also cancelled the main weekly Friday prayers, and temporarily closed Parliament.
Nowruz travel

In a speech marking the start of the Persian new year, known as Nowruz, Rouhani on Friday defended the government's response to the outbreak in the face of widespread criticism that officials acted too slowly and may have even covered up initial cases before infections rapidly spread across the country.

He also praised doctors and nurses for their courage in fighting COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus.

"Our nation has managed to reach its goals, despite difficulties ... Iran will overcome the coronavirus with unity," Rouhani said.

Iranian authorities have asked people to avoid all travel during the Persian New Year holidays, which usually sees almost all citizens take to the streets. But the pleas have been ignored by many.

According to the Iranian Red Crescent, about three million people have left the 13 worst-hit provinces by road since March 17.

Health ministry spokesman Kianoush Jahanpour said on Saturday there was "a minority who did not follow the guidelines", warning that provinces popular with tourists would not welcome visitors for the Nowruz holiday.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...-19-measures-eased-weeks-200321110824922.html
 
Almost 800 more dead in Italy

Deaths continue to spiral in Italy. Official figures show 793 have died of Covid-19 in the last 24 hours - another daily record.

In total 4,825 people have now died across the country.

More than 53,500 have been diagnosed with the virus nationally, up more than 6,500 since yesterday.
 
The number of confirmed cases in the Netherlands has risen by 637 to a total of 3,631, health officials say, while the death toll has risen by 30 to 136

Bosnia has recorded its first coronavirus death - the manager of a hospital in the northwestern town of Bihac, according to Reuters news agency

In Switzerland, health authorities say 6,100 infections have been confirmed - a 25% increase on the previous day - with 56 deaths

Portugal says the death toll has doubled overnight to 12, with 1,280 infected.
 
Moscow (CNN)Russian President Vladimir Putin said this week his country managed to stop the mass spread of coronavirus -- and that the situation was "under control," thanks to early and aggressive measures to keep more people from getting the disease.

Does Russia have coronavirus under control? According to information released by Russian officials, Putin's strategy seems to have worked. The number of confirmed Russian coronavirus cases is surprisingly low, despite Russia sharing a lengthy border with China and recording its first case back in January.

The numbers are picking up, but Russia -- a country of 146 million people -- has fewer confirmed cases than Luxembourg, with just 253 people infected. Luxembourg, by contrast, has a population of just 628,000, according to the CIA World Factbook, and by Saturday had reported 670 coronavirus cases with eight deaths.

Russia's early response measures -- such as shutting down its 2,600-mile border with China as early as January 30, and setting up quarantine zones -- may have contributed to the delay of a full-blown outbreak, some experts say.

A strong record on testing

"The director-general of WHO said 'test, test, test,'" Dr. Melita Vujnovic, the World Health Organization's representative in Russia, told CNN Thursday. "Well, Russia started that literally at the end of January."

Vujnovic said Russia also took a broader set of measures in addition to testing.

"Testing and identification of cases, tracing contacts, isolation, these are all measures that WHO proposes and recommends, and they were in place all the time," she said. "And the social distancing is the second component that really also started relatively early."

Rospotrebnadzor, Russia's state consumer watchdog, said Saturday that it had run more than 156,000 coronavirus tests in total. By comparison, according to CDC figures, the United States only picked up the pace in testing at the beginning of March, while Russia says it has been testing en masse since early February, including in airports, focusing on travelers from Iran, China, and South Korea.

That's not to say there were no holes in Russia's defenses. Russia didn't start testing those arriving from Italy or other badly affected EU countries immediately, limiting its controls for arrivals from Europe to taking temperatures and imposing two-week quarantines. The majority of the coronavirus cases reported in Russia were brought from Italy, according to health officials.

Distrust among the population

Still, Russia contends with widespread public skepticism, a legacy of its Soviet past. On social media, Russians have raised questions referring to their country's poor track record of transparency, such as the coverup around the Chernobyl nuclear catastrophe in 1986 and the country's botched response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the 1980s.

Authorities have moved swiftly to counter what they see as misinformation. In early March, Russia's Federal Security Service and internet watchdog moved to take down a viral post claiming the real number of coronavirus cases was 20,000 and that the Russian government was covering it up. Facebook and Instagram users in Russia then started to see coronavirus awareness alerts linking to Rospotrebnadzor's official website.

News reports of shortages in protective equipment have also fueled skepticism. And some experts have raised doubts about the reliability of Russia's testing system, which depends on a single laboratory. A report by PCR.News, a media outlet for medics and healthcare professionals, pointed out that the only approved coronavirus testing system, produced by Vector in Novosibirsk, has a lower sensitivity than other virus tests, raising concerns about false negatives.

David Berov, the first confirmed coronavirus patient in Moscow, wrote on Instagram that his second test showed a negative result, while the first and third tested positive for coronavirus.

"The virus was confirmed in my third test, it was not seen in my blood but was in my saliva," Berov wrote on March 5. "As I was told, they could barely see it so that's why they were in doubt for so long."

Vector did not respond to a request for comment. The Russian branch of the WHO, however, told CNN it received the specifications for the Vector test kits and the laboratory had been placed on the list of approved institutions used to confirm the coronavirus.

Anastasia Vasilyeva, a doctor for Russian opposition figure Alexey Navalny and leader of the Alliance of Doctors union, made headlines with a series of videos in which she claims the authorities are covering up real coronavirus numbers by using pneumonia and acute respiratory infection as a diagnosis.

"You see they said the first coronavirus patient that died, that the cause of death was thrombosis," Vasilyeva told CNN. "That's obvious, nobody dies from coronavirus itself, they die from the complications, so it's very easy to manipulate this."

Moscow health officials denied the accusation and said they were testing pneumonia patients for coronavirus. The WHO's Dr. Vujnovic also was skeptical about Vasilyeva's claim.

"If there was a hidden, unrecognized burden somewhere it would be seen in these [pneumonia] reports," she said. "So I do not believe this is happening, which does not say that you might not see an increase of cases in the next period, because we have seen that in many countries."

Putin himself addressed the concerns about the statistics Wednesday, saying the government might not have the full picture but is not covering up the numbers.

"Here is the thing: the authorities may not possess the full information, because people a) sometimes do not report it, b) they themselves don't know that they are sick, and the latent period is very long," he said in a televised meeting. "But everything that is issued ... by the Ministry of Health is all objective information."

This week the numbers have surged, with Russia adding 30 to 50 cases every day, and the count will most likely continue its upward trajectory as Russia expands its testing. Nevertheless, the local representative for the WHO says Russia is still doing relatively well, as the country tracks cases with epidemiological links to travel or family transmission. On Saturday morning, Rospotrebnadzor released a figure potentially more concerning than the number of confirmed cases -- 36,540 people are being monitored for possible coronavirus.

Meanwhile, the government moved to impose more sweeping measures, canceling public events and closing Russia's borders to foreigners, with some exceptions. But politics as usual continues under Putin: the President has signed a decree scheduling a nationwide referendum on constitutional amendments that could see him stay in power till 2036 on April 22. The authorities have vowed to monitor coronavirus developments but so far have not changed the date.

https://edition.cnn.com/2020/03/21/europe/putin-coronavirus-russia-intl/index.html
 
WTHHHH is going on in Italy!!! RIP

I still see people in India claiming this media hype!
 
Something isn’t right in Italy

They have to look deep into what could be the reason as to why they are still dying so much more than even the chinese.

Information ministers need to give out actual reasons instead of just figures. People can avoid the virus just with these precise details
 
Something isn’t right in Italy

They have to look deep into what could be the reason as to why they are still dying so much more than even the chinese.

Information ministers need to give out actual reasons instead of just figures. People can avoid the virus just with these precise details

Something in the Italian dna that makes it more deadly?
 
Something in the Italian dna that makes it more deadly?

There has to be a better explanation.

Countries are on lockdown just like Italy has been for a longer period but the number of deaths are on a very high magnitude there. If they can present a detailed study of the common traits found in those many people to pass away, it could be highly essential in saving people all around the world.

This is no coincidence or a case of acting too late. There is more to Italy than what is being reported, which is just the numbers
 
Sri Lanka imposes nation-wide curfew as confirmed coronavirus cases in the country rise to over 75
 
The UAE is shutting beaches, parks, pools, cinemas & gyms from March 22 for two weeks over coronavirus concerns, the state news agency WAM reported - Restaurants & cafes will be allowed to operate at 20% of capacity, & as long as customers are at least 2 metres apart.
 
There has to be a better explanation.

Countries are on lockdown just like Italy has been for a longer period but the number of deaths are on a very high magnitude there. If they can present a detailed study of the common traits found in those many people to pass away, it could be highly essential in saving people all around the world.

This is no coincidence or a case of acting too late. There is more to Italy than what is being reported, which is just the numbers

Things to keep in mind when looking at italy's number:

In Italy the median age of those who have died so far is around 80. This means 50% of those who have died are older than 80 years old. Since Italy has a very large percentage of old people the virus has caused more deaths.

After first symptoms appear it can take another 14 days until people get critically ill and require hospitalization. After hospitalization it can take another 10-20 days until death. This means those whonare dying now were most likely infected around 3-4 weeks ago.

Italy's lockdown happened on 9th March after 7000 confirmed cases. Since it can take up to 14 days for symptoms to appear and for people to realize they are infected it means there are still people locked up in their home with their families who think they are healthy. While in the meantime they could potentially infect those living with them.

We don't know if italy's decision to lockdown was on time or too late. As a comparison China locked down Hubei province when number of cases was still below 1000. People in China were wearing masks even in home.

In northern Italy some hospitals have probably reached their limit. Which means they can't take in all the critical patients and hence leading to another increase in death rate.
 
Things to keep in mind when looking at italy's number:

In Italy the median age of those who have died so far is around 80. This means 50% of those who have died are older than 80 years old. Since Italy has a very large percentage of old people the virus has caused more deaths.

After first symptoms appear it can take another 14 days until people get critically ill and require hospitalization. After hospitalization it can take another 10-20 days until death. This means those whonare dying now were most likely infected around 3-4 weeks ago.

Italy's lockdown happened on 9th March after 7000 confirmed cases. Since it can take up to 14 days for symptoms to appear and for people to realize they are infected it means there are still people locked up in their home with their families who think they are healthy. While in the meantime they could potentially infect those living with them.

We don't know if italy's decision to lockdown was on time or too late. As a comparison China locked down Hubei province when number of cases was still below 1000. People in China were wearing masks even in home.

In northern Italy some hospitals have probably reached their limit. Which means they can't take in all the critical patients and hence leading to another increase in death rate.

Thanks

What do you think about the NHS’s move in striking a deal with the private sector and securing 8000 beds with 20,000 extra paid staff. Also the returning NHS staff?

There is a vacuum manufacturer in Worcestershire that is now shifting its focus in making ventilators, they hope to produce approximately 1000 ventilators a week, other companies are also trying to follow suit.

Do you recon london and outer England stands a better chance than Italy?
 
Thanks

What do you think about the NHS’s move in striking a deal with the private sector and securing 8000 beds with 20,000 extra paid staff. Also the returning NHS staff?

There is a vacuum manufacturer in Worcestershire that is now shifting its focus in making ventilators, they hope to produce approximately 1000 ventilators a week, other companies are also trying to follow suit.

Do you recon london and outer England stands a better chance than Italy?

How bad UK will be hit depends on how much the health care system can handle at once. It would be a great thing for UK if they can indeed increase their health care system capacity on such a short notice. It would give her more room and time to handle the crisis and less desperate measures would be required for a much lesser time. Many countries don't have the resources to produce their own ventilators and increase their capacity on a short notice and are therefore much more desperate to keep the virus in check. So that's good news for the UK.

The only thing that makes me concerned about UK's situation currently is the high numbers of deaths in comparison with the cases reported.

Uk has 5000 cases & 233 reported deaths.

This doesn't fit in with trend seen from other countries.

USA has 24'700 cases & 290 deaths
Germany has 22'000 cases & 90 deaths
France has 14'500 cases & 562 death
South Korea has 8800 cases & 100 death
Switzerland has 6000 cases & 80 deaths
Austira has 3000 cases & 8 deaths

https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/#countries

In UK's case the death to reported cases ratio is very high. This could mean many different things. Most likely a large number of infected haven't been tracked down yet and now it all depends on how these individuals are behaving. Whether they have self-isolated or not provided they are even aware of their condition.

UK seriously needs to increase it's testing rate. Once an infected person has been identified its friends and relatives can be told to self-isolate too and this helps stop the virus from spreading uncontrollably. Otherwise the virus can spread all over the country and no amount of health care capacity would be large enough.

It could also mean that there is nothing wrong with the testing speed and UK indeed happens to have a relative few cases of infection in comparison to other countries. Unlikely but possible.
 
In Italy, the worst-hit European country, nearly 800 people died in the past day, bringing the total number of dead to 4,825

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the numbers in the UK were "very stark" and "accelerating", adding:

"The Italian death toll is already in the thousands and climbing. Unless we act together... then it is all too likely that our own NHS will be similarly overwhelmed."In a message to the country on Saturday evening, Mr Johnson urged people not to visit loved ones on Mother's Day, which will be celebrated on Sunday.

Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has warned that "the worst is yet to come" as he urged people to stay indoors.
 
Last edited:
Breaking: The Italian Prime Minister is giving a snap 11.30pm press conference, announcing EVERYTHING in the country - including factories - will shut down. Only things to stay open will be supermarkets, pharmacies and banks. All other workplaces closed. Also all parks.
 
Breaking: The Italian Prime Minister is giving a snap 11.30pm press conference, announcing EVERYTHING in the country - including factories - will shut down. Only things to stay open will be supermarkets, pharmacies and banks. All other workplaces closed. Also all parks.

Wow. I guess we will be following this in the next few days.
 
Trips to the supermarket, Bank Only are also not going to stop this

The only way to contain to to just stay home completely and not even speak to your neighbor
 
On March 5th, US had 221 cases and now on March 21st just 16 days later they have 26,000. They have increased the number of cases by more than 100 times in just 2 weeks.


If the most advanced, developed and richest country in the world is struggling to contain it then we really should be worried!!!
 
The Italian region of Lombardy has introduced stricter measures in a bid to tackle the spread of coronavirus.

Under the new rules announced late on Saturday, sport and physical activity outside, even individually, is banned. Using vending machines is forbidden.

The move comes as Italy reported nearly 800 coronavirus deaths on Saturday and saw its toll for the past month reach 4,825, the highest in the world.

Lombardy is the worst-affected region in the country with 3,095 deaths.

The region's President Attilio Fontana announced the new measures in a statement.

Businesses have been asked to close all operations excluding "essential" supply chains. Work on building sites will be stopped apart from those working on hospitals, roads and railways.

All open-air weekly markets have been suspended.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-51991972
 
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison warns the country could see lockdowns in a bid to curb coronavirus.

The potential measures come after large crowds gathered on Sydney's beaches including Bondi on Saturday, flouting social distancing advice.

Mr Morrison said the situation at Bondi Beach should be a "wake up call to take these policies seriously".

He also announced a financial package to assist the country's economy during the crisis.

The number of coronavirus cases in Australia has topped 1,000 and seven people have died.

Bondi Beach was temporarily closed on Saturday after crowds exceeded Australia's 500-person outdoor gathering limit. It remains closed on Sunday.

Mr Morrison mentioned the incident and appealed for Australians to show common sense when it comes to following the rules.

"You have to keep a healthy distance between each other," he said.

"If Australians can't do that on a broad scale, then they are denying the governments and the authorities the most important weapon we have to save lives and to save livelihoods, and states and territories will have to take more severe responses to deal with that."

He warned that "draconian measures" including lockdowns are set to be discussed on Sunday. He said the lockdowns could apply to areas where there have been areas of large outbreaks.

Mr Morrison also warned Australians against non-essential travel and advised that interstate holidays be cancelled.

South Australia has announced it will close its borders from Tuesday. Under the new rules, anyone entering or returning to the state will be forced to self-isolate for 14 days.

Police will be stationed at points along the state border and those entering will have to sign a declaration vowing to adhere to self-isolation regulations. They will also have to provide an address to police, according to 9 News.

Mr Morrison said the government would make available almost A$189 billion (£93 billion) to support the most vulnerable to the effects of the coronavirus crisis.

The measures include doubling income support for those on Jobseeker's allowance. Assets tests and waiting periods will be waived.

Grants of up to $100,000 will be made available for small and medium sized businesses.

Individuals affected by the coronavirus will be able to access up to $10,000 of their superannuation during 2019 and 2020. They will be able to take a further $10,000 the following year.

Australian airlines and airports will be provided with up to $715 million in support.

The financial package is the country's first stimulus package since the 2008 global financial crisis.

Mr Morrison stressed that the measures cover the next six months. "This is not a quick fix," he said. "This will not be my last visit to the podium. There will be more packages and more support."

Singapore has announced it will ban all short-term visitors under new coronavirus measures. Short-term visitors are also banned from transiting through Singapore. Only work pass holders who have healthcare and transport will be allowed to enter, along with their dependents.

The city state confirmed on Saturday that two people had died from Covid-19, the first virus related deaths in Singapore.

China reported 46 new cases, all but one brought in from other countries. The one domestic case was linked to a previous imported case, according to local authorities.

South Korea reported 98 new cases on Sunday. The figure suggests a downward trend in new cases. The total number of coronavirus cases in South Korea has now reached 8,897.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-51992357
 
Virus deaths surge past 13,000 as one billion confined to homes

Nearly one billion people around the world were confined to their homes on Sunday, as the coronavirus death toll crossed 13,000 and factories were shut in worst-hit regions.

The raging pandemic has forced lockdowns in 35 countries across the globe, disrupting lives, travel and businesses as governments scramble to shut borders and unleash hundreds of billions in emergency measures to avoid a widespread virus-fuelled economic meltdown.

More than 300,000 infections have been confirmed worldwide, with the situation increasingly grim in Italy where the death toll spiked to more than 4,800 — over a third of the global total.

Source Dawn.
 
Something isn’t right in Italy

They have to look deep into what could be the reason as to why they are still dying so much more than even the chinese.

Information ministers need to give out actual reasons instead of just figures. People can avoid the virus just with these precise details

Need to test samples from Water supplies and drainage system.
 
Crazy times! By the time this slows down - we'll have millions infected and 50K dead around the world. It's only getting started in North America, with South Asia and Africa following closely...
 
MADRID (Reuters) - The Spanish government said on Saturday it would do whatever was needed to combat the coronavirus pandemic and warned that “the worst is yet to come” after the national toll surpassed 1,300 deaths and reached close to 25,000 cases.

The second-worst outbreak in Europe showed no sign of slowing as the death toll jumped by more than 300 from the previous day. Intensive care units are filling up in some hospitals.

“We have yet to receive the impact of the strongest, most damaging wave, which will test our material and moral capacities to the limit, as well as our spirit as a society,” Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez told a news briefing.

Sanchez said Spain had not lived through such a dramatic situation since its 1936-39 civil war, in which around half a million people died. Drawing parallels to a war economy, he said his government was working on plans to produce in Spain the equipment needed to battle coronavirus, such as masks.

His leftist government a week ago declared a 15-day state of emergency nationwide barring people from all but essential outings. Sanchez praised the “exemplary” response and said he had no plans to strengthen the restrictions, which he called the toughest in Europe.

The prime minister also made no mention of extending the state of emergency, though he warned of tough weeks ahead.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...coronavirus-deaths-surpass-1300-idUSKBN2180ZV
 
Last edited:
The global outlook: More than 300,000 people have contracted the novel coronavirus and at least 12,944 have died, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

US death toll rises: More than 323 people have died from the virus in the United States.

source cnn
 
Australia coronavirus: Sydney and Melbourne to shut down

Australia's two biggest cities will shut down non-essential services in the next 48 hours as coronavirus cases rise rapidly in the country.

Sydney and Melbourne, along with the capital Canberra, are expected to close pubs and restaurants after announcements by state governments.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said total lockdowns might have to be introduced to curb the spread.

The number of cases has risen sharply in recent days, reaching 1,315.

New South Wales (NSW), home to Sydney, is the worst-affected state with 533 confirmed cases. Victoria, of which Melbourne is the capital, has 296 cases, while Queensland has 259.

The new restrictions will see many businesses close but supermarkets, petrol stations, pharmacies and home delivery services will continue running.

Schools in NSW remain open for now but Victorian schools will close from Tuesday after school holidays were brought forward.
If the shutdown of non-essential services is not implemented, "our hospitals will be overwhelmed and more Victorians will die," Victoria's state premier Daniel Andrews was quoted as saying by broadcaster ABC.

Seven people have died across Australia so far from Covid-19.

In other developments:

The prime minister announced new stimulus measures to boost the economy

South Australia, Western Australia and the Northern Territory will close their borders from Tuesday. Under the new rules, anyone arriving will be forced to self-isolate for 14 days

Tasmania, an island state, has already imposed similar travel restrictions
The Australian Football League suspended its 2020 season, with no fixtures until at least 31 May. The women's league has also been halted
In contrast, the National Rugby League says it will carry on with matches as planned

Lockdowns could be imposed

The new measures come after large crowds gathered on Sydney's beaches including Bondi on Saturday, flouting social distancing advice.

Mr Morrison said the situation at Bondi Beach should be a "wake up call to take these policies seriously" and warned lockdowns could be imposed in areas where large outbreaks have occurred.

"You have to keep a healthy distance between each other," he said.

"If Australians can't do that on a broad scale, then they are denying the governments and the authorities the most important weapon we have to save lives and to save livelihoods, and states and territories will have to take more severe responses to deal with that."
What was in the financial package?

The prime minister announced a second stimulus package worth A$66bn, meaning the total financial package offered by the government and Reserve Bank now amounts to A$189bn (£94bn, $109bn).

Mr Morrison said financial support would be offered to those most vulnerable to the effects of the coronavirus crisis.

The measures include doubling income support for those on Jobseeker's allowance while waiving asset tests and waiting periods.

Grants of up to A$100,000 will be made available for small and medium-sized businesses.

Individuals affected by the coronavirus will be able to access up to A$10,000 of their pension during 2019 and 2020. They will be able to take a further A$10,000 the following year.

Australian airlines and airports will meanwhile be provided with up to A$715 million in support.

Mr Morrison stressed that the measures cover the next six months. "This is not a quick fix," he said. "This will not be my last visit to the podium. There will be more packages and more support."
What's happening in Asia?

Singapore has announced it will ban all short-term visitors under new coronavirus measures. Short-term visitors are also banned from transiting through Singapore. Only work pass holders who have healthcare and transport will be allowed to enter, along with their dependents.

The city state confirmed on Saturday that two people h189ad died from Covid-19, the first virus related deaths in Singapore.

China reported 46 new cases, all but one brought in from other countries. The one domestic case was linked to a previous imported case, according to local authorities.

South Korea reported 98 new cases on Sunday. The figure suggests a downward trend in new cases. The total number of coronavirus cases in South Korea has now reached 8,897.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-51992357
 
Palestinian officials have announced the first two cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the new coronavirus, in the besieged Gaza Strip.

Deputy Health Minister Youssef Abulreesh said late on Saturday that the two Palestinian patients had returned from Pakistan via Gaza's Rafah border with neighbouring Egypt on Thursday.
 
Alarm and scepticism over N Korea claim of being coronavirus free

Seoul, South Korea - More than 160 countries across the world are battling COVID-19, but as coronavirus challenges even the world's most sophisticated health systems, there is one nation that claims to have no cases at all: North Korea.

"Not one novel coronavirus patient has emerged," Song In Bom, an official from North Korea's emergency health committee said last month in the official Rodong Sinmun newspaper.

But even if North Korea is free from coronavirus, the Kim Jong Un regime is not doing a good job at convincing the rest of the world.

In South Korea, analysts and medical experts are highly sceptical of Pyongyang's claims - and those with sources in North Korea said the virus is already ravaging its way through the country.

"Despite the fact that North Korea closed its borders or refused to allow Chinese or foreign travellers in, it is very likely that some North Koreans are already infected," said Roh Kyoung-ho, a doctor at the National Health Insurance Service Ilsan Hospital Department of Laboratory Medicine.

"I don't think it's even possible to measure cases there because North Korea's medical system is not well-established or advanced."

Virus verified?

Nobody knows for sure if anyone in North Korea has already contracted coronavirus, but recent political moves seem to signal worry in Pyongyang.

Earlier this month, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un broke months of diplomatic silence by penning a personal letter to South Korean President Moon Jae-in.

The letter's contents were not released, but a briefing from Moon's senior press secretary stated that it was full of well-wishes and concern about South Korea's COVID-19 outbreak. The sudden move has some experts wondering if North Korea is working on an appeal for coronavirus aid.

"I think that the North Koreans would probably accept masks or hand sanitiser or respirators, and maybe also some other forms of health assistance. And I think it should be done for humanitarian reasons," said Peter Ward, a researcher on the North Korean economy and writer for NK News.

"But at the same time, I think we should be under no illusions that such humanitarian support will give us any leverage in dealing with North Korea in terms of denuclearisation."

Talks over North Korea's nuclear and missile capabilities have been on hold for months after the collapse of a summit between Kim and US President Donald Trump in February last year.

North Korea has carried out a series of missile launches since then, most recently on Saturday, when the state-run KCNA also revealed that Kim had received a letter from Trump.

A senior White House official confirmed the letter had been sent saying it was "consistent with efforts to engage global leaders during the ongoing pandemic," according to Reuters.

Seo Jae-pyoung, an activist originally from North Korea who now heads the Seoul-based Association of North Korean Defectors, said that he had heard reports of COVID-19 in North Korea.

"I've spoken directly with people in North Korea and have heard that North Korea declared a state of emergency," Seo said.

"I heard that the first case in North Korea was confirmed on January 27, and that the People's Army locked down roads and railways in provincial cities, and that people were not even able to walk in the streets."

Information coming out of North Korea's tightly controlled borders is often scarce and hard to verify.

Nevertheless, Seo claims he has received messages from sources stating that face masks are being smuggled into the country through China, and that masks from South Korea are being sold on the black market and given as gifts to high-ranking officials.

And because of the country's limited access to test kits, North Korea is often basing its diagnosis on patients' symptoms, he said.

"Regular, everyday North Korean people don't really know about this virus," Seo said. "In North Korea, they're just seeing it as some scary disease."

Journalists and researchers have also heard about an outbreak.

Robert Lauler, a former NGO worker and English editor at the Daily NK, an online publication that has contacts in North Korea, said its sources reported 82 people in quarantine and 23 dead from COVID-19 in the country.

"That information is from a couple of weeks ago," Lauler said.

"Last week, we also ran a story about a military report that stated that around almost 200 soldiers had died from symptoms that appeared to be coronavirus. But in all these cases, the numbers we put out are not necessarily 100 percent from coronavirus. The sources we have suggest that there has been an outbreak and that people are dying."

Risk of devastation

A coronavirus outbreak would be devastating to the North Korean people and an economy that is already suffering under economic sanctions.

"We're talking about an amazing level of devastation to the North Korean economy and particularly to the breadbasket region in North Korea, which is on the northwestern side of the country," Lauler said. "I'm pessimistic … Given that sanctions and all the other conditions are still in place, it doesn't really bode well for the economy going forward."

As an authoritarian state, the North Korean government does have the power to unilaterally order people into lockdown or stop travel throughout the country. Some foreign diplomats were reportedly forced into quarantine, for example, and ultimately flown out of the country after being released.

North Korea is already vulnerable to devastation because of last year's blows from Hurricane Lingling and African Swine Fever. Moreover, North Korea's weak healthcare infrastructure would probably be overwhelmed by a rapid spread of COVID-19.

"Outside of Pyongyang and Hamhung, I believe there are virtually no medical institutions where everyday people can easily get treatment," Seo said. "Most cities do not have an ambulance or transportation for patients, and many people who quarantine would have to do so at home."

Malnutrition and disease across North Korea have been rising since the middle of 2019, when harvests were significantly damaged by droughts and floods. More than 10 million people suffered from "severe food shortages," according to the UN.

"Given the relatively low levels of nutrition in the country and the chronic disease rates, you would imagine the fatality rate would be higher in North Korea than a lot of other places," Ward said.

That is why he believes North Korea is keeping its suspected outbreak a secret from the rest of the world.

"The government is concerned about a public awareness of a serious outbreak that could kill hundreds of thousands of people," he said. "They are trying to avoid social panic and social instability."
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...a-claim-coronavirus-free-200319051628072.html
 
I think, right now, India Administered Kashmir is the safest place, or THE ONLY SAFE PLACE, in the world.

Few weeks ago it was the least safe.
 
Cases pass 300,000 with more than 13,000 deaths around the world; 92,000 people have recovered

Sport and physical activity outside are banned in Italy's worst hit region of Lombardy

The move comes after Italy reported nearly 800 coronavirus deaths on Saturday

Britons are warned the spread of the virus is "accelerating" and they must avoid social contact

More than a billion people in India asked to observe a 14-hour long curfew to test the country's preparedness

Australia's biggest cities, Sydney and Melbourne, are set to shut down non-essential services.
 
Australia is going to close pubs, clubs, cinemas, casinos, nightclubs and places of worship from Monday, with cafes and restaurants having to switch to takeaway only.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced the measures after a national cabinet meeting.

Home delivery services will continue running and supermarkets will remain open.

Schools are not being closed nationwide but some states have suggested they might do so.

The number of confirmed cases has risen sharply in Australia in recent days, reaching 1,315.
 
Cases pass 300,000 with more than 13,000 deaths around the world; 92,000 people have recovered

Australia to close pubs, clubs, cinemas, casinos, nightclubs and places of worship

Sport and physical activity outside are banned in Italy's worst hit region of Lombardy. The move comes after Italy reported nearly 800 coronavirus deaths on Saturday

Britons are warned the spread of the virus is "accelerating" and they must avoid social contact

More than a billion people in India asked to observe a 14-hour long curfew to test the country's preparedness
 
Spanish authorities have reported 394 new virus-related deaths since yesterday, bringing the national total to 1,720. The rise compares with 324 new deaths on Saturday.

Over 3,600 new cases have also been confirmed. Officials say 28,572 have been infected since the outbreak began - 2,575 people have recovered.

Behind Italy and China, Spain has reported the highest number of coronavirus cases in the world. The majority of deaths have been reported in the country's capital, Madrid.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Australia is going to close pubs, clubs, cinemas, casinos, nightclubs and places of worship from Monday, with cafes and restaurants having to switch to takeaway only.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced the measures after a national cabinet meeting.

Home delivery services will continue running and supermarkets will remain open.

Schools are not being closed nationwide but some states have suggested they might do so.

The number of confirmed cases has risen sharply in Australia in recent days, reaching 1,315.

Why do the governments say we will close xyz days from now?

People use this deadline to go out and go nuts for ‘a last time’. The virus multiplies significantly during these few days
 
DUBAI (Reuters) - The United States’ offer to help Iran in its fight against the new coronavirus pandemic is strange, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in a televised speech on Sunday, describing U.S. leaders as “charlatans and liars”.

Tensions between the two countries have been running high since 2018, when U.S. President Donald Trump exited Tehran’s 2015 nuclear deal with six world powers and reimposed sanctions that have crippled the Iranian economy.

“Several times Americans have offered to help us to fight the pandemic. That is strange because you face shortages in America. Also you are accused of creating this virus,” said Khamenei, an anti-U.S. hardliner who has the final say in Iran.

“I do not know whether it is true. But when there is such an allegation, can a wise man trust you and accept your help offer? ... You could be giving medicines to Iran that spread the virus or cause it to remain permanently.”

Frictions increased when Trump ordered a U.S. drone strike that killed the top commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, Qassem Soleimani, on Jan. 3. Iran retaliated by hitting U.S. targets in Iraq on Jan. 8.

“Our number one enemy is America. It is the most wicked, sinister enemy of Iran ... its leaders are terrorists ... Liars and charlatans,” said Khamenei.

Iranian authorities have blamed U.S. sanctions for hampering its efforts to curb the outbreak and President Hassan Rouhani has urged Americans to call on their government to lift sanctions as Iran fights the coronavirus.

China, a party to Iran’s nuclear deal, has urged the United States to lift sanctions on Iran immediately amid Tehran’s response to the coronavirus outbreak.

But the United States sent Iran a blunt message this week: the spread of the virus will not save it from U.S. sanctions that are choking off its oil revenues and isolating its economy.

Khamenei, who canceled his annual speech for Persian new year from the holy Shi’ite Muslim city of Mashhad on March 20 because of the outbreak, said Iran would triumph over the virus.

“The Islamic Republic has the capability to overcome any kind of crisis and challenges, including the coronavirus outbreak,” said Khamenei, who called on people to stay at home.

While many Iranians avoided traveling during the Persian new year holiday, police said millions have defied warnings issued by officials to avoid unnecessary trips aimed at curbing the spread of the virus.

The office of Tehran’s governor said all shopping centers will be closed in the capital from Sunday.

“Only pharmacies and shops that provide essential goods will remain open in Tehran,” Iranian state TV reported.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ffer-vows-to-defeat-coronavirus-idUSKBN21909Y
 
First coronavirus cases confirmed in the Palestinian Gaza Strip

The first two cases of coronavirus have been confirmed in the densely-populated Gaza Strip, Palestinian health officials said on Sunday.

Malaysia reports 123 new coronavirus cases, total at 1,306

Malaysia reported 123 new coronavirus cases on Sunday, taking the total to 1,306 cases, with 10 deaths.
 
Khamenei says U.S. offer to help Iran fight coronavirus is strange

DUBAI (Reuters) - The offer by the United States to help Iran fight the coronavirus pandemic is strange, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in a televised speech on Sunday, describing U.S. leaders as “charlatans”.

Despite heightened tensions between the longtime foes, Washington has offered humanitarian assistance to Iran while it struggles with the coronavirus outbreak.

Iran is the most-affected country in the Middle East with over 1,500 coronavirus deaths and 20,610 infected people.

“Several times Americans have offered to help Iran to contain the virus ... You are accused of creating this virus. I do not know whether it is true, but it is strange that you want to help Iran,” Khamenei said.

“Aside from the fact that you have shortages in your fight against the virus, what if you give us a drug that will help the virus to remain in Iran permanently?”

Khamenei, an anti-U.S. hardliner, said the Islamic Republic had the capability to overcome “any kind of crisis and challenges, including the coronavirus outbreak”.

Tensions have been running high between Iran and the United States since 2018, when U.S. President Donald Trump exited Tehran’s 2015 nuclear deal with six world powers and reimposed sanctions that have crippled the country’s economy.

Frictions increased when Trump ordered a U.S. drone strike that killed top Iranian military commander Qassem Soleimani on Jan. 3.. Iran retaliated by hitting U.S. targets in Iraq on Jan. 8.

“Our number one enemy is America. It is the most wicked, sinister enemy of Iran ... its leaders are charlatans,” Khamenei said.

Iranian authorities have blamed U.S. sanctions for hampering its efforts to curb the outbreak and called for the restrictions to be lifted. Washington has refused to lift sanctions.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...an-fight-coronavirus-is-strange-idUSKBN21909Y
 
The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the Netherlands rose by 573, or nearly 16%, to 4,204, Dutch health authorities said in a daily update on Sunday.
 
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The lockdown of Belgium due to the coronavirus epidemic will continue for at least the next eight weeks, health minister Maggie De Block told the De Zondag paper on Sunday.

From March 17, Belgians are only allowed to leave home to buy food, for health-related errands or to assist someone in need. Schools and universities are closed and employees of most companies have to work from home.

Non-essential travel abroad is prohibited until April 5, all gatherings are banned and police are patrolling the streets to monitor and enforce the restrictions.

Asked how long this would last, De Block said:

“That’s the million dollar question! We are now heading toward the peak of the epidemic, after which the curve will descend. I think this situation will last for at least another eight weeks. It would be the normal curve.”

She said the estimate was based on what happened in China and South Korea, where the epidemic hit earlier.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ight-more-weeks-health-minister-idUSKBN2190KM
 
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The lockdown of Belgium due to the coronavirus epidemic will continue for at least the next eight weeks, health minister Maggie De Block told the De Zondag paper on Sunday.

From March 17, Belgians are only allowed to leave home to buy food, for health-related errands or to assist someone in need. Schools and universities are closed and employees of most companies have to work from home.

Non-essential travel abroad is prohibited until April 5, all gatherings are banned and police are patrolling the streets to monitor and enforce the restrictions.

Asked how long this would last, De Block said:

“That’s the million dollar question! We are now heading toward the peak of the epidemic, after which the curve will descend. I think this situation will last for at least another eight weeks. It would be the normal curve.”

She said the estimate was based on what happened in China and South Korea, where the epidemic hit earlier.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ight-more-weeks-health-minister-idUSKBN2190KM

8 weeks.
 
Hundreds of churches across South Korea appeared to go ahead with religious services on Sunday, despite a government request to cancel them.

Church leaders asked worshippers to stand metres apart and to wear face masks, the state news agency Yonhap said.

The country’s culture minister met church officials at a large Protestant church in the capital Seoul, and repeated an earlier call for religious leaders to move church services online.

South Korea’s leaders have warned several times that they will have to impose stricter quarantine orders if South Koreans ignore government advice to avoid large gatherings.

Seoul has recorded 98 new cases of the virus over the past 24 hours. This is down from a high of 909 new infections which were confirmed in one day in late February.

Other countries have also struggled to prevent religious gatherings taking place. The Georgian Orthodox Church held services on Sunday despite a state of emergency which banned gatherings of 10 or more people.
 
Italy's worst-hit region, Lombardy, announced stricter measures as part of its lockdown. Sport and physical activity outside are banned as is the use of vending machines

The country's president, Sergio Mattarella, said he hoped the rest of the world could learn from Italy's troubles. He said citizens across the European Union needed to feel the bloc was taking concrete action to combat the virus

Mr Mattarella also thanked Germany for agreeing to send medical equipment. Meanwhile, Russia began sending military doctors, disinfection vehicles and other medical equipment to Italy

Spain registered its worst figures yet after almost 400 people died in a single day. It brought the national total there to 1,720 making it one of the worst-hit countries in the world

A makeshift hospital has been set up in a conference centre in the capital Madrid, a city that is bearing some of the highest infection rates

And the country's prime minister, Pedro Sanchez, said he was seeking to extend by 15 days a state of emergency which bars people from leaving home for non-essential reasons

The Netherlands, Greece, France and Germany all reported a surge in the number of deaths and cases. Romania reported its first death from the virus.
 
First 100,000 cases took 3 months
2nd 100,000 cases took 12 days
3rd 100,000 cases took 3 days


This is sad and scary
 
The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the Netherlands rose by 573, or nearly 16%, to 4,204, Dutch health authorities said in a daily update on Sunday.

573 is the total number of deaths. This includes 43 from last 24 hours.
 
The total of new deaths from coronavirus in Italy in the last 24 hours - 651 - is lower than the number reported in the previous day - 793.

According to the government, the number of confirmed cases has risen from 53,578 to 59,138, a 10% increase.

This is the lowest rise in percentage terms since the contagion came to light on 21 February, according to Reuters news agency.
 
German Chancellor Angela Merkel in quarantine after doctor tests positive for coronavirus
 
More on the new restrictions imposed by the German government moments ago, banning gatherings of more than two people outside work and home.

"Our behaviour is the most effective way" of slowing the rate of infection, Chancellor Angela Merkel said of the nationwide measures.

Some exceptions will be allowed, including for people living under the same roof and going out together for fresh air.

The government has also ordered hairdressers and beauty, massage and tattoo parlours to close and restaurants will only be allowed to offer takeaway services.

The country had already closed schools and other non-essential shops.
 
Back
Top