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Coronavirus pandemic - World News

Finland blocks roads to Helsinki to curb coronavirus spread

Police and the Finnish army set up roadblocks on all routes that connect Helsinki with the rest of the country, while Finland’s parliament approved the plan at the last moment to enforce the capital region’s coronavirus blockade by midnight on Friday.

Finland’s government decided on Wednesday to issue a three-week blockade of the region around Helsinki, the epicentre of the coronavirus outbreak in Finland, to prevent people from travelling and spreading the virus elsewhere in the country. But the decision needed parliament’s approval, which it granted unanimously late on Friday.

Traffic began to jam towards evening on the motorways leading out from the capital region, Uusimaa, as police began blocking lanes with bollards and fences at roughly 30 makeshift checkpoints, local media reported.

Meanwhile in Helsinki, legislators at the parliament debated the law throughout the evening as it got delayed due to constitutional technicalities earlier on Friday.

Travelling to and from the Uusimaa region will be prohibited until April 19, with certain exceptions such as goods deliveries and indispensable work-related commuting.

By Friday, authorities had counted seven deaths and 1,025 confirmed COVID-19 cases in Finland, most of them in the capital region.

Last week, Finland restricted traffic across its borders, banned public meetings of more than 10 people, closed schools for most pupils and urged people to stay at home as much as possible.

Earlier on Friday, the government decided to introduce stricter controls and 14-day quarantine rules for residents who return from abroad.

Due to the coronavirus outbreak, Finland will also temporarily suspend its operations in Iraq, where some 80 Finnish soldiers have participated in international counter terrorism efforts by training Kurdish peshmerga troops, the Finnish army said.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...inki-to-curb-coronavirus-spread-idUSKBN21E2WU
 
Turkey's coronavirus death toll rises by 17 to 92: health minister

Turkey’s coronavirus death toll rose by 17 on Friday to 92, while the total number of cases rose by 2,069 to 5,698, the country’s health minister told a press conference.

Turkish Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said the country needed wider measures against the coronavirus outbreak, adding that the country had more than 1 million test kits.

Turkey’s government is not disclosing the location of cases to prevent the risk of increasing transmission rates by encouraging people to move from areas with high rates to places where there are no or few cases, Koca added.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ses-by-17-to-92-health-minister-idUSKBN21E2VP
 
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Australia stepped up enforcement of social distancing rules on Saturday to contain community transmission of the novel coronavirus, implementing fines, closing beaches and threatening stricter measures if people defy pleas to stay at home.

The death toll from the virus rose to 14 after an elderly woman died in an aged-care facility in New South Wales (NSW)state where several residents and employees have tested positive for the virus, according to NSW health officials.

The country’s total number of confirmed coronavirus cases rose by 212 to 3,378 early on Saturday, two-thirds of them in NSW and Victoria states, according to the federal heath ministry.

The infection rate in Australia remains slower than in many other countries, although it is accelerating, especially in the most populous states of NSW and Victoria where more than half of the country’s 25.5-million people live.

As of midnight on Saturday, all returning citizens from abroad will be put into compulsory quarantine in hotels for two weeks at the government’s expense.

Military personnel will help ensure travelers comply with the new rules.

“There’s so many parts of the world where this (coronavirus) is running rampant and I think every returned traveler is a significant risk,” Victoria Premier Daniel Andrews told a televised briefing.

Two-thirds of the cases in Australia have been traced to contact with people returning from overseas, government health officials said, although community transmission has been growing.

NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian said harsher enforcement of social distancing could be necessary if community transmission began to rise “at a rate that we are not comfortable with”.

MORE BEACHES CLOSED

Australia’s state and federal governments have sent some mixed messages about social distancing and other containment measures, leading to widespread confusion.

While there is no national order to stay home, entertainment and other mass-gathering venues have been shut and authorities have urged people to cancel house parties and other social gatherings.

In Victoria, police closed beaches on Saturday after hundreds of people flocked to the waterside a day earlier in a repeat of scenes the previous weekend at Sydney’s Bondi beach.

Police said they had attended a backpacker hostel at Bondi on Friday night to prevent a “free sausage sizzle” that had been advertised at the venue, amid concerns that young people in particular are not taking containment measures seriously.

Victoria and South Australia states implemented on-the-spot fines for people and businesses breaking social distancing rules, following similar measures introduced by NSW.

In Queensland state more than one million people headed to polling stations on Saturday for council elections, and were asked to bring their own pens and maintain distances of 1.5 metres (5 feet), the state government said.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ing-rules-to-combat-coronavirus-idUSKBN21F01N
 
Brazil's Bolsonaro questions coronavirus deaths, says 'sorry, some will die'

Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro on Friday cast doubt on Sao Paulo's death toll from the coronavirus outbreak and accused the state governor of manipulating the numbers for political ends, without giving evidence for his claims.
 
Ireland has been put under similar lockdown measures to the UK following three more coronavirus-related deaths.

Taoiseach Leo Varadkar said residents should stay home until at least 12 April unless they are buying groceries, attending medical appointments or collecting medication, getting brief exercise or making essential family visits.

Almost all shops will be told to close and all gatherings outside of families will be banned.

Public transport will be available only to essential workers and nobody should travel beyond 2km (1.2 miles) from their homes for any reason, he added.

Those over the age of 70 or with chronic diseases will be told to stay in their homes without exception over the period, which begins at midnight.

Mr Varadkar said: "Freedom was hard won in our country, and it jars with us, to restrict and limit individual liberties, even temporarily. But freedom is not an abstract concept.

"We give it meaning every single day - in the way we live our lives - and in the decisions we take willingly to protect our loved ones.

"So I am asking people to give meaning to our freedom and liberty by agreeing to these restrictions. Restricting how we live our lives so that so that others may live.

"I am asking us for a time, to forego our personal liberties and freedoms for a greater cause.

"Tonight I am appealing to every man, woman and child in our country to make these sacrifices - not out of self-interest but for each other.

"To begin each day knowing that every single imposition, every inconvenience, every irritation will save lives and help our health service cope.

"The whole world is suffering during this pandemic, and Ireland is no different.

"What happens now is up to each one of us."

The measures come after three more deaths thought to be as a result of COVID-19, the respiratory illness caused by coronavirus. One of the victims was a healthcare worker.

According to data compiled by US university Johns Hopkins, there are 2,121 coronavirus cases in Ireland, with 22 deaths recorded.

Schools had already been closed, along with universities, pubs and most non-essential shops but, despite this, Mr Varadkar has previously warned that the country's intensive care units would be at capacity within a few days.

Ireland's chief medical officer, Tony Holohan, said the earlier rules were working and that the number of new cases was slowing. However, he added that this did not mean that the worst was over.

"We think we see signs that are encouraging us, that this is helping, but we think we need to go further," he said.

"We think in the early course of this infection, with the support that we have had from the public, that with these additional strengthening measures, we can drive the infection back out of the community and more into households."

Sky's senior Ireland correspondent David Blevins said: "Leo Varadkar chose his words carefully, acknowledging the value Ireland places on its freedom and asking the population to give that freedom meaning by saving lives.

"It is difficult, if not impossible, to remember any previous taoiseach making a statement of such significance. In the space of 10 days, he has made what many would consider to be the two most defining addresses of his political career.

"It is also worth noting that he made them as caretaker taoiseach because the Irish parliament has not yet reached agreement on the formation of a coalition government following the election at the beginning of February."

https://news.sky.com/story/coronavirus-ireland-put-in-lockdown-as-covid-19-spreads-11964828
 
Russia is beginning what Vladimir Putin called a "non-working week", to try to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

The government is urging people to stay at home, though mixed messaging has left many Russians confused.

Officials now hint the new restrictions could be extended beyond 5 April, depending on the health situation.

The number of Russians infected with Covid-19 passed 1,000 on Friday, with most cases detected in Moscow.

Based on that figure, the Kremlin spokesman has stressed that there is "de facto no epidemic" here, comparing Russia's position favourably with the crisis in Europe.

And whilst state TV's rolling news channel has changed its name to We're Staying Home - broadcasting from presenters' living rooms - many people are struggling to adjust after its previous insistence that Covid-19 was a "foreign threat".

So when Mr Putin announced a paid week off work for all, there was a rush to book holidays.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-52061381
 
Granada, Spain - Every night in Spain since the coronavirus state of alert was decreed on March 14, citizens take a moment to applaud the country's beleaguered medical workers.

But this hopeful image does little to dim the pain of the pandemic; Spain's daily death toll reached a harrowing new high of 769 on Friday, bringing the total number of fatalities to almost 5,000.

Fresh cases of coronavirus-related infections did drop, from a record total on Thursday of 8,578 to 7,871 on Friday.

But both numbers are far worse than a week ago, when new cases stood at 2,833.

Another unnerving fact is that compared with Italy, where eight percent of health workers are affected, in Spain by Friday that tally stood at 16.5 percent.

What has caused such a rapid spread of coronavirus in Spain?

The most high-profile reason touted by the media in Spain is the public health service's uneven and reportedly depleted resources for tackling this, or indeed any, kind of virus-related pandemic.

Academics in Spain partly confirm this as one possible reason, but underline multiple other factors.

"As recently as Wednesday, the Centre for Disease Prevention and Control in Europe pointed out that the impact of COVID-19 depended on a country's level of preparation and its ability to implement rapid countermeasures," Silvia Carlos Chilleron, a professor in the department of Public Health and Preventive Medicine at the University of Navarra, told Al Jazeera.

"If the increase in cases has been fast, as it has been in Spain, and the human and material resources to fight it are not guaranteed, then the impact is more serious. That probably causes a greater number of deaths among the most vulnerable sectors of society, particularly when medical professionals are among those affected."

Also on Wednesday, Spain's State Confederation of Medical Unions (CESM) lodged a case with the country's Supreme Court, asking the health ministry to provide sufficient protective equipment as soon as possible.

CESM alleged in their case, which was rejected, that the ministry had so far failed to provide professional health workers with sufficient protection to carry out their work in a manner that reduces the risk of catching coronavirus.

"People are generally respecting the lockdown and trying not to come into hospitals for minor illnesses and that's helping reduce the risk of contagion," one hospital doctor in southern Spain, who did not wish to be named for fear of reprisals, told Al Jazeera.

"But there is a lack of sanitary material in the hospitals for this kind of crisis, which multiplies the possibilities of health staff getting contagious infections, and that's going to be a huge factor."

Underlying reasons for the coronavirus spread before the state of alert could have been "the low level of perception among the population at large that coronavirus represented a risk", Jose Hernandez, a researcher and assistant professor of sociology at Cordoba University, whose specialties include social health policies, told Al Jazeera.

At that point and "until relatively recently, there wasn't enough information on what coronavirus was", he said.

Spanish population distribution may also have an effect, observed Alberto Mataran, a professor of Environmental Sciences at the University of Granada.

"There's a huge density of people in cities like Madrid or on the Mediterranean coast in particular, and a lot of blocks of flats in cities' outlying suburbs.

"Add in a lot of communal spaces, a very affectionate kind of social behaviour compared to some countries - we always shake hands, or hug, or kiss each other, when we meet, for example - and the opportunities for propagation surely could increase, too."

As for the much-cited dearth of resources, Hernandez argued it explains the "relatively rapid saturation" of the health services.

"Also, Spain has a large elderly population, who are very vulnerable, and retirement homes do not, generally, have massive medical resources.

"On top of that, the fact that Spain's hospitals and medical services are run by different autonomous regions creates some very important underlying inequalities."

Hernandez added that while regional governments can demand assistance from Madrid, this does raise the risk of poorly judged medical strategy decisions in the central government.

In 2014, medical staff in Madrid protested against the lack of effective protective equipment and safety precautions amid the Ebola epidemic.

"We could see that the public health system had some big gaps in the early detection of infections. And these are structural weaknesses," he said.

Fast-track testing

Meanwhile, the government had to defend its decision to allow demonstrations in Spain on International Women's Day on March 8, something that professor Silvia Carlos Chilleron flagged as a possible factor.

"The greater the number of contacts, the greater the probability of contagion, particularly when it's a new infection against which we have no immunity," she said.

She also pointed to the unusually mild spring and the higher levels of socialisation - people sitting outside in bars and so on - as another possibility, while warning that studies have yet to resolve whether a rise in temperature and higher humidity may act as a brake on the virus's propagation.

Over the past few days, the national conversation has focused on testing - a dearth of verifiable, rapid methods to establish the true extent of the spread of coronavirus.

The government's much-vaunted purchase of millions of fast-track tests from China and elsewhere partly backfired this week when it was discovered that the initial batch of 9,000 had very limited reliability.

Although the Spanish government insists the problem will be resolved with further purchases of more reliable tests, most have yet to arrive.

Carlos Chilleron said polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing, which takes between four and six hours to produce results and is being used by 20,000 people a day in Spain, was the most reliable method.

According to the Live Science website, PCR tests work by "detecting specific genetic material within the virus. Depending on the type of PCR on hand, healthcare workers might swab the back of the throat; take a saliva sample; collect a liquid sample from the lower respiratory tract; or secure a stool sample."

Quicker tests that take a fraction of the time are less precise and as a result, and "we don't have the same kind of security from them that a person is not affected", said Carlos Chilleron.

She recommends social distancing and hygiene as the best precautions in the absence of testing.

In Spain, as the death toll rises, there are currently rumours that lockdown measures will be tightened further.

Rumours are also circulating that should a peak not be reached soon and cases start to fall, lockdown measures will be toughened up even further.

As the full scale of the pandemic has yet to emerge, knowing what measures are needed is looking increasingly hard to judge.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/03/coronavirus-deaths-rising-quickly-spain-200327181759832.html
 
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The number of people infected with the novel coronavirus in the United States hit more than 104,000 early on Saturday, according to a Johns Hopkins University tally, with the number of fatalities surpassing 1,700, pushing the global death toll up to 27,360.

Italy, meanwhile, announced 919 new deaths from the coronavirus, the highest number of fatalities any country has reported in the space of 24 hours since the outbreak began late last year.

The total number of people who have died as a result of COVID-19 in Italy now stands at 9,134. The number of cases also continues to rise, hitting more than 86,000.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...deaths-rise-live-updates-200327231629838.html
 
Italy numbers are worrying me. What's efficacy of LockDown if numbers from Italy aren't declining ?
 
Tokyo has reported more than 50 new coronavirus cases in 24 hours - a record daily increase for the Japanese capital.

The figures were reported by national broadcaster NHK, which said there are now more than 300 cases in the capital.

The increase came as Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike urged citizens of the city and surrounding areas to stay indoors.

Japan has reported almost 1,500 coronavirus cases and 49 deaths, according to data collated by Johns Hopkins University.

Tokyo was due to host the Olympic and Paralympic Games this year, but they have been postponed until 2021 because of the outbreak.
 
Italy numbers are worrying me. What's efficacy of LockDown if numbers from Italy aren't declining ?

Indeed and how long will people be forced to be locked down.

People will go crazy. In the supermarkets certain people start running away or start yelling if the so called 1.5 meter distance is broken.

Crazy times.
 
Donald Trump signed the largest-ever US financial stimulus package, worth $2tn (£1.7tn). He also ordered General Motors to make ventilators for coronavirus patients. The US has seen some 104,000 cases and almost 1,700 fatalities.

The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Germany rose to 48,582 - an increase of more than 6,000 in 24 hours, according to data from the Robert Koch Institute for infectious diseases; Johns Hopkins University in the US - which has been maintaining a database of coronavirus cases since the outbreak - shows there are 53,340 cases in the country.

Meanwhile, Germany's air force is flying another six patients from Bergamo in Italy for treatment in German hospitalsAnd France's military has evacuated two patients out of the eastern city of Metz via helicopter for treatment in Germany. Eastern France has been the country's worst-hit area and many hospitals there are over capacityIreland introduced new restrictions, with everyone ordered to stay at home - except when going out for essential work or to buy food.

Russia is beginning what President Vladimir Putin called a "non-working week"A woman in her 80s has become the first person in Jordan to die from coronavirus, according to state mediaMexico's president urged people to stay inside their homes to prevent an "overwhelming" spread of coronavirus, in what was dubbed his strongest stance so far against the pandemic.

Thailand has reported another death and 109 new cases. This brings the total there to 1,245 infections and six deaths, officials say.
 
The death toll from coronavirus in Spain has now exceeded 5,000, after 832 more fatalities were reported there in the past 24 hours.
The death toll now stands at 5,690, while a total of 72,248 people have been infected.

Spain is currently Europe's second-worst-hit country after Italy.

A state of emergency is in place until at least 12 April, with most shops and businesses closed and people's movements severely restricted.

The army has been deployed to deep-clean hospitals and other facilities. Hospitals have been under intense pressure and, like in many other countries, health workers have complained of inadequate protective equipment.
 
Spanish health officials says the number of people who have died from COVID-19 has risen to 5,690 up from 4,858 while the number of cases has risen to 72,248 from 64,059
 
Spain has the second-highest number of deaths from coronavirus in the world - after Italy. And those who look after patients have themselves been infected in large numbers - more than 9,444 are confirmed to have the virus.

The figure, announced on Friday, has nearly doubled since 24 March when it stood at 5,400.

A plane carrying 1.2 million face masks arrived in Madrid on Saturday morning.

And a military aircraft took off from Zaragoza to Shanghai where it will pick up a shipment of medical equipment, according to El Pais.

The Spanish government has extended the state of emergency until at least 12 April. People's movements are severely restricted and most shops and businesses closed.
 
Authorities in the Netherlands have reported 1,159 new coronavirus cases and 93 deaths. So far, 9,762 cases have been reported in the country and 639 deaths.

Switzerland says deaths from coronavirus have risen to 235 - an increase of 40 in 24 hours. The country has confirmed 13,213 cases.

Vietnam's health ministry says there have been a total of 174 confirmed cases and no deaths.

In Russia, officials have reported a total of 1,264 cases - an increase of 228 in 24 hours. The country has reported four deaths in total, but these figures have been disputed.

The Czech Republic says 2,422 people have tested positive so far, and nine people have died.

Belgium has reported 1,850 new cases and 64 deaths in 24 hours. In total, the country has reported 9,134 cases and 353 deaths.

Iran says 2,517 people have now died from coronavirus, with 139 fatalities in the past 24 hours. In total, the country has reported 3,076 cases.
 
The number of cases around the world has now surpassed 600,000, according to latest figures.

In Europe, meanwhile the number of deaths has surpassed 20,000, the same data compiled by Johns Hopkins University shows,

The university has been keeping track of the number of coronavirus cases and deaths on its online global dashboard.

The latest landmark came just two days after the world passed half a million infections.

Global cases topped 100,000 on 6 March, 200,000 on 18 March, 300,000 on 21 March and 400,000 on 24 March, the university's dashboard shows.

The five countries with the most cases are:

The US, with 104,865

Italy, with 86,498

China, with 81,996

Spain, with 72,248

Germany, with 53,340
 
The reason USA has over 100K infected is because they are testing more people.

If the same rate were tested in India say, then we could be seeing millions infected.
 
Russia is fully closing its borders from Monday as it attempts to stop the spread of coronavirus.

The closure includes all rail, road, footpath, river and combined crossing points, a government order said.

Russia has recorded 228 new cases in the past 24 hours, bringing the total to 1,264 people. Five people have now died in Russia, according to Interfax, with four fatalities in Moscow.
 
Another terrible day for Italy, with another 889 deaths in 24 hours. Italy has now seen 10,023 deaths and over 92,000 cases. Some 70,000 are currently infected and 12,384 have recovered.
 
The first 15 days in April will be “even more difficult than the 15 we have just left”, French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe has warned.

France has recorded 1,998 deaths and has been in lockdown for 10 days, a period which has now been extended until 15 April.

"I want to speak clearly to the French," said Mr Philippe. "The fight is just beginning."

Health Minister Olivier Veran said resources were being increased, including an order of more than one billion masks for health workers.
 
French health authorities reported 319 new deaths from the coronavirus, up 16 percent on the previous day and taking the total to 2,314, as the government scrambled to increase the number of intensive care beds nationwide.

The daily government tally only accounts for those dying in hospital but authorities say they will be able to compile data on deaths in retirement homes from next week, which is likely to result in a big increase in registered fatalities.

The number of known cases of infection rose to 37,575 on Saturday from 32,964 a day earlier, the health authority said.

"I want to say how things are with clarity and frankness. The battle is only starting," said Prime Minister Edouard Philippe at a news conference with Health Minister Olivier Veran to outline the government's strategy.

"The first 15 days of April will be even more difficult than the 15 days that are coming to an end now," Philippe said.
 
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The reason USA has over 100K infected is because they are testing more people.

If the same rate were tested in India say, then we could be seeing millions infected.

Not true. It might be easy to hide infected cases but almost impossible to hide deaths. If millions are infected that means thousands will show severe symptoms and thousands or atleast hundreds would die in a single day. Which is not happening.
So stop exaggerating.
 
Canada has said it is banning people with COVID-19 symptoms from domestic flights and trains.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced the measures on Saturday.

Under the new rules, which come into effect on Monday, people with symptoms will be denied travel on domestic flights and intercity trains.

According to a government press release, train operators and airlines will have to conduct a health check of passengers before they travel.

During the check, they will be asked health questions and staff will be required to look for signs of illness, according to the Globe and Mail.Those who show symptoms will not be allowed to travel for 14 days.

“If you feel the onset of symptoms of a cold or of COVID-19, you need to stay at home, you need to isolate, you need to not travel,” Mr Trudeau said.

He added that Canadians had been doing an excellent job at staying at home but he would enforce further measures to keep Canadians safe if needed.

“Right now we’re not looking at closing the provincial borders,” he said.
 
Northern Ireland brings in tough measures to fight coronavirus

Northern Ireland will introduce “sweeping new powers” to combat the spread of coronavirus from 2300 GMT on Saturday, with many restrictions on businesses tougher than the rest of the United Kingdom.

The British region will prohibit anyone from leaving home without reasonable excuse, compel certain premises to shut and use its power of direction to close or restrict businesses that do not ensure employees’ safety, its devolved government said.

The number of coronavirus deaths in Northern Ireland rose by two to a total of 15 on Saturday, while 324 people had tested positive, the Public Health Agency said.

Ireland, which shares an open border with Northern Ireland, has so far reported 2,415 cases and 34 deaths. It ordered citizens on Friday to stay home until April 12, with most only able to leave to shop for groceries and for brief exercise.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Monday ordered people to stay at home to try to slow the spread of the virus, saying they should only go out to shop for basic necessities, exercise, for a medical need, to provide care or go to work where absolutely necessary.

The measures in Northern Ireland are tougher on employers, with the instruction that anyone who can work from home must work from home, and companies cannot compel an employee to come to work if it is feasible to work from home.

First Minister Arlene Foster said the devolved government was asking the people of Northern Ireland to make fundamental changes to how they lived their lives.

“These are extraordinary powers for any Government to have to introduce, but we are living in extraordinary times,” she said.

“We know the enormity of what we are asking of the public, but it is proportionate to the threat we all face from this deadly virus. No-one is immune.”

The Belfast executive said it would introduce penalties ranging from a fixed penalty notice to fines of up to 5,000 pounds to enforce the new powers.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...h-measures-to-fight-coronavirus-idUSKBN21F0YC
 
Italy coronavirus death toll surges past 10,000; lockdown extension likely

The death toll from an outbreak of coronavirus in Italy barrelled past 10,000 on Saturday, a figure that made an extension of a national lockdown almost certain.

Officials said 889 more people died in the previous 24 hours, the second highest daily tally since the epidemic emerged on Feb. 21, and that total fatalities reached 10,023.

Confirmed cases rose by about 6,000 to 92,472, the second-highest number of cases in the world behind the United States.

Officials said the numbers would have been worse without a national lockdown.

“Without these measures, we would be seeing far worse numbers and our health service would be in a far more dramatic state. We would have been in an unsustainable situation,” said Angelo Borelli, the Civil Protection head who reads out the numbers daily to the media and an anxious Italy.

Italy, the first Western country to introduce severe restrictions on movement after uncovering the outbreak five weeks ago, has since increasingly tightened them, and hopes that they would be eased from next Friday were fading fast.

“There are elements that make us believe that all of the April 3 expirations of provision will have to be postponed,” Industry Minister Stefano Patuanelli told Italian broadcaster Rai.

The Lombardy region, which has borne the worst of the contagion, recorded 542 new deaths, bringing the total there to 5,944.

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte told a news conference after the figures were released that he had approved a new package of 4.7 billion euros ($5.24 billion) of measures to help those worst hit, including shopping vouchers and food packages.

Conte has urged the European Union to launch a “recovery bond” to help fund the response to the coronavirus outbreak, saying failure to tackle the emergency would be a “tragic mistake” for the bloc.

In an interview with Italian daily Il Sole 24 Ore on Saturday, Conte said a common debt instrument was needed to spearhead a European recovery and reinvestment plan to support the economy of the whole area.

Education Minister Lucia Azzolina has already said the closure of schools and universities, which began on March 5, would have to be extended past April 3.

Italy’s minister for southern regions expressed concerns about potential social tensions and civil unrest in poorer areas if, as expected, the epidemic moves south.

“I am afraid that the worries that are affecting large sections of the population over health, income and the future, with the continuation of the crisis, will turn into anger and hatred,” Minister Giuseppe Provenzano told La Repubblica newspaper on Saturday.

Michele Emiliano, governor of the southern Puglia region, downplayed played fears of civil unrest in the south but said the lockdown may have to be extended until mid-May.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...10000-lockdown-extension-likely-idUSKBN21F0R5
 
New Zealand records first death

New Zealand recorded its first death related to the new coronavirus as the number of people infected with the virus rose by 63 cases to a total of 514, Director-General of Health Ashley Bloomfield has confirmed.

Bloomfield said the woman who died was in her 70s and was initially diagnosed with influenza.
 
Not true. It might be easy to hide infected cases but almost impossible to hide deaths. If millions are infected that means thousands will show severe symptoms and thousands or atleast hundreds would die in a single day. Which is not happening.
So stop exaggerating.

Wrong.

Many don't even display the Coronovirus symptoms but still have/had the virus.

Now read again slowly, I stated if the same rate were tested in India.

Don't be scared, face facts.
 
President Trump backs down after saying he is considering a quarantine on New York and two other states

Number of US deaths doubles in two days to more than 2,000

Boris Johnson warns the crisis will get worse in a letter to UK households

Concerns that forcing families to stay indoors could lead to increased cases of abuse

Australia’s health minister says there are “positive early signs” that the growth in cases is starting to slow

In Europe, the number of people killed passes 20,000

Portugal grants residency to all migrants who have applied, because of the pandemic
 
Here's what else has been happening over the last few hours:

The number of people who have died with coronavirus in the UK has now reached 1,019, with a further 260 deaths announced on Saturday

British-Iranian charity worker Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe has had her temporary leave from prison in Tehran extended by two weeks, according to her husband. She was released from prison earlier this month because of the outbreak

A cruise ship - the Zaandam - carrying more than 1,800 people off Panama has begun moving healthy passengers to another ship after four people died and two others tested positive for the virus

In Europe, the number of people killed by the virus has risen above 20,000, with both Italy and Spain reporting more than 800 deaths in one day

Australia’s Health Minister has said there are “positive early signs” that the growth in cases is starting to slow. The rate of new infections in Australia has halved over the past week.

Tokyo has confirmed 68 new coronavirus cases, Japan's record daily increase, broadcaster NHK reported on Sunday
 
Portugal gives migrants residency

Portugal has announced that it will approve all applications for legal residence by migrants, because of a backlog of cases made worse by the coronavirus.

All asylum seekers who've begun their applications will now be eligible for resident status.

Officials described it as "an act of solidarity at a time of crisis".

The country has reported about 5,000 infections and 100 deaths.
 
Australia: Public gatherings of two people

Australia's Prime Minister Scott Morrison has announced more restrictions, including limiting public gatherings to just two people.

People should only go out when necessary, and those over the age of 70 should stay home, he added.

All playgrounds and outdoor gyms parks will be closed from Monday.

The country's chief medical officer has also said he is confident Australia is testing the majority of cases in the country.
 
Another 838 people died in Spain in the past 24 hours, the health ministry has announced - the highest daily rise in fatalities so far.

It brings the number of deaths from the virus to 6,528.

The total number of those infected rose to 78,797 from 72,248.
 
Swiss death toll reaches 257

The Swiss death toll has risen by 235 in a day to 257, Reuters news agency quotes the country's health agency as saying.

The number of confirmed cases has increased to 14,336 from 13,213, it said.

This places Switzerland among the top European countries by number of cases, behind Italy, Spain, Germany, France and the UK.
 
Grim milestone - 30,000 deaths worldwide

A total of 30,982 people have died of coronavirus globally, with 669,312 confirmed cases, according to the latest figures from Johns Hopkins University.
 
Grim milestone - 30,000 deaths worldwide

A total of 30,982 people have died of coronavirus globally, with 669,312 confirmed cases, according to the latest figures from Johns Hopkins University.

Thats since January?
Worldwide 30.000 is not a big figure at all since 3 months have past.

Wish there was more detail the numbers given.

Age group and health condition.
 
Officials in the Netherlands have recalled hundreds of thousands of protective masks, which were imported from China and distributed to hospitals, because they don't meet quality standards.

The Dutch Health Ministry told AFP news agency that 1.3 million masks were delivered on 21 March. About 600,000 of the masks had already been distributed to healthcare workers.

"The rest of the shipment was immediately put on hold and has not been distributed," the ministry said in a statement.

The problem was either that the masks didn't close over the face properly, or were fitted with defective filters.
 
The death toll in the Netherlands has risen by 132 in the last 24 hours, bringing the total up to 771.

The total number of cases in the country, which has a population of about 17 million, has also risen by 1,104 to a total of 10,866.
 
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has hit back at criticism over the country's response to the coronavirus pandemic, saying he had to weigh protecting the country's sanctions-hit economy while tackling the worst outbreak in the region.

Iran, one of the world's hardest-hit countries from the virus, reported 123 more deaths on Sunday in the past 24 hours, pushing its overall toll to 2,640 amid 38,309 confirmed cases.

The president reacted on Sunday at criticism of its lagging response to the worst coronavirus outbreak in the region, which has so far infected 38,309 people in the Islamic Republic, and killed more than 2,600 others - according to data collected by Johns Hopkins University in the United States.

Rouhani described international outcry at the government's handling of the COVID-19 outbreak in Iran as a "political war", saying he had to weigh protecting the economy while tackling the virus, labelled a pandemic by the World Health Organization (WHO).

Leaders around the world are struggling to strike a balance between containing the pandemic and preventing their economies from crashing.

Speaking at a cabinet meeting, Rouhani said the government had to consider the effect of mass quarantine efforts on Iran's beleaguered economy, which is under heavy US sanctions.

"Health is a principle for us, but the production and security of society is also a principle for us," Rouhani said. "We must put these principles together to reach a final decision."

"This is not the time to gather followers," he added. "This is not a time for political war."

In May 2018, President Donald Trump withdrew the US from a landmark nuclear deal signed three years earlier between Iran and world powers. Washington has since imposed crippling sanctions on Tehran that prevent it from selling oil on international markets.

Iran has urged the international community to lift sanctions and is seeking a $5bn loan from the International Monetary Fund.

Last week, United Nations rights chief called for any sanctions imposed on countries like Iran facing the new coronavirus pandemic to be "urgently re-evaluated" to avoid pushing strained medical systems into collapse.

"At this crucial time, both for global public health reasons, and to support the rights and lives of millions of people in these countries, sectoral sanctions should be eased or suspended," UN human rights chief Michelle Bachelet said.

In recent days, Iran has ordered the closure of nonessential businesses and banned travel between cities. But those measures came long after other countries in the region imposed more sweeping lockdowns.

Just over a week after saying he expected the measures taken to curb the spread of the coronavirus to be eased by early April, Rouhani warned on Sunday that "the new way of life" in Iran was likely to be prolonged.

"We must prepare to live with this virus until a treatment or vaccine is discovered, which has not yet happened to date," he added.

"The new way of life we have adopted" is to everyone's benefit, Rouhani noted, adding that "these changes will likely have to stay in place for some time".

After the president's warning, the reopening of schools following this year's Persian New Year holidays of March 19 to April 3 appears unlikely.

On a positive note, Rouhani said he had been told by top health experts and doctors that "in some provinces, we have passed the peak [of the epidemic] and are on a downward trajectory".

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...e-rouhani-hits-criticism-200329113250455.html
 
The finance minister for the central German state of Hesse has been found dead, police say.

The body of 54-year-old Thomas Schäfer was found on a railway line in town of Hochheim near Frankfurt on Saturday morning.

Investigators presume the CDU politician’s death was suicide based on the circumstances,*police said in a statement.

Earlier this week, Mr Schäfer had announced state financial assistance for those affected by the coronavirus pandemic,*German media reported.

In a video message,*Hesse’s state premier Volker Bouffier reportedly alluded to the challenges Mr Schäfer was facing*in dealing with the economic effects of the coronavirus crisis.

Other German politicians have expressed their shock at Mr Schäfer’s death, including CDU leader Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer.
 
Italy recorded 756 new deaths in the past 24 hours - bringing the total to 10,779.
 
Authorities in Moscow have tightened restrictions on the movement of people in a bid to contain the spread of coronavirus, meaning residents can only leave their homes for urgent and limited purposes.

From Monday, people in the Russian capital will only be allowed to leave their homes to seek urgent medical help, go to work if they are required to, shop for basic necessities such as food and medicine and throw out household waste.

On his blog, Moscow mayor Sergei Sobyanin also said people can walk their pets “no more than 100 metres from their place of residence”.
 
France has reported 292 new deaths from the coronavirus outbreak, bringing the total to 2,606, AFP news agency reports.

The country has the fifth highest number of deaths in the world after Iran, China, Spain and Italy, figures show.
 
Coronavirus: Why are deaths rising so quickly in Spain?
Granada, Spain - Every night in Spain since the coronavirus state of alert was decreed on March 14, citizens take a moment to applaud the country's beleaguered medical workers.

But this hopeful image does little to dim the pain of the pandemic; Spain's daily death toll reached a harrowing new high of 769 on Friday, bringing the total number of fatalities to almost 5,000.

Fresh cases of coronavirus-related infections did drop, from a record total on Thursday of 8,578 to 7,871 on Friday.

But both numbers are far worse than a week ago, when new cases stood at 2,833.

Another unnerving fact is that compared with Italy, where eight percent of health workers are affected, in Spain by Friday that tally stood at 16.5 percent.

What has caused such a rapid spread of coronavirus in Spain?

Multiple factors
The most high-profile reason touted by the media in Spain is the public health service's uneven and reportedly depleted resources for tackling this, or indeed any, kind of virus-related pandemic.

Academics in Spain partly confirm this as one possible reason, but underline multiple other factors.

"As recently as Wednesday, the Centre for Disease Prevention and Control in Europe pointed out that the impact of COVID-19 depended on a country's level of preparation and its ability to implement rapid countermeasures," Silvia Carlos Chilleron, a professor in the department of Public Health and Preventive Medicine at the University of Navarra, told Al Jazeera.

"If the increase in cases has been fast, as it has been in Spain, and the human and material resources to fight it are not guaranteed, then the impact is more serious. That probably causes a greater number of deaths among the most vulnerable sectors of society, particularly when medical professionals are among those affected."

Also on Wednesday, Spain's State Confederation of Medical Unions (CESM) lodged a case with the country's Supreme Court, asking the health ministry to provide sufficient protective equipment as soon as possible.

CESM alleged in their case, which was rejected, that the ministry had so far failed to provide professional health workers with sufficient protection to carry out their work in a manner that reduces the risk of catching coronavirus.

"People are generally respecting the lockdown and trying not to come into hospitals for minor illnesses and that's helping reduce the risk of contagion," one hospital doctor in southern Spain, who did not wish to be named for fear of reprisals, told Al Jazeera.

"But there is a lack of sanitary material in the hospitals for this kind of crisis, which multiplies the possibilities of health staff getting contagious infections, and that's going to be a huge factor."

Underlying reasons for the coronavirus spread before the state of alert could have been "the low level of perception among the population at large that coronavirus represented a risk", Jose Hernandez, a researcher and assistant professor of sociology at Cordoba University, whose specialties include social health policies, told Al Jazeera.

At that point and "until relatively recently, there wasn't enough information on what coronavirus was", he said.

Spanish population distribution may also have an effect, observed Alberto Mataran, a professor of Environmental Sciences at the University of Granada.

"There's a huge density of people in cities like Madrid or on the Mediterranean coast in particular, and a lot of blocks of flats in cities' outlying suburbs.

"Add in a lot of communal spaces, a very affectionate kind of social behaviour compared to some countries - we always shake hands, or hug, or kiss each other, when we meet, for example - and the opportunities for propagation surely could increase, too."

As for the much-cited dearth of resources, Hernandez argued it explains the "relatively rapid saturation" of the health services.

"Also, Spain has a large elderly population, who are very vulnerable, and retirement homes do not, generally, have massive medical resources.

"On top of that, the fact that Spain's hospitals and medical services are run by different autonomous regions creates some very important underlying inequalities."

Hernandez added that while regional governments can demand assistance from Madrid, this does raise the risk of poorly judged medical strategy decisions in the central government.

In 2014, medical staff in Madrid protested against the lack of effective protective equipment and safety precautions amid the Ebola epidemic.

"We could see that the public health system had some big gaps in the early detection of infections. And these are structural weaknesses," he said.

Fast-track testing
Meanwhile, the government had to defend its decision to allow demonstrations in Spain on International Women's Day on March 8, something that professor Silvia Carlos Chilleron flagged as a possible factor.

"The greater the number of contacts, the greater the probability of contagion, particularly when it's a new infection against which we have no immunity," she said.

She also pointed to the unusually mild spring and the higher levels of socialisation - people sitting outside in bars and so on - as another possibility, while warning that studies have yet to resolve whether a rise in temperature and higher humidity may act as a brake on the virus's propagation.

Over the past few days, the national conversation has focused on testing - a dearth of verifiable, rapid methods to establish the true extent of the spread of coronavirus.

The government's much-vaunted purchase of millions of fast-track tests from China and elsewhere partly backfired this week when it was discovered that the initial batch of 9,000 had very limited reliability.

Although the Spanish government insists the problem will be resolved with further purchases of more reliable tests, most have yet to arrive.

Carlos Chilleron said polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing, which takes between four and six hours to produce results and is being used by 20,000 people a day in Spain, was the most reliable method.

According to the Live Science website, PCR tests work by "detecting specific genetic material within the virus. Depending on the type of PCR on hand, healthcare workers might swab the back of the throat; take a saliva sample; collect a liquid sample from the lower respiratory tract; or secure a stool sample."

Quicker tests that take a fraction of the time are less precise and as a result, and "we don't have the same kind of security from them that a person is not affected", said Carlos Chilleron.

She recommends social distancing and hygiene as the best precautions in the absence of testing.

In Spain, as the death toll rises, there are currently rumours that lockdown measures will be tightened further.

Rumours are also circulating that should a peak not be reached soon and cases start to fall, lockdown measures will be toughened up even further.

As the full scale of the pandemic has yet to emerge, knowing what measures are needed is looking increasingly hard to judge.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/03/coronavirus-deaths-rising-quickly-spain-200327181759832.html
 
The Republic of Ireland has seen 10 more deaths in the last 24 hours bringing the total number of people to have died to 46.

There is now a total of 2,615 confirmed cases in the country.

The figures were reported after personal protective equipment (PPE) arrived from China and it was announced that a Dublin hotel and conference centre will be the first of a series of new coronavirus centres for isolation and stepdown care.

Similar facilities are to open in other urban locations, including Cork, Limerick and Galway.
 
Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has laughed off the suggestion that his country should try to stem the spread of the coronavirus, because he can't see the virus "flying around".

Speaking to a TV reporter at an indoor ice hockey match, he also claimed that crowds at the match were fine because the coldness of the stadium would prevent the virus from spreading.

There is no evidence that this could be the case and the coronavirus cannot be seen with the naked eye.

Unlike most of Europe, Belarus has not placed any restrictions on sports events.

"There are no viruses here," Mr Lukashenko said. "You haven't seen them flying around, have you? I don't see them either! This is a fridge. Sport, particularly the ice, this fridge here, that's the best antiviral cure!"
 
Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has laughed off the suggestion that his country should try to stem the spread of the coronavirus, because he can't see the virus "flying around".

Speaking to a TV reporter at an indoor ice hockey match, he also claimed that crowds at the match were fine because the coldness of the stadium would prevent the virus from spreading.

There is no evidence that this could be the case and the coronavirus cannot be seen with the naked eye.

Unlike most of Europe, Belarus has not placed any restrictions on sports events.

"There are no viruses here," Mr Lukashenko said. "You haven't seen them flying around, have you? I don't see them either! This is a fridge. Sport, particularly the ice, this fridge here, that's the best antiviral cure!"

Looks like the virus has already taken over his body and making him say those things!
Belarus has about 100 cases and needs to be careful.
 
Australia curbs gatherings, locks down travellers, in new coronavirus measures

Australia’s most populous states will restrict public gatherings to two people from midnight, state leaders said on Monday, as part of a wave of new measures designed to slow the spread of coronavirus which has infected more than 4,000 across the country.

The neighbouring eastern states of New South Wales and Victoria account for most of Australia’s total COVID-19 infections and death toll, which stands at 17.

“It is only in exceptional circumstances that you should leave home,” New South Wales Premier Gladys Berejiklian said in Sydney on Monday.

“We will get through this. We are in a position now which allows us to control the spread as much as possible.”

Police in neighbouring Victoria will issue fines of A$1600 ($984) to people who breach a limit of two people gathering in public, unless the group is from one household.

“Unless you want to be burying an elderly relative or your best mate, or your parents ... do the right thing,” Victoria Premier Daniel Andrews said in Melbourne on Monday.

The small island state of Tasmania also imposed a two-person limit on public gatherings from midnight, and became the country’s first state to ban people from alternating between their main home and their second home, if they have one.

“There will not be movement between your shack and your primary place of residence, allowing you to alternate and sleep nights in both,” state premier Peter Gutwein said, using the slang for holiday homes.

“You will need to make a choice,” he added.

Tasmania reported its first coronavirus death overnight, which took the country’s total deaths from the illness to 17. Confirmed COVID-19 cases are around 4,200 nationwide, although authorities said the rate of daily infections had halved in recent days.

Amid the extraordinary shutdown of businesses and resulting layoffs, the regulators and banks have taken measures to pause loan repayments for six months. Overnight, the federal government said it was putting a six-month moratorium on evicting renters.

All travellers arriving home in Australia from overseas meanwhile must go into monitored quarantine in hotels or other facilities for 14 days, under police supervision, according to measures implemented at the weekend.

Australia has swayed in recent weeks between policies designed to keep as many businesses open as possible, and a more aggressive push to lock down the country, causing some confusion.

Amid concerns distressed assets could be snapped up by overseas buyers, Australia said on Monday that all foreign investment proposals would be assessed by the relevant government agency during the duration of the crisis.

While most virus cases have been detected in major cities, clusters have also emerged in tourist destinations, such as in the Barossa Valley, a wine region in South Australia.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ers-in-new-coronavirus-measures-idUSKBN21G0Y7
 
Madeira to limit passengers allowed to disembark on islands to 100 per week

Madeira, an autonomous region of Portugal, said it would limit the number of people allowed to enter its islands to 100 per week from Tuesday onwards, with freed up hotel space used to quarantine people with symptoms of coronavirus.

A total of 34 confirmed cases have been reported on Madeira, four islands off the northwest coast of Africa home to 270,000 people and usually visited by a million tourists each year.

Portugal has confirmed 5,962 cases and 119 deaths, far below neighboring Spain.

Four major hotels which would otherwise be filling up with holidaymakers over the Easter break will now be used to quarantine people displaying symptoms of the COVID-19 virus.

The 100 passengers allowed must remain in quarantine for 14 days, the regional government said.

Portugal suspended flights to and from Italy in early March and restricted tourism across the land border with Spain, though free movement of goods is still guaranteed.

Flights to and from countries outside the bloc were suspended on 19 March, with the exception of Canada, the United States, Venezuela, South Africa, and Brazil, which have large Portuguese diasporas.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...bark-on-islands-to-100-per-week-idUSKBN21G0X5
 
Most of you are probably too young or where not born when the AIDS/HIV was leashed upon the globe in the 80s. Back then A/H had a 100% morality rate - 100%. There was no internet, no social media, just the 3 TV channels (in the UK). There was no SKY etc either. This was a crisis.

Coronavirus is not a crisis; heck, we dont even know if the people who have died had underlying illnesses.

This entire C19 escapade is designed to do one thing - the creation of limitless money to bolster a worldwide economy that was still realing from the crash of 2008.
 
Australian PM pledges 'economic lifeline'

Scott Morrison says Australia will commit A$130bn (£63bn; $79bn) over the six months to support the "livelihoods of what we anticipate of being almost six million Australians" - about a quarter of the population.

It will include a A$1,500 per fortnight "job keeper payment".

"We will pay employers to pay their employees, and to make sure they do," he says.

"We are all in this together."

==

What's the situation across South Asia?

Cases continue to soar in Pakistan, the region's worst-affected country, as authorities confirm more than 1,500 infections. But the country's top health official said the situation was "under control" over the weekend, just as China sent a plane loaded with medical personnel and supplies to help

On Saturday, Sri Lanka recorded its first death from Covid-19. The island nation has confirmed 113 cases so far and a strict - in some districts, indefinite - curfew remains in place across the country

In Nepal, the virus seems to be spreading slower than in other parts of the region - the country confirmed its fourth case over the weekend afte…

==

Australia will limit social gatherings to just two people, down from 10

US guidelines on social distancing will be extended until at least 30 April

It will be six months before UK 'returns to normal', says its deputy chief medical officer

Meanwhile India's PM asked for forgiveness over its sweeping lockdown

There are now more than 720,000 infections globally and almost 34,000 deaths

==

China has reported a drop in new virus cases for a fourth day in a row.

There were 31 new cases reported on Monday - of which 30 were imported.

This is down from 45 the previous day, said the National Health Commission.

There were also four deaths recorded, bringing the death toll to 3,304.
 
Drop in China's new coronavirus cases; none in Hubei for sixth day

Mainland China reported a drop in new coronavirus infections for a fourth day as imported cases fell, while authorities shut the borders to foreign travellers and drastically slashed the number of international flights.
 
PARIS (Reuters) - From the stage of an evangelical superchurch, the leader of the gospel choir kicked off an evening of prayer and preaching: “We’re going to celebrate the Lord! Are you feeling the joy tonight?”

A cross is pictured on the Eglise de la Porte Ouverte Chretienne during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Mulhouse, France March 12, 2020. Picture taken March 12, 2020. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
“Yes!” shouted the hundreds gathered at the Christian Open Door church on Feb. 18. Some of them had traveled thousands of miles to take part in the week-long gathering in Mulhouse, a city of 100,000 on France’s borders with Germany and Switzerland.

For many members of this globe-spanning flock, the annual celebration is the high point of the church calendar.

This time, someone in the congregation was carrying the coronavirus.

The prayer meeting kicked off the biggest cluster of COVID-19 in France - one of northern Europe’s hardest-hit countries - to date, local government said. Around 2,500 confirmed cases have been linked to it. Worshippers at the church have unwittingly taken the disease caused by the virus home to the West African state of Burkina Faso, to the Mediterranean island of Corsica, to Guyana in Latin America, to Switzerland, to a French nuclear power plant, and into the workshops of one of Europe’s biggest automakers.

Weeks later, Germany partially closed its border with France, suspending a free-movement pact that has been in place for the past 25 years. The church cluster was a key factor, two people familiar with the German decision told Reuters. Church officials told Reuters that 17 members of the congregation have since died of complications linked to the disease.

Other religious gatherings have been linked to the spread of the virus: A large church in South Korea has triggered more than 5,000 cases there. This story, told to Reuters by members of the Christian Open Door congregation and officials involved in coping with the outbreak, is testament to the speed and ferocity of the coronavirus infection. As public health administrators were still gearing up for coronavirus, the disease was operating to its own, remorseless timetable - one that has quickly outpaced anything they could put in place.

As the faithful gathered on a clear Tuesday evening in the church, an old shopping center converted into a 2,500 seat auditorium, the disease seemed remote. France had 12 confirmed cases, according to World Health Organization (WHO) data. There were none in the Mulhouse area.

France, like other governments in northern Europe, had imposed no restrictions on big meetings. There was no alcohol gel for the congregations to clean their hands, no elbow bumps instead of handshakes.

“At the time, we viewed COVID as something that was far off,” said Jonathan Peterschmitt, son of the lead pastor and grandson of the church’s founder. His father, Samuel, was unavailable for an interview because he had been sickened by the virus, his son and a church spokeswoman said.

The day after the first case linked to the church was identified on Feb. 29, public health officials followed the usual protocol and traced the people whom the carriers had been in contact with, to stem the spread. Using a list supplied by the church - which public health officials said cooperated fully - they first contacted those who had staffed the children’s crèche during the gathering.

At this point, the health inspectors realized they were too late. Some crèche staff were already sick, according to Michel Vernay, an epidemiologist with France’s national public health agency in eastern France.

“We were overwhelmed,” said Vernay. “We realized that we had a time bomb in front of us.”

“SPIRITUALLY RECHARGE”

Among the congregation was local man Elie Widmer, a 37-year-old manager of a house-building company. His parents were members of the church, which was founded in 1966 by Jean Peterschmitt, a French shopkeeper who embraced evangelism after his wife was unexpectedly cured of an illness.

Widmer said he had drifted away from the church as a teenager, but returned. The Mulhouse gathering was something he looked forward to the whole year, he said: “You feel a special energy during that week. For a week, you stop everything to spiritually recharge.” As a drummer in the church orchestra, he attended the whole week.

Coming from further afield was Antoinette, a 70-year-old grandmother who lives on the Mediterranean island of Corsica. For her, the gathering was part of a 25-year tradition.

Antoinette made the trip with five other women who worship at the Bethel evangelical church in the capital Ajaccio. She spoke on the condition that she not be fully identified, saying believers had been stigmatized by people outside the church for spreading the virus.

Antoinette has chronic lung problems, for which she has regular treatment. As the women flew out of Corsica on Feb. 16, they looked forward to combining evangelical workshops with excursions to the shops.

“We knew nothing,” she said from her home in Ajaccio. “We weren’t thinking about the epidemic.”

Neither was Mamadou Karambiri, who flew into Paris’s Charles de Gaulle airport on Feb. 14 aboard an Air France flight from Ouagadougou, capital of Burkina Faso.

He is pastor of his own church in Africa and co-founder of an organization called the International Evangelism Center – Africa Interior Mission. A charismatic speaker with a shock of white hair, Karambiri was to be the meeting’s star preacher.

His church, a warehouse-like building that takes up a city block in Ouagadougou, can accommodate 12,000 people, according to a worshipper there. A giant white cross towers above the red dirt street outside. Across the road is the studio that televises the sermons the pastor delivers to worshippers assembled on rows of blue plastic chairs.

Karambiri traveled to the Mulhouse gathering with his wife and a bodyguard, said his spokesman, Aristide A. Ouedrago. The pastor, through his secretary, declined to be interviewed for this story.

Ouedrago said that he believed that when Karambiri traveled, the virus was not in France, although in fact there were 12 cases.

“PETRI DISH”

In Mulhouse, the Christian Open Door church stands across the road from a kebab cafe. A four-storey-high white metal cross rises over the car park.

Also gathering in the church building were two children whose mother had taken sick before the event started, health officials said. The mother stayed at home, but their grandfather brought the children along - the elder child was five, the younger just one year old.

The children and their mother would later test positive for coronavirus, making the mother a potential source of the cluster, said Vernay, the French public health official. It was not clear to public health officials where the mother, whom Vernay declined to identify, picked up the infection.

The week’s schedule included gospel choir performances, collective prayer, singing, sermons from preachers, workshops, and testimony from people who said God had cured their illnesses.

The best-attended sessions had up to 2,500 people and there were never fewer than 1,000, said Jonathan Peterschmitt, the founder’s son, from his home. Many people came day after day, and spent hours there. “So we were in the same petri dish for a week,” he said.

By the end of the gathering on Feb. 21, no one had reported any flu-like symptoms, according to Nathalie Schnoebelen, a church spokeswoman. At the time, France’s tally of confirmed COVID-19 cases was steady at 12.

SPREAD

In late February, Widmer, the drummer, started feeling unwell. His wife, his three children, and his mother-in-law also took ill.

On March 3, the WHO recorded 91 new COVID-19 cases in France, bringing the country’s total to 191. The church, prompted by the discovery of the infected woman and her two children, posted on its Facebook page that people who had come to the gathering should contact a doctor.

Widmer dialed 15, the number in France for emergency medical care. There were not enough testing kits for him to be tested. But doctors diagnosed coronavirus and ordered him and his family to quarantine themselves.

For three days he had a strong fever and headache, and lost his sense of taste and smell. He said he was not especially worried: His family had milder symptoms. He has since recovered, but remains in self-isolation.

The virus spread through the church founder’s family. Around a dozen members are now recovering.

A few miles away across the border, German officials were watching with growing alarm.

They had received a report from the Robert Koch Institute, a German state public health institution, that added eastern France to its list of four coronavirus risk areas around the world - along with China’s Hubei province, Iran, Italy and North Gyeongsang province, adjoining the city of Daegu, the site of the South Korean church outbreak. By March 11, France’s COVID-19 tally at the WHO had leapt to 1,774, of whom 33 had died.

Roughly 45,000 French workers commute to Germany daily, according to official data - around a fifth of them from the Mulhouse area. Most work in Germany’s wealthy industrial region of Baden-Wuerttemberg, where automakers Porsche and Mercedes-Benz have their headquarters. Europa-Park, a theme park just over the Rhine in Germany, is a big employer, also of French workers.

After attending the gathering, a worker from the French nuclear power plant at Fessenheim near Mulhouse tested positive. The plant’s operator, Electricite de France SA (EdF), ordered 20 others to self-isolate at home but operations were not disrupted, a representative of the power company said. Another person who had been at the gathering worked in the Peugeot Citroen factory on the edge of Mulhouse; that individual too was infected, according to a person familiar with the case.

German officials in Baden-Wuerttemberg decided to act, imposing restrictions on movements across the border.

The French government asked Berlin for an explanation. On March 16, German Chancellor Angela Merkel spoke to French President Emmanuel Macron. They talked about the cluster in eastern France and the risk from commuters, said a German government official briefed on the call. Then they agreed to close the border to traffic other than cargo vehicles and people making essential trips. A French official confirmed the contents of the discussion.

Police appeared at previously unmanned border posts, asking car drivers for a document from their employer proving travel is essential. Cargo trucks are backed up.

But the disease was already out. A resident of Switzerland who went to the meeting brought the virus back to their evangelical community near Lausanne, the Swiss federation of evangelical churches said on its website. Public health authorities in French Guyana said they found five people who had traveled to the gathering also tested positive.

GOD’S PRESENCE

Back home in Corsica after her trip to the church gathering, Antoinette felt under the weather.

She put it down to the exertion of the trip, and carried on meeting up with other church-goers in Ajaccio. On March 2, nine days after she returned, she received a call from Mulhouse describing the outbreak there.

She was hospitalized overnight, tested, and on March 4, became one of the first cases of COVID-19 on the French island of Corsica. She has since been in self-isolation, and her church has suspended services. As of March 27, 263 people were infected with coronavirus on Corsica, 21 of whom died.

“People have pointed their finger at me,” said Antoinette on March 16. “They need a scapegoat.” She said some people outside her circle were suspicious of evangelical Christians and blamed her for bringing the virus to Corsica. Jonathan Peterschmitt, the son of the Mulhouse pastor, said others in the congregation had been subject to verbal attacks by strangers for spreading the infection, and were now fearful of revealing their identities.

By March 20, France had more than 10,000 cases of COVID-19. Around a quarter were in Grand-Est, the region that includes Mulhouse. “The very great majority” of these could be traced to the church, said Vernay, the local public health official.

Because there are more critical cases than intensive care beds in the region, some patients have been flown by helicopter to Switzerland, Germany and Luxembourg. The French military have set up a field hospital inside green metal-framed tents.

At home in Ouagadougou, Pastor Karambiri and his wife, after falling ill on March 1, went to a local clinic, tested positive, and quarantined themselves until March 20.

At the end of his self-imposed period of isolation, he broadcast a message to his followers in a video posted on his organization’s Facebook page. Sitting on a sofa, his bible on his lap and his wife alongside him, he told them about the infection.

The coronavirus, he said, is “a satanic plan conceived a long time ago to destroy the world. But God is watching over us and he will lead the people out.”

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...set-a-virus-time-bomb-in-france-idUSKBN21H0Q2
 
Spain reports more than 800 deaths

Spain has reported 812 new deaths related to coronavirus since Sunday.

Authorities said nearly 6,400 more people have also been infected.
 
Some 20,000 former NHS staff have returned to work in the UK

A breathing aid that can help keep patients out of intensive care has been created in days

Spain has reported 812 new deaths, taking the national total to 7,340

Confirmed cases in Germany jump up 4,751 to over 57,000

US guidelines on social distancing will be extended until at least 30 April

Meanwhile India's PM asked for forgiveness over its sweeping lockdown

There are now more than 720,000 infections globally and almost 34,000 deaths
 
Spain reports more than 800 deaths

Spain has reported 812 new deaths related to coronavirus since Sunday.

Authorities said nearly 6,400 more people have also been infected.

Spain has become the third country to confirm more cases of coronavirus than China - as the number of deaths rose by 812 in a day to reach a total of 7,340.

Confirmed COVID-19 cases have increased by 6,398 people since Sunday to reach 85,195 in total, Spain's health ministry said.

The country has now joined the United States and Italy in having more cases than China, which had confirmed 82,156 cases as of Monday.
 
Italy expected to announce partial lifts to the lockdown today.

Interesting move, this will dictate what happens in Europe alo
 
Spain is further tightening its lockdown and Hungary is voting on a controversial new coronavirus law. Here’s the latest from Europe:

New, stricter measures have come into force in Spain for the next two weeks, which stop all people in non-essential jobs from going to work. The country reported 812 deaths on Monday, bringing its total to 7,340

In Hungary, parliament will vote on whether or not to give sweeping powers to Prime Minister Viktor Orban. The government says they're needed to fight the coronavirus outbreak but critics say they could curtail freedom of speech and allow the authorities to imprison journalists

Economic advisers in Germany will publish a report on the economic impact of the virus. There are more than 62,000 reported cases nationwide, but only 541 deaths – a low number compared to other nations, which is confusing experts
 
Spain's Foreign Minister, Arancha González, has told the BBC the country's latest national figures show the virus’s upwards curve appears to be flattening out.

The Spanish authorities have confirmed 6,398 more cases of coronavirus. This brings the total to 85,195 - higher than that of China, where the outbreak began.

Another 812 deaths have also been reported. The national total now stands at 7,340, making Spain the worst-affected country in the world behind Italy.

Madrid, Catalonia and the Basque region remain the hardest-hit areas.

But there is some good news: the number of new confirmed cases is the lowest reported for a week.

Ms González said pressure on intensive care units remained the biggest challenge, and new restrictions would help contain the spread.

The foreign minister also said it was unfair to single out Spain because other countries - including Italy and the US - were also dealing with unprecedented numbers.
 
Spain has reported 812 new deaths, taking the national total to 7,340
But the country's foreign minister says the upward rise in cases appears to be flattening out
Prince Charles is out of self-isolation, a week after testing positive for coronavirus
New dates for the Tokyo Olympics have been announced: 23 July to 8 August 2021
In the UK, some 20,000 former NHS staff have returned to work
US guidelines on social distancing will be extended until at least 30 April
There are now more than 730,000 infections globally and almost 35,000 deaths
 
Hungarian democracy 'in quarantine'

The Hungarian parliament has now granted the government the power to rule by decree in this emergency.

The new law, which we described a short while ago, was backed by 137 MPs, and 53 were against.

The law has no time limit and has been strongly criticised by opponents in Hungary, as well as by international human rights watchdogs.

Prime Minister Viktor Orban - a nationalist and conservative - promised to use the extraordinary powers "proportionately and rationally".

The leader of the opposition Jobbik party, Peter Jaka
 
Some very early signs that cases and deaths are slowing down in both Italy and Spain.
 
One of Japan's top doctors has called on the country to act before it is too late. Satoshi Kamayachi said Japan should not "wait until an explosive increase in infections before declaring an emergency", according to news agency Reuters. Tokyo has seen a recent spike in cases, but has only asked people to "refrain from unnecessary trips" in the evening and at weekends.

Pakistan's Supreme Court has blocked orders issued by the high court which would have seen more than 1,000 prisoners "under trial" released. The idea had been to ease the overcrowding in the country's jails during the coronavirus outbreak.

Indonesia's President Joko Widodo has warned of the need for stronger measures to curb movement around the country. According to The Straits Times, he revealed almost 900 buses had taken 14,000 out of the capital Jakarta to their home towns in the last eight days, potentially spreading the virus to previously unaffected areas.

Myanmar must prepare for a "big outbreak" after some 23,000 migrant workers returned from Thailand in just 10 days, the health minister Myint Htwe has said. The South China Morning Post said the latest two of the country's 10 coronavirus cases are reportedly returning migrants
 
BCG vaccine being trialled in some countries as protection against Covid 19.

If thats successful, it may explain lower number of cases in developing countries.
 
Spain

As of Monday, all non-essential activities have been halted until 9 April

Only essential services, including healthcare, food and energy provision, will continue to operate as normal

Austria

From Wednesday, wearing protective masks in supermarkets will be mandatory

People who are vulnerable to coronavirus will not be allowed to work

Hotels will be closed to tourists

Greece

The closure of all non-essential shops has been extended to 11 April

Incoming flights from the Netherlands have been banned, and those from Germany restricted

Cyprus

A curfew will be enforced between 21:00 and 06:00 local time (19:00 and 04:00 GMT) for all but essential workers

Breaching the curfew will be punishable by a fine of up to 300 euros (£266; $330)

If people wish to leave their homes, they must ask for permission by sending a text message to a special number
 
[MENTION=141306]sweep_shot[/MENTION]

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/COVID-19_testing

You were right about Bangladesh's testing.
Only 1000 tests conducted.

Hasina wants to hide the numbers I suspect.

Yeah. I doubt Bangladesh has enough testing kits to do a large-scale testing.

Also, Hasina may want to hide the numbers to avoid potential unrest.

I personally feel there are thousands of infections there (definitely not 49).
 
Hasina wants to hide the numbers I suspect.

Yeah. I doubt Bangladesh has enough testing kits to do a large-scale testing.

Also, Hasina may want to hide the numbers to avoid potential unrest.

I personally feel there are thousands of infections there (definitely not 49).

It's looking a lot more likely.
 
Italy is extending its lockdown until "at least" 12 April, the country's health minister has said.

It comes as the country's death toll rose to 11,591.

Italy was first put in lockdown three weeks ago today.
 
Health officials in France have confirmed 44,550 people have tested positive for covid-19 in the country and 3,024 people have died after contracting the virus.
 
The World Bank says "significant economic pain seems unavoidable" in the Asia Pacific region

American Airlines, one of the world's richest carriers, says it will apply for $12bn (£9.7bn) in government aid

President Trump says the US will have enough ventilators to meet demand

New York's Governor Andrew Cuomo says the scale of coronavirus deaths is "staggering"

UK health officials says the nationwide stay at home advice is "making a difference"

The virus has killed more than 33,000 people around the world, says the WHO
 
Indonesia says it will ban all arrivals by foreign nationals, including those in transit. Exemptions apply for permanent residents, those with visas for temporary stays, and diplomatic visitors.

Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi said the government aimed to issue the regulations for the ban on Tuesday. It's not clear when the ban will go into effect.

Indonesia will also improve screening for its own nationals returning home.

It currently has 1,414 confirmed cases and 122 deaths.
 
Germany has reported a further 128 deaths and 4,615 confirmed cases of coronavirus since Monday, according to Reuters citing figures from the Robert Koch Institute, the German public health agency.

That brings the total number of cases there to 61,913 with 583 fatalities.

In the eastern city of Jena, shoppers and passengers on public transport will be required to wear a face mask.

In the absence of a mask, people will be allowed to wear a scarf, as long as it covers the nose and mouth.

The city council in Jena says the new rules will enter into force next week.
 
Tanzania confirmed its first coronavirus death on Tuesday, health minister Ummy Mwalimu said in a statement.

Thailand reported 127 new coronavirus cases and one death on Tuesday, a health official said.
 
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