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Coronavirus pandemic - World News

Outbreak in Germany under control, says health minster

Germany's Health Minister Jens Spahn says the country’s coronavirus outbreak is under control, after a decline in the infection rate.

As we mentioned earlier, Mr Spahn says the number of recovered patients has recently been consistently higher than the number of new infections - showing the lockdown has been successful.

"The outbreak has, as of today, become controllable and manageable again," he told a news conference, adding that the health care system had "at no time been overwhelmed so far".

Figures published by Germany's disease control agency indicate the infection rate had dropped to 0.7 - meaning each infected person passed the virus to less than one other.

However, the number of fatalities is still rising, as is the number of infected health care workers.

Germany has been praised for its aggressive testing efforts. It has almost 138,000 positive cases, according to Johns Hopkins University tracking, and 3,868 people have died nationally with the virus, which is a relatively low number.
 
6,000 extra deaths in two weeks in Ecuador province

Ecuador's official coronavirus death toll is 403, but new figures from just one province suggest many thousands have died in the country.

The government said 6,700 people had died in the Guayas province alone in the first two weeks of April, far more than the usual 1,000 deaths there in the same period.

Guayas is home to the nation's largest city Guayaquil - the worst affected part of the country.

Footage obtained by the BBC earlier this week showed residents of the city forced to store bodies of relatives in their homes for up to five days. They said authorities had been unable to keep up with rate of death, leaving corpses wrapped in sheets in family homes and even on the street.

City authorities last week began distributing thousands of cardboard coffins and set up a dedicated helpline for families that needed a body removed from their home.
 
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe says the World Health Organization (WHO) has issues that need to be inspected when the pandemic is over.

But he said his government was not planning to withdraw funding for the WHO.

"Now is time to support the WHO," he said. "But the truth is, there are issues and challenges. We need to inspect this after this situation is contained."

His comments come just days after US President Donald Trump announced he would be withdrawing funding for the WHO.

Mr Trump accused the WHO of making deadly mistakes and overly trusting China.
 
I was looking at testing ratios of all countries, specially the ones with population sizes similar to Pakistan. One country really pop'ed out, Brazil has conducted 60,000 odd tests and they have about 30,000 positive cases. Meaning if they conduct 2 tests then 1 is coming out as positive. Really really worrying situation. This means the actual number of cases will easily be in the 100,000s.

Meanwhile Russia has conducted close to 2 million tests and their positive cases is almost same as Brazil at 32k. This means Russia have a stronger grip on the situation.


Pakistan has conducted about 85,000 tests and positive is about 7,000 so our ratio isn't ominous as some other countries but we definitely need to increase testing.
 
An outbreak of Covid-19 on board French aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle has infected 1,081 people, Defence Minister Florence Parly has told the National Assembly. Twenty-four of the 2,300 on board are in hospital and one is in intensive care.

France has today reported 761 more deaths with coronavirus, taking the total toll to 18,681. Italy and Spain are the only European countries to have recorded more. Elsewhere in Europe:

In Germany Health Minister Jens Spahn says the outbreak there is "under control and manageable", with officials saying the transmission rate between people has dropped to 0.7. Germany has tested far more people for coronavirus than other European countries and has seen 3,868 deaths - a relatively low figure for its population of 83 million

Controversy surrounds the latest figures on infections and deaths in Spain, where the official death toll is 19,478. The worst-hit regions of Madrid and Catalonia object to the government's new approach of not counting deaths where a test for Covid-19 has not been carried out.

Italy has reported another 575 deaths in the past 24 hours, but significantly the number of people in intensive care continues to fall, down 124 on Thursday to 2,812

Denmark is to allow dentists, opticians, tattoo and piercing studios and several other professions to return to work from Monday, provided they follow guidelines on hygiene and protection. Cafes and restaurants must remain shut

Albania has beefed up jail terms for people who break quarantine measures, with up to eight years for someone who infects another person causing death

Meanwhile, Serbia, Montenegro and North Macedonia have begun three-day lockdowns timed to coincide with the Orthodox Easter holiday
 
President Trump said lockdown protesters being treated "rough", after calling for the "liberation" of some states

Vice-President Mike Pence said states have enough test kits to begin reopening today

The WHO advised countries to plot a cautious path out of lockdown rather than relying on antibody tests

The UK launched a vaccine taskforce, funding 21 research projects

The UK death toll reached 14,576 as 847 new deaths are reported in hospitals

Germany said its outbreak is under control - each virus carrier is infecting less than one other person on average

China denies cover-up of Wuhan outbreak, where the pandemic began, despite revised death toll

There have now been more than 2.15 million confirmed cases worldwide and 145,000 deaths
 
Germany's confirmed coronavirus cases have risen by 3,609 to 137,439, data from the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) for infectious diseases showed on Saturday, marking a fourth straight day of a spike in new infections.

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Thailand reports 33 new coronavirus infections, bringing the nation's total to 2,733 cases, a senior official said on Saturday.

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China's National Health Commission reported 27 new confirmed coronavirus cases on April 17, up from 26 the day earlier, according to data published on Saturday.

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Mexican health officials reported on Friday 578 new cases of the novel coronavirus and 60 new deaths, bringing the country's total to 6,875 cases and 546 deaths.
 
More than 100 performers have signed up to join One World: Together At Home - a huge benefit show being broadcast online and around the world later today.

The list of celebrities making an appearance is massive and includes acts like Taylor Swift, Andrea Bocelli and Stevie Wonder.

The special concert has been created by the Global Citizen movement and the World Health Organization (WHO), in collaboration with pop star Lady Gaga, to raise funds and thank healthcare workers working to combat Covid-19.
 
There has been a rise in the number of new infections in Germany, for the fourth day in a row.

The latest figures, from the Robert Koch Institute, show there were 3,609 new cases in the past 24 hours. There were also 242 deaths, taking the country's total tally to 4,110.

On Friday, Health Minister Jens Spahn said the outbreak was under control in Germany following a month-long lockdown.

He said that since 12 April the number of recovered patients had been consistently higher than the number of new infections.
 
In a stark warning, doctors in Japan have said the country's medical system could collapse.

According to two medical associations, the coronavirus outbreak is reducing the ability of Japan's hospitals to treat other medical emergencies.

While the number of confirmed cases of Covid-19 remains relatively low compared with other countries, hospitals are turning away patients.

Doctors have complained of a lack of protective equipment, which suggests Japan has not prepared well for the virus. This is despite the fact it was the second country outside China to record an infection, in January.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has been criticised for not introducing restrictions to deal with the outbreak sooner for fear they could harm the economy.
 
The number of people who have died with coronavirus in Spain has passed 20,000, the health ministry has announced.

Since the start of the pandemic, 20,043 people have died from Covid-19. In 24 hours, the death toll rose to 565, a slight drop from the 585 reported on Friday.

Spain is one of the worst-hit countries, behind the United States and Italy.
 
In a stark warning, doctors in Japan have said the country's medical system could collapse.

According to two medical associations, the coronavirus outbreak is reducing the ability of Japan's hospitals to treat other medical emergencies.

While the number of confirmed cases of Covid-19 remains relatively low compared with other countries, hospitals are turning away patients.

Doctors have complained of a lack of protective equipment, which suggests Japan has not prepared well for the virus. This is despite the fact it was the second country outside China to record an infection, in January.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has been criticised for not introducing restrictions to deal with the outbreak sooner for fear they could harm the economy.
 
Virus-hit cruise ship leaves Australia after stand-off

After more than three weeks stranded in Australian waters, the German cruise ship Artania set sail for Europe on Saturday to cheers by locals and relief from officials who had been keen to see the virus-stricken vessel leave the country.

The ship had docked in Fremantle, near Perth in Western Australia, on 27 March when about 25 passengers reported respiratory symptoms. Dozens of passengers later tested positive for Covid-19.

The Artania had defied orders to leave the port after most of the passengers were evacuated and flown home.

On Saturday it left Fremantle for Germany carrying 411 crew and passengers. Western Australia Premier Mark McGowan announced there were three more cases of coronavirus in Western Australia, two of them from the Artania.
 
Spain's death toll passes 20,000

The death toll from Covid-19 in Spain moved past 20,000 on Saturday, the country's health ministry said.

A total of 20,043 people have now died there, with 565 deaths in the past 24 hours. That figure is down on the 585 reported on Friday.

Spain is one of the countries hardest hit by the pandemic.

The number of declared cases now stands at 191,726 - but the health ministry said the increase in infections had slowed in recent days, and the number of people considered to be cured had risen to nearly 75,000.
 
At least 20 Afghan presidential palace staff test positive

At least 20 officials working at Afghan President Ashraf Ghani's palace have tested positive for the coronavirus, prompting the 70-year-old leader to limit most of his contact with staff to digital communication, government sources said.

An official document delivered to the Presidential Palace in Kabul is thought to have infected staff, many of whom began feeling unwell and were tested earlier this month, according to a senior health official.

“A contaminated document was sent to an office inside the palace from another government department and that's how the employees were infected,” the official told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity.
 
Uzbekistan has decided to prolong restrictions imposed to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus until May 10, the Central Asian nation's government said.

The social distancing measures were set to expire on April 10. The Tashkent government has locked down all provinces and some major cities, closed some businesses and ordered citizens to only leave their homes for work or essential shopping.

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Croatia is extending its coronavirus lockdown for another 15 days, Interior Minister Davor Bozinovic said, but added the government was looking at whether it was possible to gradually ease restrictions on movement.

A month ago, the government closed all the shops, bars, restaurants, schools and public transport leaving open only food stores, pharmacies and petrol stations.

Croats have been allowed to leave their homes to buy essentials or seek medical treatment, go for a walk or do an exercise, but not in a group and avoiding social contact. Many people have been working from home.

Croatia has recorded 1,832 cases of COVID-19, with 39 deaths. On Saturday, the number of new infections rose by 18 which is the lowest daily increase registered since March 17.
 
Dutch coronavirus infections reach 31,589, 142 new deaths

Confirmed coronavirus infections in the Netherlands have risen by 1,140 to 31,589, Dutch health authorities have said.

According to Reuters, the Dutch Institute for Public Health (RIVM) said in its daily update that the death toll among people known to have been infected with the novel coronavirus increased by 142 to 3,601.
 
A national helpline in the US has seen a dramatic increase in people getting in touch.

The Disaster Distress Helpline provides counselling for people who are facing emotional distress.

In March 2020 the helpline answered roughly 7,000 calls and received 19,000 text messages, an increase of 891% on the same period in 2019.

According to the helpline's website, "stress, anxiety, and other depression-like symptoms are common reactions after a disaster".
 
French health officials say there have been a further 364 COVID-19 deaths in hospital and 278 COVID-19 deaths in care homes
 
Italy's daily coronavirus death toll lowest since April 12

Deaths from the Covid-19 pandemic in Italy have risen by 482, the lowest daily increase since April 12, while the number of new cases is stable at 3,491, the Civil Protection Agency said.

The death toll had risen by 575 on Friday, up from 525 the day before, with 3,493 new cases recorded.

According to Reuters, today's number of deaths marked the lowest daily rise since last Sunday, when it stood at 431.
 
Ever since Spain's prime minister imposed nationwide restrictions on movement on 14 March, children have had to stay indoors. It is among the strictest lockdowns in Europe with only adults allowed out to visit their nearest supermarket or pharmacy or for essential work.

The country has seen 20,000 deaths in one of the biggest outbreaks of Covid-19 in the world.

Barcelona Mayor Ada Colau pleaded with the government this week with the message: "Free our children."

Now PM Pedro Sánchez has given children some hope. From 27 April he has said children will be allowed outside but the measure is stlil being finalised and may involve under-12s only.
 
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has announced that the Canada-US land border will remain closed to non-essential travel for an additional 30 days.

The current closure was set to expire on Tuesday.

“This is an important decision and one that will keep people on both sides of the border safe," he said.
 
Hand gel at bus stops among post-lockdown measures for Paris

Paris’ bus stops and metro entrances will be equipped with hand gel dispensers and commuters will likely be obliged to wear face masks to use public transport once coronavirus confinement measures are lifted, according to the city’s mayor.

France is due to start exiting its strict lockdown from May 11, with schools set to reopen then, but the government has yet to spell out when businesses like cafes and cinemas can restart and to what extent people will be allowed to move around.

Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo told the Journal Du Dimanche (JDD) newspaper in an interview published on Sunday that hand gel would be made widely available as the French capital tries to keep the virus spread under control.

This will include free dispensers at swimming pools, sports stadiums and nurseries, but also in the street and at bus stops, she said, adding that JCDecaux, a company known for making advertising billboards, was working on the scheme.

Asked whether authorities in the broader Paris region should make it compulsory to wear face masks in metros and on commuter trains, Hidalgo said discussions on that were under way.

“Given how crowded these lines are, this really strikes me as necessary,” Hidalgo said.

Prime Minister Emmanuel Macron’s government has faced criticism over a shortage of face masks and testing kits. The president has said that by May 11, France would be able to test anyone presenting COVID-19 symptoms and give nonprofessional face masks to the public.

Hidalgo added that some streets in Paris could be closed to cars in the immediate aftermath of the lockdown exit. These would be turned into cycle highways in a bid to keep pollution down and not further exacerbate the outbreak of the virus, which causes respiratory problems in some of those affected.

France has been under virtual lockdown since March 17. Some measures have been progressively tightened in the capital, and authorities banned Parisians from outdoor sports activity like jogging between 10 a.m. and 7 p.m. local time.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ost-lockdown-measures-for-paris-idUSKBN2200XQ
 
Turkey reported 82,329 confirmed coronavirus cases, overtaking neighbouring Iran for the first time to register the highest number of infections in the Middle East.

Iran partially reopened its capital, Tehran, allowing "low-risk businesses", including shops, factories and warehouses to resume operations. But Algeria, Morocco, Croatia and Spain extended lockdowns, while Uzbekistan prolonged social distancing measures.

Nigerian president's chief of staff died from COVID-19, the respiratory illness caused by the new coronavirus. Abba Kyari's was the highest-profile death in the West African country.

In the United States, New York reported the lowest daily death toll in more than two weeks with Governor Andrew Cuomo expressing hope the hard-hit state may now be "past the plateau". In Washington state, Governor Jay Inslee accused President Donald Trump of "fomenting domestic rebellion and spreading lies" after the latter encouraged protests against Democratic governors who have imposed virus-related restrictions.

Globally, more than 2.3 million people have been infected and more than 159,000 people have died, according to a tally by the Johns Hopkins University.
 
Australia calls for probe into WHO, China virus response

Marise Payne, Australia's foreign minister, is calling for an independent investigation into the global response to the coronavirus pandemic, including the World Health Organization's handling of the crisis.

Canberra will "insist" on a review that would investigate, in part, China's early response to the outbreak in Wuhan, the city where the virus was first detected last year, Payne says in an interview with public broadcaster ABC.

"We need to know the sorts of details that an independent review would identify for us about the genesis of the virus, about the approaches to dealing with it [and] addressing the openness with which information was shared," she says.

Payne adds that the fallout from the pandemic may change the relationship between Australia and China "in some ways", with her concern around Beijing's transparency now "at a very high point".

Hugo Lopez-Gatell, Mexico's deputy health minister, says the country has registered 7,497 confirmed coronavirus cases and 650 deaths till Saturday.

That is up from 6,875 cases and 546 deaths on Friday.
 
Donald Trump has attacked China once again over the coronavirus pandemic - questioning whether it was a "mistake that got out of control" or a crisis that was started deliberately.

At the daily White House briefing, the US president warned that Beijing would face consequences if it was "knowingly responsible" for the spread of COVID-19, but he stopped short of saying what type of actions he might take.

"It could have been stopped in China before it started and it wasn't, and the whole world is suffering from it," Mr Trump told reporters on Saturday.

Hundreds of people gathered outside the governor’s residence in St Paul, Minnesota, on Friday, April 17, to protest the state’s coronavirus-related lockdown measures, video shows.

Hundreds gather to protest lockdown in Minnesota
The president has ramped up his rhetoric in recent days, and he has repeatedly referred to coronavirus as the "Chinese virus" in the past.

Mr Trump and his senior aides have also accused China of lacking transparency. These allegations resurfaced after the city of Wuhan, where the outbreak began, revised its total number of fatalities upwards - increasing them by 50%.

Describing China's figures as "unrealistic", she warned the country has a "moral obligation" to provide credible information to the rest of the world.

This week, the Trump administration also suspended aid to the World Health Organisation - accusing the UN health agency of being "China-centric".

The president said he had hundreds of statements supporting his handling of the crisis

14 April -Trump to reporter: 'You know you are a fake'
Critics claim Mr Trump is attempting to use Beijing to deflect from shortcomings in his own response to the pandemic.

The US has by far the world's highest number of confirmed coronavirus cases, with more than 730,000 infections and over 38,000 deaths.

There are concerns in the White House of a potential backlash if tensions between Washington and Beijing get too heated, as the US is heavily reliant on China for personal protective equipment.

Demonstrations demanding an end to stay-at-home measures that have hit America's economy spread further on Saturday.

This is despite the fact that new coronavirus hotspots are continuing to emerge nationwide, and experts warning that relaxing restrictions too quickly could prove disastrous.

"We continue to see a number of positive signs that the virus has passed its peak," the president told reporters.

New York, which has recorded almost half of the country's deaths from COVID-19, reported 540 new coronavirus-related fatalities on Saturday - the lowest daily number since 1 April.

However, Mr Cuomo warned that 2,000 people are still being admitted to hospital with COVID-19 on a daily basis - and said nursing homes remain a "feeding frenzy" for the virus.

"We are not at a point when we are going to be reopening anything immediately," he added.

New Jersey care homes investigated
More than 22 million Americans have filed for unemployment benefits in the past month, with the closures of businesses and schools - alongside severe travel restrictions - hitting the economy hard.

However, an influential research model has suggested that strict adherence to stay-at-home orders imposed in 42 US states has been a crucial factor behind an improved forecast for the country's coronavirus death toll.

The University of Washington is now projecting that 60,308 people in the US will die from coronavirus by 4 August, a 12% decrease from a forecast made earlier this week.

https://news.sky.com/story/coronavi...eak-deliberately-11975333?dcmp=snt-sf-twitter
 
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'Pandemic and chaos': Brazilians protest coronavirus lockdowns

Hundreds of people have taken to the streets across large cities in Brazil, snarling traffic as they denounced pandemic lockdown measures opposed by President Jair Bolsonaro.

Protesters in trucks, cars and motorcycles, some wrapping in the country's green and yellow flags, honked horns in the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo and the capital of Brasilia on Saturday, calling for governors to resign over measures that have forced most businesses to close for weeks.

Bolsonaro has been a fierce critic of the states' stay-at-home measures, arguing that the economic harm could be more damaging than the illness.

The protests took place a day after Bolsonaro fired his health minister, Luiz Henrique Mandetta, who had been promoting isolation measures.

In Rio de Janeiro, about 100 vehicles took part in the gridlock, cruising down Atlantica Avenue, along the iconic and temporarily shut down Copacabana beach.

"Either we just have the pandemic, which is already a lot, or we have the pandemic and chaos," said Anderson Moraes, a state legislator who had called for Rio residents to join the protest. "For sure, lives are more important than anything else, but we can't take decisions today without thinking about tomorrow. Because tomorrow, I don't know how a family man will be when he sees his children going hungry."

In Brasilia, Bolsonaro reiterated his intention to start reopening the economy.

"The fear was excessive," he said on Saturday, denouncing the "greed" of politicians "who have shut down everything and created panic".

"People want a return to normality," the president said in a Facebook Live session shortly before meeting with a small crowd of supporters who had gathered outside the Planalto presidential palace. "We're going to start adding more flexibility."

Brazil has the most confirmed COVID-19 cases in Latin America - more than 36,500 - and at least 2,347 deaths. That is a relatively low number in relation to the country's population of 211 million, but the outbreak's peak is expected in May.

The pandemic that began in central China in December is believed to have infected more than 2.3 million people worldwide. At least 155,000 people have died, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

Many countries are testing only the most serious cases and the number of confirmed infections is likely to be a fraction of the true total.

Governments are under pressure to reopen factories, shops, travel and public activities even as numbers of infections rise across most of the globe.

Shutdowns that began in China in late January and spread to the United States, Europe and elsewhere have wiped out millions of jobs, plunging the world into its most painful economic slump since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

The International Monetary Fund expects the global economy to contract by an unprecedented 3 percent this year - a far bigger loss than 2009's 0.1 percent after the global financial crisis.

On Saturday, supporters of US President Donald Trump also protested in several states demanding governors end controls on public activity even as new case numbers surge.

The president on Twitter urged his supporters to "liberate" three states with Democratic governors.

Texas, Indiana and some other states have announced plans to allow some retailing and other activity to resume. Florida and South Carolina are reopening beaches.

Most Americans, by two-to-one, disagree with the protesters, however. A new Pew survey found that most were more concerned about ending home confinement too soon rather than too late.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, who has criticised the federal response as inadequate, rejected pressure to reopen businesses.

New York's daily death toll fell below 550 on Saturday for the first time in two weeks, but Cuomo said hospitals are reporting nearly 2,000 new patients a day.

"We are not at a point when we are going to be reopening anything immediately," Cuomo told reporters.

Mounting evidence suggests that social distancing slowed the pandemic after more than half of humanity - 4.5 billion people - were confined to their homes.

Some countries - Spain, Japan, the United Kingdom and Mexico - have extended restrictions on movement.

But others are loosening restrictions amid signs the outbreak could be easing.

Switzerland, Denmark and Finland reopened shops and schools this week. And Germany, which has declared the virus "under control" after 3,400 deaths, allowed some shops to reopen and will let some children return to school within weeks.

Parts of Italy began emerging from lockdown too, with Venice residents strolling around quiet canals.

Iran also allowed some businesses in the capital, Tehran, to reopen on Saturday despite the Middle East's deadliest outbreak.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...st-coronavirus-lockdowns-200419045913323.html
 
Spain's death toll from the Covid-19 outbreak rose by 410 on Sunday, down from 565 on Saturday, the health ministry said, bringing the total to 20,453 deaths in one of the world's hardest-hit countries.

The number of overall coronavirus cases rose to 195,944 on Sunday from 191,726 on Saturday, it added.
 
Millions of Orthodox believers in Russia are celebrating Easter with churches closed and services broadcast on TV and online in an attempt to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

In Moscow the main Easter vigil was held with no congregation. The patriarch told those following at homes that this was to protect them from a "terrible illness".

President Vladimir Putin, who normally attends Mass with the Patriarch, sent a video message to the nation instead. He assured people that things were "fully under control" and said Russia would come through the "trial" it had been sent.

But the country announced another record rise in new cases on Sunday, taking the total infected so far close to 43,000.

With more than 100,000 tests done each day, the number of cases detected here is growing and fast. Most are still in and around Moscow but the virus is increasingly spreading in the regions.

Despite all this, some parishes do seem to have defied the lockdown to attend services in places.
 
Iran has become the latest country to ease restrictions by allowing bazaars and shopping malls to reopen from Monday as part of an easing of lockdown restrictions. Some shops and businesses were allowed to open again on Saturday but Monday's openings will apply to "medium-risk" businesses.

Officials say more than 5,000 people have died with coronavirus in Iran so far but the true figure is believed to be much higher.

Other countries also plan to allow stores to begin operating again in the coming days:

Israel has already allowed some types of shop to reopen, although shopping malls must remain closed for the time beingPoland is gradually lifting lockdown measures from Sunday, with shops among the businesses allowed to reopen

Europe's largest economy, Germany, will allow shops of up to 800 square metres (8,611 square feet), as well as car dealers and bike shops, to open their doors again
 
Coronavirus: Spanish PM promises to ease confinement of children

Spanish children have been kept at home since 14 March, under strict measures to curb the spread of Covid-19.

Now Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez aims to relax the rule on 27 April so they can "get some fresh air".

Barcelona Mayor Ada Colau, who has young children herself, this week pleaded with the government to allow children outside.

Spain has seen more than 20,000 deaths since the start of the pandemic and almost 200,000 reported cases.

In a televised briefing on Saturday evening, Mr Sánchez said Spain had left behind "the most extreme moments and contained the brutal onslaught of the pandemic".

But he said he would ask parliament to extend Spain's state of alarm to 9 May as the achievements made were "still insufficient and above all fragile" and could not be jeopardised by "hasty decisions".

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-52341728
 
Greg. G Wolff, an Epidemiologist with the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Branch conducted a study which showed having the flu jab increased the risk of coronavirus by over 35%.

Be careful if you have had the flu jab this winter.
 
Canadian coronavirus deaths rise by almost 12pc in a day: official data

The total number of people killed by the coronavirus in Canada has risen by just under 12 per cent to 1,506 in a day, official data posted by the public health agency showed.

In a statement posted shortly before 11:00 eastern time (1500 GMT), it said the figure for those diagnosed with the coronavirus had climbed to 33,922. The respective figures on Saturday were 1,346 deaths and 32,412 positive diagnoses.
 
Greg. G Wolff, an Epidemiologist with the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Branch conducted a study which showed having the flu jab increased the risk of coronavirus by over 35%.

Be careful if you have had the flu jab this winter.

Have you got a link to the article/research on this? Curious to have a look through it.
 
I know, most of you are too lazy to read anything with more than three lines, so I always bold out the interesting bit, just for you. <3

Coronavirus bursting Israeli ultra-Orthodox fatal bubble

Most Israelis have been holed up in their homes for the past few weeks and isolated from the rest of the world. Yet even as the directives of the Ministry of Health became increasingly stringent, a significant part of the ultra-Orthodox community and leadership continued living in denial. The Israeli media spent many long days reporting about instructions given by the leader of the Lithuanian faction of the ultra-Orthodox community, Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky. He had ordered his followers not to stop yeshiva studies or prayer quorums, and to continue with large weddings and funerals with numerous participants. In fact, these continued to take place in Bnei Brak, Beit Shemesh and Jerusalem. It is hard to imagine, but while this was going on, Minister of Health Yaakov Litzman, himself the representative of the Ashkenazi ultra-Orthodox community in the government and a member of the Gur Hasidic sect, asked Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to exempt synagogues from the closure order and to allow the ultra-Orthodox to continue praying in a quorum as is their custom.

That's why no one was surprised when the densely populated ultra-Orthodox towns and neighborhoods became hotspots for the spread of the coronavirus and home to the highest number of people infected. And yet, even after the ultra-Orthodox community recognized the danger inherent in this pandemic, underground "minyanim" (prayer quorums of 10 people at least) continued to take place, with lookouts warning worshippers if the police were coming. Ultra-Orthodox children playing in the streets even coughed on the police and called them Nazis. According to various testimonies, Litzman himself, who has the virus that causes COVID-19, continued to pray in a synagogue quorum despite the directives of the very ministry he heads.

Friction between civil authorities and the ultra-Orthodox community has never been as serious as it is now. With the number of coronavirus carriers in Bnei Brak soaring, the government declared the city a "restricted zone" on April 2. Thus, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have been forced to enter the largest and most densely populated ultra-Orthodox city in order to restore order and assist residents sequestered in their homes, in many cases without enough food or medication.

In the early hours of April 6, the Cabinet adopted by phone a decision to allow the government to close off more cities and neighborhoods in Israel and the West Bank. Thus, the government imposed closure over eight secular and ultra-Orthodox cities and over 15 Orthodox/ultra-Orthodox neighborhoods in Jerusalem. DF troops started patrolling the streets of ultra-Orthodox urban centers such as Elad, Modi’in Ilit and the Meah Shearim neighborhood of Jerusalem.

According to news reports, the Israeli economy will not be able to function until the situation in ultra-Orthodox towns and neighborhoods stabilizes. This is causing the sociopolitical situation to become more violent and extreme than ever. Anyone who attacks the ultra-Orthodox leadership or public is subject to retaliation, often being called “Nazi” and “anti-Semite.” On the other side of the divide, every ultra-Orthodox Jew is automatically considered a “lawbreaker” and “spreader of the disease.”

Obviously, the truth is much more complicated than these mutual accusations. This is because it is not just about the coronavirus. It is part of a much larger story concerning the relationship between the State of Israel and the ultra-Orthodox. The ultra-Orthodox community received an unusual degree of autonomy in Israel, under the aegis of politicians from the right and the left. It is the inevitable outcome of their enormous political power. In private, politicians from across the political spectrum admit that they prefer to have the ultra-Orthodox in their coalitions, because “it is easier to close a deal with them.” In exchange for full social, educational and religious autonomy and generous funding for their educational institutions and yeshivas, they provide the other parties with the seats they need, and rarely make problems (especially as compared to the other members of the coalition). No one knows exactly how this can be changed either. There are no plans to get the ultra-Orthodox to agree to teaching a core curriculum in their schools, serving in the IDF or holding a job.

Over the years, there has been a growth in the number of citizens who get no training for life in the modern world. They don’t learn math or English; they don’t go near chemistry, biology or physics; and they don’t know how to use a computer. Not all of them become yeshiva students dedicating their lives to studying the Torah, yet even those who are unfit for that kind of life cannot serve in the army or work. According to the Central Bureau of Statistics, less than 50% of ultra-Orthodox men were considered employed in November 2018. This figure includes those who work part-time or even just one day a month. As a result, they don’t meet the minimum requirements to pay taxes and they are not part of Israel’s contributing population.

This public is used to living in poverty and making do with little. In times of crisis or disaster, however, this little is not enough. Their refusal to cooperate with law enforcement, even in severe cases of pedophilia and domestic violence, is damaging to ultra-Orthodox society itself. Though it is not all the ultra-Orthodox, a good part of the community rejects the State of Israel and its institutions altogether, and regards them with hostility. Yes, they must be tolerated, but they must still stay away from them like fire. There is a kind of "iron curtain," which the ultra-Orthodox leadership built to separate their community from the country at large. These leaders, the "gedoilim" (the sages), are the important rabbis who run this world according to their own rules, with the help of ultra-Orthodox politicians, journalists and wheeler-dealers. All of this is intended to maintain their political power and wield it as they please. We should keep in mind that most of the ultra-Orthodox community does not watch television or access internet. Many of them heard about the pandemic when cars fitted with loudspeakers started making rounds of ultra-Orthodox towns and neighborhoods to inform them.

What this coronavirus pandemic has shown clearly is that despite the physical and metaphysical barriers that the ultra-Orthodox have built around themselves (entry into some ultra-Orthodox cities is banned from Friday evening until the end of the Sabbath), it is all worthless, because this virus doesn’t recognize any boundaries. What happens in Bnei Brak has an impact on Nazareth and Tel Aviv, according to head of the Arab Joint List Ayman Odeh. If there is a significant outbreak in ultra-Orthodox Elad or Bnei Brak, all the other sick people in Israel will suffer as a result of it. And when the virus starts spreading quickly, the unbelievable happens, and IDF soldiers are posted to those very neighborhoods where people are adamant about refusing to let their own sons serve in the military.

The relationship between the ultra-Orthodox public and the state authorities must undergo a significant shift once the coronavirus crisis is over. The bubble in which the ultra-Orthodox have lived for so long just burst.

There are already signs of internal criticism, and this could well get much louder as Israel approaches the highpoint of this pandemic, which, according to the Ministry of Health, has yet to come. It is very important that the ultra-Orthodox community, part of which has been undergoing a gradual process of emancipation over the last few years, realizes that the people keeping it from obtaining knowledge are also keeping it from power and from making educated decisions. No less important is the idea that Israeli politicians must realize that the very existence of a state within a state is unconscionable and was wrong from the outset. The ultra-Orthodox leadership’s insistence on taking things to the extreme — inciting against the state on the one hand and forcing it to accept its priorities on the other, all the while sucking up vast budgets — has brought Israel to where it is today.

Not everyone realizes the scope of this tragedy. Once the crisis is over and the full picture becomes clear, civil authorities and the ultra-Orthodox community must engage each other in a new dialogue, based on respect of the law as it exists in Israel, cooperation with state institutions and a fundamental change in attitudes toward the state among the ultra-Orthodox public.

https://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/or...-draft-coronavirus-yeshiva.html#ixzz6J2nLKWo4

The things seem to have escalated!

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="und" dir="ltr">This will turn into yet another riot if the police don't act fast.<br><br>(Video: מחאות החרדים הקיצוניים) <a href="https://t.co/9S5j7rA9t8">pic.twitter.com/9S5j7rA9t8</a></p>— Emanuel (Mannie) Fabian (@manniefabian) <a href="https://twitter.com/manniefabian/status/1251964120070590465?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 19, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Ultra-Orthodox man being arrested during the protests in Jerusalem. <a href="https://t.co/bCi1q0kKVf">pic.twitter.com/bCi1q0kKVf</a></p>— Emanuel (Mannie) Fabian (@manniefabian) <a href="https://twitter.com/manniefabian/status/1251966000335028225?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 19, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Never thought I'd see such scenes. Ultra-orthodox jews rioting.
 
Three beaches in Sydney re-open as New South Wales records just six new cases

Despite falling cases, Australia still has strict "lockdown" rules

New York's governor says cases there are "slowing, not growing"

The number of deaths in the US now exceeds 41,000

"Dozens" of members of staff in Afghanistan's presidential palace test positive

In Latin America, the number of cases is now above 100,000
 
Several European countries are starting off the new week with tentative steps to ease the strict lockdowns in place.

On Monday, in Germany small shops will be allowed to open and schools will resume for those classes that have graduation exams coming up.

Last week Berlin said the infection rate had slowed and that the outbreak was under control - while warning that people had to remain vigilant to avoid a second wave of infections.

Also from Monday, Poland will re-open parks and forests and in Norway, nursery schools will reopen their doors to children. The Czech Republic will allow open-air markets to trade and in Albania, the mining and oil industries can operate again.

However, Spain, which has one of Europe’s strictest lockdowns, and France have both decided to hold off on relaxation of measures for a few more weeks. In Spain though, children will be allowed some time outside from next week.
 
For the first time in weeks restrictions are easing in Germany.

The country has flattened the curve of new infections and last week said the virus was tentatively under control.

Small shops, bookshops, garages and bicycle stores of any size are being allowed to open their doors, as long as they apply social distancing measures.

Schools remain largely closed but the classes about to graduate this summer will gradually resume and universities will be allowed to hold exams. All other lockdown measures will remain in place.

Germany on Monday recorded 1,775 new cases for the past day while the number of deaths linked to Covid-19 rose by 110 to 4,404, according to official figures.
 
Spanish cases rise to over 200,000

The number of people diagnosed with coronavirus has risen to 200,210, according to Spain's health ministry.

Nearly 400 new deaths have also been reported since yesterday, bringing the total toll to 20,852.

Spain has the second-highest number of confirmed infection cases in the world, behind the US, figures from Johns Hopkins University say.
 
Singapore has confirmed 1,426 new Covid-19 cases - its biggest daily jump yet.

With just over 8,000 cases, the country has the most number of infections in Southeast Asia, surpassing figures in Indonesia and the Philippines.

Officials said that the majority of the new cases were foreign workers while 16 of the new cases are Singaporeans or those with permanent residency.

Once praised for its success in containing the virus, Singapore is now facing a surge of infections linked to industrial work sites and tightly packed worker dormitories.

Around 300,000 low-wage workers, mostly from South Asia, work in Singapore in construction and maintenance.
 
A three-person committee has begun looking into an incident over the weekend when 100,000 people defied the nation-wide lockdown in Bangladesh.

They broke the rules to attend the funeral of Maulana Jubayer Ahmed Ansari, a senior member of an Islamist party.

The incident has sparked fears of leading to massive Covid-19 clusters emerging from the event. Bangladesh has confirmed more than 2,400 cases so far and 91 deaths.

Here's more news from the rest of South Asia:

Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan has urged citizens to stay at home and follow social distancing orders as cases continue to soar in the region. The country has more than 8,400 infections so far

Over the weekend, Nepal sealed 14 mosques and quarantined 33 Indians and seven Pakistanis who were taking refuge in them, local media reported

Sri Lanka will ease its strict lockdown next week, authorities said on Saturday. The island nation has reported just under 250 positive cases and seven deaths.
 
Coronavirus: Brazil's Bolsonaro joins anti-lockdown protests

Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro has come under criticism for joining protesters demanding that restrictions on movement introduced to stop the spread of coronavirus be lifted.

Mr Bolsonaro has clashed in recent weeks with state governors who have imposed lockdowns, denouncing the measures as "dictatorial".

As of Sunday, Brazil had more than 38,000 confirmed cases, the highest number in Latin America.

More than 2,400 people there have died.

President Bolsonaro addressed a crowd of a few hundred supporters outside army headquarters in the capital, Brasilia.

He said the protesters were "patriots" for defending individual freedoms.

As well as demanding an end to the lockdown, some of those attending the rally also held up signs calling for Brazil's Congress and the Supreme Court to be closed down.

Others said they wanted the military to take over the handling of the coronavirus crisis.

Brazil was under military rule for more than two decades from 1964 until 1985 and calls for the armed forces to be given more power are highly controversial.

While the president did not make any reference to those demands, his appearance at the rally - at which people were calling for the closure of the country's democratic institutions - has been labelled "provocative" by his critics.

Journalists also noted that he neither wore a face mask, even though he coughed on occasion, nor gloves - precautions which many other politicians in the region are taking.

He has in the past dismissed coronavirus as "little more than a flu".

The speaker of Brazil's Chamber of Deputies, Rodrigo Maia, tweeted that "the whole world is united against coronavirus, but in Brazil we have to fight the coronavirus and the virus of authoritarianism".

"In the name of the Chamber of Deputies, I reject any and all acts which defend the dictatorship," he added.

Relations between the president on the one hand and Congress and the Supreme Court on the other have been tense, with Mr Bolsonaro claiming they are trying to curtail his powers and even oust him.

Last week, the president sacked his health minister, Luiz Henrique Mandetta, who had backed the lockdown measures.

President Bolsonaro argues that the lockdown measures are damaging the economy and has argued that they should be eased and Brazil's borders reopened.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-52351636
 
Coronavirus: Brazil's Bolsonaro joins anti-lockdown protests

Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro has come under criticism for joining protesters demanding that restrictions on movement introduced to stop the spread of coronavirus be lifted.

Mr Bolsonaro has clashed in recent weeks with state governors who have imposed lockdowns, denouncing the measures as "dictatorial".

As of Sunday, Brazil had more than 38,000 confirmed cases, the highest number in Latin America.

More than 2,400 people there have died.

President Bolsonaro addressed a crowd of a few hundred supporters outside army headquarters in the capital, Brasilia.

He said the protesters were "patriots" for defending individual freedoms.

As well as demanding an end to the lockdown, some of those attending the rally also held up signs calling for Brazil's Congress and the Supreme Court to be closed down.

Others said they wanted the military to take over the handling of the coronavirus crisis.

Brazil was under military rule for more than two decades from 1964 until 1985 and calls for the armed forces to be given more power are highly controversial.

While the president did not make any reference to those demands, his appearance at the rally - at which people were calling for the closure of the country's democratic institutions - has been labelled "provocative" by his critics.

Journalists also noted that he neither wore a face mask, even though he coughed on occasion, nor gloves - precautions which many other politicians in the region are taking.

He has in the past dismissed coronavirus as "little more than a flu".

The speaker of Brazil's Chamber of Deputies, Rodrigo Maia, tweeted that "the whole world is united against coronavirus, but in Brazil we have to fight the coronavirus and the virus of authoritarianism".

"In the name of the Chamber of Deputies, I reject any and all acts which defend the dictatorship," he added.

Relations between the president on the one hand and Congress and the Supreme Court on the other have been tense, with Mr Bolsonaro claiming they are trying to curtail his powers and even oust him.

Last week, the president sacked his health minister, Luiz Henrique Mandetta, who had backed the lockdown measures.

President Bolsonaro argues that the lockdown measures are damaging the economy and has argued that they should be eased and Brazil's borders reopened.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-52351636

How can a world leader of such a massive country be so publicy stupid?
 
Europe's tentative steps out of lockdown

The Czech Republic made its first move to lift restrictions two weeks ago, allowing citizens to cycle, jog and hike in the countryside without face masks.

They’ll discuss travel today, with President Milos Zeman suggesting he wants the borders to remain closed for a year, and urging people to “savour the beauty of the Czech countryside” instead.

In Norway this morning children returned to pre-school, under three conditions: they must take packed-lunches, no toys can be brought in from home, and there must be hand-washing facilities outside.

Books, bikes and cars are being sold again today in Germany, with face masks recommended in public places, and mandatory in some states.

But for others, confinement endures.

In Spain, some construction work has restarted but general lockdown measures remain tight. A ban on children leaving their homes has been lifted, so they can now get fresh air.

Belgium and France will stay under lockdown until early May, with care home deaths still a huge concern in both countries.
 
Rioting has broken out in housing estates around Paris as tensions escalated over the coronavirus lockdown.
 
Canadian coronavirus deaths rise by almost 7 percent

The total number of people killed by the coronavirus in Canada rose by almost 7 percent to 1,611 from a day earlier, official data posted by the public health agency showed.

In a statement posted shortly before 11:00 eastern time (15:00 GMT), it said the figure for those diagnosed with the coronavirus had climbed to 35,392.

The respective figures on Sunday were 1,506 deaths and 33,922 positive diagnoses.
 
Canadian coronavirus deaths rise by almost 7 percent

The total number of people killed by the coronavirus in Canada rose by almost 7 percent to 1,611 from a day earlier, official data posted by the public health agency showed.

In a statement posted shortly before 11:00 eastern time (15:00 GMT), it said the figure for those diagnosed with the coronavirus had climbed to 35,392.

The respective figures on Sunday were 1,506 deaths and 33,922 positive diagnoses.

still very low compared to the UK where it seems they dont really care of 100k die or not.
 
More than 130 asylum seekers in Lisbon, Portugal, have contracted the coronavirus after an outbreak at their hostel.

Of about 180 residents, 138 tested positive for the virus, the mayor's office said.

The hostel was evacuated and disinfected on Sunday after one resident was taken to hospital, and everyone who had tested positive was relocated and placed in quarantine.

In Portugal, 735 people have died with the virus, according to official figures, and there have been 20,863 confirmed cases.
 
Italian authorities say the number of people officially identified as infected with coronavirus has fallen for the first time since the country's outbreak began.

"For the first time, we have seen a new positive development: the number of currently positive has declined," civil protection agency chief Angelo Borrelli told reporters.

As of Monday, there were 108,237 people either being treated in hospital or recovering at home after testing positive, 20 fewer than the previous day - a small but symbolic drop.
On Sunday, the increase of active positive cases was 486.

Italy has the third-highest number of Covid-19 cases in the world after Spain and the US. However, as people who die at home or in care facilities are not included in its figures, many doctors believe its actual death and infection rates may be higher than the official tallies.
 
France has become the latest country to record more than 20,000 deaths related to coronavirus, a toll its director of health has called "symbolic and painful".

As of Monday, there have been 20,265 virus-related deaths in France - 12,513 of them in hospitals and 7,752 in nursing homes, Jérôme Salomon said.

"Tonight, our country is crossing a painful symbolic milestone," he said.

Three other countries have so far recorded more than 20,000 deaths - Spain, Italy and the US.
 
491f4995-23f9-48f4-b313-04145d597771.png
 
Donald Trump to suspend immigration to the United States He said on Twitter it was a response to "invisible enemy" and to protect jobs

Virgin Australia, which Sir Richard Branson's group part-owns, enters administration

Australia's second-biggest airline is yet another corporate casualty of the virus

Sir Richard is also seeking loans for Virgin Atlantic and has offered an island as collateral

Another 1,433 people with Covid-19 die in the US, taking the total above 42,000

Cases continue to grow exponentially in Singapore, mostly among the migrant worker community
 
ICRC steps up support in congested Asian prisons

The International Committee of the Red Cross, which works in prisons worldwide, is stepping up efforts to curb the spread of coronavirus in overcrowded prisons in the Philippines, Cambodia and Bangladesh.

As well as a 48-bed isolation centre for Manila's prisons, it has donated 20 tonnes of healthcare, hygiene and sanitation items to Cambodia's Directorate General of Prisons and organised hygiene-training sessions for prison staff in Bangladesh where it has also distributed disinfection materials.
 
I think by the time COVID-19 saga is over, we will possibly have over 10-million cases and close to 1-million deaths.

Let's see.
 
Spain's health ministry says the number of reported COVID-19 deaths in the country has risen by 430 to 21,282 and the number of confirmed coronavirus cases has risen by 3,968 to 204,178
 
Russia's confirmed coronavirus cases surge past 52,000

Russia recorded 5,642 new coronavirus cases in the last 24 hours, bringing its nationwide tally to 52,763, the Russian coronavirus crisis response centre said.
 
Stranded in Chile and protests in Colombia - here's the latest on the coronavirus pandemic in Latin America.

Medical personnel in Peru have protested against the lack of protective equipment in hospitals which they say is forcing them to re-use single-use masks. According to a tally kept by Johns Hopkins University, Peru has more than 16,000 confirmed cases of coronavirus - second only to Brazil in Latin America.

Hundreds of Bolivians have been allowed to enter their country after being stranded in neighbouring Chile for two weeks. The two countries reached a deal to temporarily open the closed border to let 450 Bolivians return home. Bolivia says it has set up shelters where the returnees - who lost their jobs in Chile's informal economy - will be quarantined

In Colombia, residents of the poor suburbs of Bogotá barricaded streets in protest at what the say is the failure of the authorities to deliver the food parcels they had been promised to see them through the quarantine.
 
Number of people facing acute hunger could nearly double - UN

The coronavirus pandemic could nearly double the number of people around the world facing acute hunger, the UN's World Food Programme has warned.

"The number of people facing acute food insecurity stands to rise to 265m in 2020, up by 130m from 135m in 2019, as a result of the economic impact of Covid-19," the WFP said its projections had shown.

The warning came as the WFP and other partners released a new report on food crises around the world.

The fourth annual Global Report on Food Crises found that food insecurity was already on the rise last year before the outbreak of the coronavirus crisis.
 
Global coronavirus cases close to 2.5 million

There are currently 2,494,915 confirmed coronavirus cases worldwide and 171,152 recorded deaths, according to data from Johns Hopkins University on 21 April at 12:00 BST.

amir1.jpgamir2.jpg
 
Latest roundup from Asia

Singapore has extended its partial lockdown until 1 June. The measures - called circuit breakers by the government - include school closures and almost everyone working from home. Social gatherings are banned.

Hong Kong has extended its social distancing measures until at least 7 May. The region reported four new cases on Tuesday. Chief executive Carrie Lam warned: "This is not the time to be complacent. If we relax, the good work we have done will be in vain."

Football clubs in South Korea will be allowed to hold practice matches behind closed doors from Tuesday, according to the K League. The season has already been delayed by two months due to the pandemic.

On Tuesday, China’s state media said more than 4,106 people have been screened after two clusters of Covid-19 infections were discovered at hospitals there. Harbin is close to the Russian border and not too far from Suifenhe, one of the two hotspots that the government seems nervous about.
 
PARIS (Reuters) - Crowds of youths targeted riot police with fireworks and torched rubbish bins in a third night of unrest on the outskirts of Paris where a heavy police presence to enforce a lockdown has exacerbated tensions.

France’s banlieues — high-rise, low-income neighbourhoods that encircle many of its cities — are frequently flashpoints of anger over social and economic inequality and allegations of heavy-handed policing.

In Villeneuve-La-Garenne, where the trouble first flared on Saturday after a motorcyclist crashed into the open door of a police car, youths aimed volleys of fireworks down streets lined with housing blocks towards police lines.

France’s lockdown permits people to leave home only to buy groceries, go to work, seek medical care or exercise. Some local residents said officers deliberately opened the door into the path of the motorcyclist, who required surgery to his leg. An investigation was underway, police said.

Unrest also broke out on the night of Monday to Tuesday in the neighbouring districts of Gennevilliers, Clichy-La-Garenne and Asnieres.

“The police are moving through the streets, LBDs and shields at the ready. Multiple fireworks,” tweeted Clement Lanot, a freelance journalist, at around midnight as violence broke out.

MEMORIES OF 2005

In 2005, the deaths of two youths fleeing police in a northern Paris suburb triggered nationwide riots that lasted three weeks.

“It’s taking a turn that reminds me of 2005,” said Yves Lefebvre, the head of France’s biggest police union, SGP Unite.

“What I fear is that it will explode in the banlieues. It may get very difficult.”

Police resources were being stretched by an absenteeism rate of about 10%, Lefebvre said, with officers off sick, in isolation or having to look after children during the lockdown.

“If tomorrow we’re confronted by widespread urban violence, we would have trouble keeping on top of it unless a curfew was put in place, and the army called in to help enforce it,” Lefebvre added.

A spokesperson for the national police force declined to comment on the possible need for a curfew if the situation deteriorated.

The Alliance police union reported sporadic outbreaks of unrest in working low-income towns in the Yvelines region, west of the greater Paris region. Police cars were vandalised, fireworks let off and projectiles hurled at officers.

Julien Le Cam, head of the Alliance union in the Yvelines, said officers from investigative units were being redeployed to street patrols to maintain numbers.

“Normally one town is ‘on duty’ and they pass the baton. Last night it was all of them,” said Le Cam. “There were violent groups in all our difficult zones looking for contact with the police.”

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...kirts-amid-coronavirus-lockdown-idUSKBN2230IA
 
NEW DELHI/ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - About 500 people entered self-isolation in staff quarters of India’s presidential palace on Tuesday, and Pakistan’s prime minister was due to be tested, as the coronavirus spreading through South Asia hit the heart of the region’s governments.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and his wife tested negative for the coronavirus, his spokesman said, after at least 20 palace officials were infected last week. In Pakistan, Prime Minister Imran Khan will undergo testing after it was confirmed that the head of the country’s biggest charity organisation, Faisal Edhi, whom he met last week, had contracted COVID-19.

In India, the alarm was raised at President Ram Nath Kovind’s residence in Delhi after the daughter-in-law of a sanitation worker living in employee quarters tested positive. Neither Kovind, 74, nor his aides would self-isolate as they would not have come into contact with lower-level workers, officials said. The president has a mostly ceremonial role.

The families of palace workers living in 114 apartments on the grounds were ordered to stay inside, and seven members of the sanitation worker’s family were moved to quarantine.

India’s 1.3 billion people have been ordered to remain indoors for 40 days under a nationwide lockdown to slow the spread of the virus.

Indian authorities have confirmed 18,984 cases of COVID-19, including 603 deaths, a low toll compared with Western countries with much smaller populations, though officials say a lack of testing may mean many more cases have not been reported.

An employee of India’s parliament has also tested positive, but did not come to work, an official said. The administrative wing of the legislature reopened on Monday as part of a staggered exit from the lockdown.

While the total number of confirmed infections is rising, Indian health officials said the speed of transmission was slowing thanks to the lockdown, in place until May 3.

The “doubling rate” - the number of days it takes infections to multiply by two - had increased to 7.5 days, up from 3.4 days before the lockdown, health ministry joint secretary Lav Agarwal said. “This is an extremely positive trend,” he said.

In Pakistan, Edhi, the charity group leader diagnosed with COVID-19, said he had met Prime Minister Khan last week to hand him a cheque to help fund the nation’s fight against the coronavirus. Neither was wearing a mask in the picture the government released after the meeting in Islamabad.

During a televised briefing on Tuesday, Dr Faisal Sultan, the prime minister’s personal physician, who is also the country’s focal person for COVID-19, said Khan would heed advice to undergo testing. Khan was present at the briefing too.

The prime minister has held a number of meetings over the last few days, including chairing a cabinet meeting on Tuesday. He met the president and intelligence chief a day earlier.

Pakistan has relaxed its lockdown to allow essential industries and services to resume operations. It also lifted restrictions on mosque congregations as the Muslim holy month of Ramadan starts later this week.

In Afghanistan, Ghani, 70, had limited most of his contact with staff to digital communication after some came down with COVID-19.

“The president is healthy and is leading government efforts on all fronts. All precautions are in place to make sure his work environment is safe and healthy,” his spokesman, Sediq Sediqqi, said on Twitter.

Here are official government figures on the spread of the coronavirus in South Asia:

* India has reported 18,984 cases, including 603 deaths

* Pakistan has reported 9,216 cases, including 192 deaths

* Afghanistan has reported 1,092 cases, including 35 deaths

* Sri Lanka has reported 310 cases, including seven deaths

* Bangladesh has reported 2,948 cases, including 101 deaths

* Maldives has reported 34 cases and no deaths

* Nepal has reported 32 cases and no deaths

* Bhutan has reported six cases and no deaths
 
After denial, Indonesia sees mounting coronavirus deaths

While Indonesia's neighbours scrambled early this year to try to contain the spread of the coronavirus, the government of the world's fourth most populous nation insisted that everything was fine, AP reports.

In speeches, Indonesia's health minister, Terawan Agus Putranto, told his country's people that they shouldn't fear the virus, even as tens of thousands around the world were being infected.

Rather than focus on creating social distancing guidelines or ramping up testing, Putranto credited Indonesian immunity and the strength of prayer for the country's lack of any infections. He dismissed as "insulting” a report by Harvard University researchers that said Indonesia must have elected not to report its cases.

Indonesia did not even confirm its first case of the virus until early March. As of Tuesday, the nation had reported at least 7,135 infections including 616 deaths. That's more Covid-19 fatalities than all other Asian counties except China.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo acknowledged last month that the government chose to keep the public misinformed about the state of the coronavirus in the country.

"Indeed, we did not deliver certain information to the public because we did not want to stir panic," he said.[/B]

While Indonesia's neighbours scrambled early this year to try to contain the spread of the coronavirus, the government of the world's fourth most populous nation insisted that everything was fine, AP reports.

In speeches, Indonesia's health minister, Terawan Agus Putranto, told his country's people that they shouldn't fear the virus, even as tens of thousands around the world were being infected.

Rather than focus on creating social distancing guidelines or ramping up testing, Putranto credited Indonesian immunity and the strength of prayer for the country's lack of any infections. He dismissed as "insulting” a report by Harvard University researchers that said Indonesia must have elected not to report its cases.

Indonesia did not even confirm its first case of the virus until early March. As of Tuesday, the nation had reported at least 7,135 infections including 616 deaths. That's more Covid-19 fatalities than all other Asian counties except China.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo acknowledged last month that the government chose to keep the public misinformed about the state of the coronavirus in the country.

"Indeed, we did not deliver certain information to the public because we did not want to stir panic," he said.
 
Major public gatherings of more than 5,000 people will remain banned in the Republic of Ireland until at least 1 September.

Large gatherings have been restricted since 24 March. The government said on Tuesday that local authorities had been advised not to consider licences for any such events.

It means no major sporting fixtures or concerts will take place in the country this summer.

On Tuesday the government confirmed there had been 44 more coronavirus-linked deaths in the Republic of Ireland, bringing the total to 730. Some 388 new cases have also been confirmed, with the total now 16,040.
 
The mid-western state of Missouri files a civil lawsuit in a US court, accusing China of deception

"The Chinese government lied to the world and silenced whistleblowers," the lawsuit says

In Australia, the Chinese embassy accuses Australian politicians of anti-China attacks

President Donald Trump's immigration ban will last 60 days

Singapore extends its "lockdown" until 1 June and tightens restrictions

The World Food Programme says the virus could cause "biblical" famines

New customers for Netflix almost double in the first quarter of the year
 
Spain PM aims to ease lockdown in May

Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez says his government plans to start winding down the country's lockdown measures in the second half of May, reports Reuters.

These restrictions will be eased slowly and gradually to ensure safety, he said at a parliamentary session. Mr Sanchez is also expected to extend Spain's state of emergency until 9 May.

Spain first enforced its lockdown on 14 March. It has the second highest number of virus cases in the world at 204,178, according to a Johns Hopkins University tally.
 
Spain loosens restrictions on children after an outcry and Romania raises millions of euros in lockdown fines. Here’s the latest from Europe:

Children are currently not allowed outside for any reason in Spain. On Tuesday the government initially said young children would be allowed out, but only to run errands with their parents. After a huge backlash they loosened the rules further – from Sunday children up to the age of 14 will be allowed out for a walk, accompanied by an adult.

In one month, Romania has raised €78 million (£69m) after handing out about 200,000 fines to people who flouted national virus restrictions. It’s roughly the equivalent of the national corporate tax income for the whole of February.

Traffic cameras in Moscow will now check cars for digital travel permits, as the Russian capital tightens its lockdown measures. Anyone with cold-like symptoms will also have to stay home, as will their family members
There has been a fourth consecutive night of unrest in the Paris suburb of Villeneuve-la-Garenne. Social tensions have risen further under strict lockdown rules.

And this September’s Berlin Marathon has been called off after Germany extended its ban on large public gatherings until 24 October
 
Singapore cases pass 10,000

The number of cases in Singapore has crossed the 10,000 mark, tipped over by 1,016 new cases reported on Wednesday.

Singapore now has the highest number of cases in South East Asia, with a large majority of these cases linked to dormitories that house foreign workers.
 
In Brazil, tributes are being paid to 32-year-old doctor Frederic Jota Lima who died on Monday. Mass graves are being excavated for coronavirus victims in Manaus, which has reported 193 deaths and a collapsing health system. The number of infections in the country reached more than 43,000 on Tuesday, but some governors are easing social distancing measures

Mexico reports an 8.3% increase in infections, rising to a total of 9,501 cases. 857 people have now died there. In Mexico City, 20% of public transport stops will close from Thursday, and most private cars will be banned from the roads

Stranded Ecuadoran citizens abroad will be flown home and quarantined for 14 days, the government announces. Officials reported a further 902 deaths likely caused by Covid-19, in addition to the 520 officially confirmed in the country where bodies were seen piling up in the capital Guayaquil. The government hopes to renegotiate its foreign debt and wants to re-open some commercial businesses as the economy continues to be hit hard by quarantine measures

In Peru, the government has helped to transport 4,000 people made unemployed by the pandemic from the capital Lima home to their regions. Officials have warned stranded people not to return to the country’s highlands on foot

And in Colombia, robots are going door-to-door to deliver parcels to quarantined residents of the city of Medellin, where a lockdown will continue until 11 May . The company who deployed the 120 robots say they are some of the first to be used in Latin America

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Spain has recorded 435 deaths in the past 24 hours.

This number, a slight increase on yesterday, brings their overall death toll to 21,717.

It comes as the country's parliament debates a request from the prime minister to extend the current state of emergency until 9 May.
Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez says his government plans to start winding down the country's lockdown measures after this date.

"We will be going back-and-forth depending on how the pandemic evolves," he said.
The country has almost 205,000 confirmed coronavirus cases - the second highest in the world.
 
All 16 German states have announced plans to make face masks compulsory, as the country slowly reduces its lockdown restrictions.

The rules will differ slightly from state to state. Mask use will however be mandatory on public transport throughout the country, and nearly all states will also make people wear face coverings when shopping.
 
The number of people who have died with coronavirus in Italy, one of the countries hardest hit by the pandemic, has passed 25,000.

Italy's civil protection services on Wednesday reported a further 437 fatalities over the past 24 hours, increasing the overall tally to 25,085.

However, the number of people registered as currently carrying the illness fell to 107,699 from 107,709 on Tuesday, a third consecutive daily decline.

There were 2,384 people in intensive care on Wednesday compared with 2,471 on Tuesday.

Italy's death toll is the second highest in the world after the US.

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said Italy will announce a plan to gradually exit its lockdown by the end of this week.
 
A further 544 people have died with coronavirus in hospital and care homes in France.

The tally - 336 in hospital and 208 in care homes - brought France's total Covid-19 death toll to 21,340.

Wednesday's daily figure of 544 deaths is 13 more than was reported in the previous 24 hours.

On Monday, France became the fourth country after Italy, Spain and the USA to pass the 20,000-fatality mark.

France has been under lockdown for five weeks. Last week French President Emmanuel Macron said this would be extended until 11 May, and that public events could not be held until mid-July at the earliest
 
The head of the US agency in charge of developing a vaccine against the coronavirus says he was removed from his job for opposing the chloroquine treatment promoted by US President Donald Trump.

The head of the World Health Organization (WHO) says there are "worrying upward trends" in early epidemics in parts of Africa and Central and South America, warning that the "virus will be with us for a long time".

More than 2.5 million people around the world have been diagnosed with the coronavirus. At least 178,000 have died with the United States accounting for about a quarter of all deaths, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

The United Nations is warning global hunger could double as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, putting 265 million people at risk.
 
French clashes this week unlike 2005 riots - minister

French Interior Minister Christophe Castaner does not think this week's outbreak of violent clashes in French housing estates will result in scenes similar to the 2005 riots that broke out throughout the country.

"We are not in this sort of scenario," he told BFM TV.

Current coronavirus-related restrictions have exacerbated tensions in low-income neighbourhoods around the capital.

The 2005 unrest - sparked by the death of two youths who were fleeing police in a northern Paris suburb - lasted three weeks.
 
Spanish death toll tops 22,000

Spain's virus death toll has passed the 22,000 mark in the third slight daily rise, the country's health ministry says.

Some 440 people had died from the coronavirus in the previous 24 hours, which brought total fatalities to 22,157, it added.
 
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