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Coronavirus pandemic - World News

The EU Commissioner for Home Affairs says states should reopen internal borders by end of June

Ylva Johansson made the comments before a meeting of national ministers on Friday

Some EU states have reopened some borders, but others remain closed

In England, masks will be compulsory on public transport from 15 June

Article that said hydroxychloroquine increases risk of death in coronavirus patients is withdrawn

Peru declares oxygen a 'strategic resource' - meaning hospitals get priority on supplies

Basketball teams in the NBA vote to resume matches on 31 July in Disneyworld, Florida

Globally, there have been 6.6m cases since the outbreak began and 388,000 deaths
 
Fiji says it's free of coronavirus

The Pacific island of Fiji has declared itself free from coronavirus, after its last known infected patient was given the all-clear.

Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama said its success was a result of "answered prayers, hard work and affirmation of science".

Fiji was among a handful of Pacific Islands struck by the virus. The first case was recorded there in mid-March, sparking panic across the nation.

The Pacific Islands were initially seen as among the world's most vulnerable to the disease due to their under-resourced health infrastructure system. But countries acted quickly to close their borders and shut down tourism - and many have remained successful in keeping the virus at bay.
 
India logs more than 9,800 new coronavirus cases while neighbour Pakistan sees a record one-day spike in deaths.

Pakistan reported a record single-day spike in coronavirus-related deaths with 82 new fatalities and 4,688 cases that it says resulted from increased testing in the past 24 hours.

India's COVID-19 fatalities have passed 6,000 after registering 260 deaths in the last 24 hours. The country registered 9,304 new cases in yet another record single-day spike in infections, raising its totals to 216,919 cases with 6,075 deaths, the Health Ministry reported on Thursday.

Turkey is set to impose a weekend curfew in 15 cities to curb the spread of the virus.

The coronavirus death toll in Brazil soared to a new daily record, with 1,473 fatalities logged at the end of Thursday. With more than 34,000 deaths, Brazil now has the third highest toll in the world.

Around 6.6 million coronavirus cases have been confirmed around the world, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. More than 389,000 people have died, including some 108,000 in the United States. More than 2.8 million people have recovered from the disease.
 
Russia's coronavirus infections near 450,000

Russia reported 8,726 new cases of the novel coronavirus on Friday, pushing the total number of infections to 449,834.

Officials said 144 people had died in the last 24 hours, bringing the official nationwide death toll to 5,528.
 
I don't think people realise how bad the situation is in Brazil. They have only tested about 980,000 people and 615,000 of those were confirmed to be infected. Those are astonishing numbers.
 
As more and more European countries ease border controls the EU is trying to co-ordinate their actions.

The European Commission, which drafts EU laws, wants the 27 member states to lift their internal border controls by 1 July. Most are in the Schengen zone, where citizens enjoy passport-free travel, but the pandemic brought border lockdowns across Europe. EU Home Affairs Commissioner Ylva Johansson announced the plan on Euronews, and the states’ home affairs ministers are discussing easing border controls today

The EU makes a big distinction between internal and external borders; the talk is not about lifting controls for non-EU travellers arriving in the bloc. Some border controls have already been lifted. Today the Czech Republic is lifting its controls with neighbours Austria, Germany, Hungary and Slovakia

The Irish government is expected to approve the second phase of a roadmap for exiting the lockdown. It would allow some workplaces and small shops to reopen; extend the distance restriction on exercise from 5km to 20km; and let people visit the homes of those isolating, but with social distancing

The world-famous Vienna Philharmonic is to give its first post-lockdown concert - Beethoven’s 5th Symphony - at Vienna’s Musikverein concert hall. It has capacity for 2,000 people, but under social distancing rules only 100 people can attend.
 
I don't think people realise how bad the situation is in Brazil. They have only tested about 980,000 people and 615,000 of those were confirmed to be infected. Those are astonishing numbers.

Its the leadership there which is the problem
 
Brazil has overtaken Italy as the country with the third-highest Covid-19 death toll after a daily record of 1,473 fatalities took its total tally to more than 34,000.

The figure was published by Brazil’s health ministry on Thursday night and means only the United States and the United Kingdom have registered more deaths because of the pandemic. The official number of infections rose to nearly 615,000, second only to the US.
 
Spain to allow foreign tourists from 1 July

Spain is to begin opening up to foreign tourists from 1 July.

The clarification comes after the country's tourism minister initially said, on Thursday, that restrictions on land borders would be lifted from 22 June.

The EU Commissioner for Home Affairs has called on states in the bloc to reopen their internal borders by the end of this month.

Spain has recorded almost 28,000 deaths and more than 233,000 cases since the coronavirus outbreak there began.
 
Turkey U-turns on weekend lockdowns after backlash

Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has cancelled plans to reintroduce a lockdown in various cities, citing a need to avoid “social and economic consequences”.

The interior ministry had announced plans for a weekend curfew in 15 cities - including Istanbul and Ankara – overnight.

However, Erdogan later tweeted that he had decided to cancel the plans, following a backlash from citizens.

Turkey reopened restaurants, cafes and beaches earlier this week, as well as allowing domestic travel to recommence.

Erdogan said he had believed a second lockdown was needed, after the number of new daily cases jumped to almost 1,000 on Thursday, up from about 700 in previous days.

"As a result of this negative development, we had to once again bring the stay-at-home order on our agenda," he tweeted. "However, the reactions we received from our people pushed us to re-evaluate the decision."
 
Here are some of the main headlines from around the world:

The EU Commissioner for Home Affairs Yiva Johansson says all states should reopen their internal borders by the end of June - some states have already begun doing so

In England, masks are going to become compulsory for everyone taking public transport from 15 June. The British Medical Association, which represents doctors, says the rule should be extended to all public places where social distancing isn't possible

British Airways says it's thinking about taking legal action against the UK government over a new rule that will require incoming travellers to be quarantined for 14 days

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has U-turned on plans to reintroduce a lockdown in some cities, saying the country needs to avoid the "social and economic consequences"

Peru has declared oxygen a "strategic resource", meaning that hospitals get priority on supplies

Indonesia's capital Jakarta has reopened its mosques and other places of worship, three months after they closed because of the coronavirus

Brazil's death toll has surpassed Italy's to become the third-highest in the world, after the US and UK
 
COVID-19 crisis shakes Brazil, but Bolsonaro keeps impeachment at bay

BRASILIA (Reuters) - One of the world’s worst coronavirus outbreaks, a paralyzed economy sending investors fleeing for the exit, and accusations that he has undermined Brazil’s young democracy have not loosened President Jair Bolsonaro’s grip on power.

As of Thursday, Brazil had nearly 615,000 confirmed coronavirus cases, second only to the United States. With 34,021 COVID-19 fatalities, its death toll overtook Italy’s.

Across the political spectrum this week, lawmakers in Brasilia have decried the far-right leader’s defiance of public health experts on the outbreak and his campaign to end state quarantine measures, which he has criticized for hurting the economy.

They have also raised concerns about his threats to institutions. Bolsonaro has vocally backed his militant supporters who have called in the streets for the military to shut down Congress and the Supreme Court, which has been investigating him and his followers.

More than 30 motions have been presented in Congress to impeach Bolsonaro for trampling on Brazil’s constitution, mostly from leftist opponents.

But Bolsonaro’s position is safe for now, four politicians told Reuters this week.

They said he has courted enough lawmakers in Congress with key appointments to fend off the threats of impeachment. Many now fear such a move would be a badly timed distraction from the growing health crisis.

“Bolsonaro has artificially stirred confrontation between Brazil’s democratic institutions, but my party is not seeking his impeachment because we cannot contribute to more instability in this unprecedented crisis,” said Bruno Araujo, president of the Brazilian Social Democratic Party.

Araujo said Bolsonaro will be judged by Brazilian voters at the next presidential election, set for 2022.

“Until then we will lurch from crisis to crisis, from outburst to outburst by this authoritarian president,” he said in an interview.

The Speaker of the House, who would decide to put an impeachment to the vote, has also said Brazil needs first to unite in fighting the coronavirus outbreak and he did not want to put “more wood on the fire.”

Bolsonaro has said his aims are democratic and those seeking to undermine his government are the greatest threat to Brazil’s constitution. Last week, he said the Supreme Court was threatening to “plunge Brazil into a political crisis” with its investigations.

One inquiry is looking into the financing of his supporters’ alleged disinformation campaigns on social media. Another is investigating if Bolsonaro interfered illegally in police appointments for personal reasons. Bolsonaro says his supporters and family are being unfairly targeted and that the accusations are untrue.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...sonaro-keeps-impeachment-at-bay-idUSKBN23C1FM
 
Ireland to accelerate lockdown easing plan: PM

Ireland will accelerate its plan to ease coronavirus lockdown restrictions in the coming days, prime minister Leo Varadkar has said.

"Today I can confirm that it is safe to move to phase two of the plan to reopen our country starting on Monday," Varadkar said. "I'm also announcing an acceleration of the roadmap."

In line with the government plan to reopen the Republic, more workplaces and shops will reopen on Monday, while a hastening of the scheme will allow widespread travel and see the final lifting of all lockdown restrictions in July rather than August.
 
US President Donald Trump on Friday called for a shift in strategy against the coronavirus pandemic to focus resources on protecting "high-risk populations", while calling for a total end to stay-at-home orders in states throughout the country.

The World Health Organization (WHO) said on Friday that some countries have seen "upticks" in COVID-19 cases as lockdowns ease, and populations must continue to protect themselves against the coronavirus.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Friday cancelled a decision to impose a new, two-day weekend curfew in 15 of the country's provinces that took many by surprise.

India's COVID-19 fatalities have passed 6,000 after it registered 260 deaths in the last 24 hours. The country registered 9,304 new cases in yet another record single-day spike in infections, raising its totals to 216,919 cases with 6,075 deaths, the health ministry reported on Thursday.

The coronavirus death toll in Brazil soared to a new daily record, with 1,473 fatalities logged at the end of Thursday. With more than 34,000 deaths, Brazil now has the third highest toll in the world.

Around 6.6 million coronavirus cases have been confirmed around the world, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. More than 389,000 people have died, including some 108,000 in the United States. More than 2.8 million people have recovered from the disease.
 
In its most optimistic pronouncement since the start of the crisis, France’s scientific advisory panel has said the Covid-19 epidemic is now “under control”.

The panel’s president, Jean-François Delfraissy, told France-Inter radio that though the virus was still circulating, it was now doing so “at low speed”.

“We reckon we are now on about 1,000 new cases a day,” he said, comparing this to the high-point of the epidemic when there were “around 80,000 new daily cases”.

Officially there have been, until today, 152,000 confirmed (ie tested) cases of coronavirus in France, and just over 29,000 deaths. The 80,000-a-day figure is an estimate of the real number of cases – including those undetected or with mild symptoms – in early March.

The number of dead from French hospitals on Thursday fell to 44.

Delfraissy said there were still clusters appearing, but these were easily circumscribed, thanks to testing, contact-tracing and self-isolation.
 
The latest figures from Italy show the daily death figures staying broadly flat - 85 on Friday, 88 the day before, according to the Civil Protection Agency.

However, the number of new confirmed coronavirus cases jumped from 177 on Thursday to 518 on Friday, with 402 recorded in the northern region of Lombardy - the hardest-hit part of Italy in terms of deaths and cases.

The total number of cases in Italy has now increased to 234,531, the sixth highest tally behind those of the United States, Russia, Spain, Britain and Brazil. The death toll now stands at 33,774.
 
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A primary school in the Canadian province of Quebec became the site of an outbreak after one child caught Covid-19, health officials say.
Out of a class of 11, nine children have since tested positive. The class was small because the school has been operating at half capacity.
Health officials confirm the school had taken preventative measures, such as handwashing reminders and marking spaces on the floor to encourage social distancing.

Elementary schools opened across Quebec outside the city of Montreal on 11 May, despite the province being Canada's biggest coronavirus hotspot, with 52,398 total cases and 4,935 deaths currently recorded.

Across the country, different provinces are reopening at different rates. On 1 June, British Columbia opened all schools on an optional, part-time basis.

Ontario, the site of Canada's second-largest hotspot, has closed schools for the remainder of the school year. But Premier Doug Ford announced the province would proceed to phase two of reopening the economy, despite a slight rise in the number of cases.
 
The World Health Organization (WHO) has changed its position on face masks and is now encouraging people to wear them in crowded places, citing anecdotal evidence that supports their value in stopping the spread of the coronavirus.

United States President Donald Trump has called for a shift in strategy against the coronavirus pandemic to focus resources on protecting "high-risk populations" while calling for a total end to stay-at-home orders in states throughout the country.

Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro has threatened to pull his country out of the WHO, accusing the body of being "partisan" and "political". With more than 34,000 coronavirus deaths, Brazil now has the third-highest toll in the world.

About 6.7 million coronavirus cases have been confirmed around the world, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. More than 394,000 people have died, including some 109,000 in the United States. More than 2.9 million people have recovered.
 
Russia's Covid-19 official death toll rises to 5,725

In Russia, 197 more people have died with coronavirus in the last 24 hours, bringing the country’s official death toll to 5,725.

There have been 8,855 new cases of the virus, according to officials, pushing the total number of infections to 458,689.

It comes after it emerged earlier this week that new mortality data from Russia’s second-largest city reignited questions about whether the country’s official tally has discounted thousands of deaths tied to the coronavirus outbreak.

St Petersburg issued 1,552 more death certificates this May than in the previous year, a nearly 32% rise indicating that hundreds of deaths tied to the pandemic are not reflected in the city’s official coronavirus death toll for the month of 171.
 
Indonesia has reported its biggest daily rise in Covid-19 infections, with 993 new cases, taking its total official number to 30,514.

Health ministry official, Achmad Yurianto, reported 31 new coronavirus fatalities, bringing the country’s official Covid-19 death toll to 1,801.

However, it has been reported that the true number of deaths in the country – the fourth most populous in the world – could be far higher.

Elsewhere, the Philippines’ health ministry has reported seven new coronavirus deaths and 714 additional infections. It means the total confirmed coronavirus deaths in the country stands at 994, while official cases have reached 21,340.
 
What are the latest key developments globally?

The court of appeal in New South Wales, Australia, overturned a ban on a Black Lives Matter protest, which was imposed due to coronavirus concerns. Thousands flooded the streets of Sydney to commemorate African American George Floyd, who died in US police custody.

In other news:

The EU commissioner for home affairs said member states should reopen their internal borders by end of June

Coronavirus is largely retreating in those US states that acted quickly to lock down, but is persisting and even rising sharply in states that locked down later and are already starting to ease restrictions, the Washington Post reports

California will allow film, television and music production to restart on 12 June if conditions allow

Portugal will start reopening its beaches later on Saturday

In Poland, gyms, swimming pools and amusement parks will reopen

In Austria, the Vienna Philharmonic, one of the most celebrated orchestras in the world, gave its first live performance since the lockdown
 
Indonesia records single-day high in new cases

Indonesia has reported nearly 1,000 new cases of the coronavirus, a new single-day high for the country that brought its total caseload past 30,000, as the government unveiled an enhanced stimulus package worth $47.6bn to anchor the virus-battered economy.

The health ministry said there were 993 newly infected people over the past 24 hours. Indonesia has confirmed 30,514 cases, including 1,801 deaths, the most in Southeast Asia.

Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati said a 677.2 trillion rupiah ($47.6bn) stimulus package aims to strengthen the healthcare system, direct more spending toward social protection to boost consumption, and provide incentives to rescue Indonesian businesses from bankruptcy and workers from layoffs.
 
People in the UK are gathering for mass anti-racism demonstrations, defying virus warnings

Large crowds are expected to protest in Washington DC against racism and police brutality

The Palace of Versailles outside Paris and the Prado museum in Madrid are among the famous venues reopening

Wearing masks in public can help slow spread of the virus, the World Health Organization says

Prince William reveals he's a volunteer on mental health helpline during lockdown

Number of cases in India overtakes Italy as hospitals struggle to cope

Globally, the number of infections is more than 6.7 million and some 395,000 people have died - Johns Hopkins
 
Canada's total coronavirus cases rose to 94,335 from 94,070 the day before, according to data published by the public health agency.

The country reported a total of 7,703 deaths, up from 7,652 the day before.

==

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro defended his government's move to partially withhold official data on the scale of the world's second-largest coronavirus outbreak.

Late on Friday, Brazil's Health Ministry took down a website showing the evolution of the epidemic over time and by state and municipality. The ministry also stopped reporting a total tally of confirmed cases, which have shot past 645,000 - more than anywhere outside the United States - and its overall death toll.

"The cumulative data ... does not reflect the moment the country is in," Bolsonaro said on Twitter, citing a note from the ministry. "Other actions are underway to improve the reporting of cases and confirmation of diagnoses."
 
Global coronavirus cases top 7 million: Reuters tally

Global cases of the novel coronavirus have topped seven million, as case numbers surge in Brazil and India, according to a Reuters tally.

About 30 per cent of those cases, or two million infections, are in the United States. Latin America has the second-largest outbreak with over 15pc of cases.

Globally, deaths from the novel coronavirus are approaching 400,000. The US accounts for about one-quarter of all fatalities but deaths in South America are rapidly rising
 
Italy reports 72 new COVID deaths on Saturday, 270 new cases

Italy reported 72 new COVID-19 deaths on Saturday against 85 a day earlier and 270 new cases, down from 518 the day before, the Civil Protection department said.
 
France reports 31 more coronavirus deaths, total at 29,142

France’s coronavirus death toll, the fifth-highest in the world, rose more slowly on Saturday, while the number of people in intensive care continued to fall, government data showed.

The number of deaths from the COVID-19 disease increased by 31, or 0.1%, from the previous day to reach 29,142, according to data posted on the government’s website.

That compared with 46 deaths, or a 0.2% rise, reported on Friday.

The number of confirmed cases of COVID-19 rose by 579 to 153,634, the government data showed.

The number of people in hospital intensive care units fell by 35 to 1,059, less than the decrease of 69 on Friday but extending a steady drop in critical cases since a peak of over 7,000 in early April.

The total number of people being treated in hospital for COVID-19 fell by 217 to 12,479.

The head of a COVID-19 scientific committee advising the French government said on Friday that the epidemic was under control.

In another sign of the epidemic’s ebbing, the Paris police authority said a temporary mortuary set up in April in a vacant building at the Rungis wholesale food market south of the capital was shut down on Saturday.

France has in the past month eased what was one of the strictest lockdown regimes in Europe to contain the novel coronavirus. This week, restaurants and bars have re-opened.

According to Reuters calculations, if probable cases of coronavirus in long-term care homes are added, France’s total number of cases stands at around 190,000, the eighth-highest tally in the world on that basis.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-h...irus-deaths-total-at-29142-idUKKBN23D0W2?il=0
 
Global cases of the novel coronavirus topped seven million as case numbers surge in Brazil and India, according to a Reuters tally. About 30 percent of those cases, or two million infections, are in the US. Latin America has the second-largest outbreak, with more 15 percent of cases. Global deaths are approaching 400,000. Approximately three million people have recovered.

Brazil has removed from public view months of data on its COVID-19 epidemic, as President Jair Bolsonaro defended delays and changes to official record-keeping of the world's second-largest outbreak. At least 36,000 people have died of the coronavirus in the country.
Indonesia has reported nearly 993 new cases, a new single-day high for the country that brought its total caseload past 30,000, with 1,801 deaths - the most in Southeast Asia - as the government unveiled an enhanced stimulus package worth $47.6bn.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has changed its position on face masks and is now encouraging people to wear them in crowded places, citing anecdotal evidence that supports their value in stopping the spread of the coronavirus.
 
US CDC reports 1,891,690 coronavirus cases

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has reported 1,891,690 cases of the new coronavirus as of the end of Saturday, an increase of 29,034 cases from its previous count, and said the number of deaths had risen by 1,128 to 109,192

==

Thailand reports eight new cases, zero new deaths for 13 days in a row

Thailand on Sunday reported eight new cases and no new deaths, taking its total to 3,112 infections and 58 deaths since the outbreak began in January.

The new cases were returnees - five from the United Arab Emirates, two from Kuwait and one from India - and had been in quarantine, where most of Thailand's recent cases have been detected, said Panprapa Yongtrakul, an assistant spokeswoman for the government's COVID-19 Administration Centre.

Thailand has recorded zero new deaths for 13 days in a row, she said.
 
Germany's confirmed coronavirus cases rise by 301 to 183,979

The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Germany increased by 301 to 183,979, data from the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) for infectious diseases showed on Sunday.

The reported death toll rose by 22 to 8,668, the tally showed.
 
Brazil takes down COVID-19 data, hiding soaring death toll

Brazil has removed from public view months of data on its COVID-19 epidemic, as President Jair Bolsonaro defended delays and changes to official record-keeping of the world's second-largest coronavirus outbreak.

Brazil's Health Ministry removed the data from a website that had documented the epidemic over time and by state and municipality.

The ministry also stopped giving a total count of confirmed cases, which have shot past 672,000 - more than anywhere outside the US - or a total death toll, which passed Italy this week, nearing 36,000 by Saturday.

"The cumulative data ... does not reflect the moment the country is in," Bolsonaro said on Twitter, citing a note from the ministry. "Other actions are under way to improve the reporting of cases and confirmation of diagnoses."

Bolsonaro has downplayed the dangers of the pandemic, replaced medical experts in the health ministry with military officials and argued against state lockdowns, hobbling the country's public health response.
 
Global cases of the novel coronavirus topped seven million as case numbers surge in Brazil and India, according to a Reuters tally. About 30 percent of those cases, or two million infections, are in the US. Latin America has the second-largest outbreak, with more 15 percent of cases. Global deaths are approaching 400,000. Approximately three million people have recovered.

Brazil has removed from public view months of data on its COVID-19 epidemic, as President Jair Bolsonaro defended delays and changes to official record-keeping of the world's second-largest outbreak. At least 36,000 people have died of the coronavirus in the country.
Indonesia has reported nearly 993 new cases, a new single-day high for the country that brought its total caseload past 30,000, with 1,801 deaths - the most in Southeast Asia - as the government unveiled an enhanced stimulus package worth $47.6bn.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has changed its position on face masks and is now encouraging people to wear them in crowded places, citing anecdotal evidence that supports their value in stopping the spread of the coronavirus.
 
Australian anti-racism protestors defying health rulels 'self-indulgent' - minister

Australians who defied public health rules and rallied in support of the US "Black Lives Matter" movement were reckless and self-indulgent, Finance Minister Mathias Cormann said.

More than 20,000 people protested in Sydney and other cities on Saturday, in solidarity with U.S. anger over the death of a black man in police custody and calling for an end to similar deaths of indigenous Australians.

"I think it is incredibly selfish," Cormann told Sky News. "It's incredibly self-indulgent."
 
Virus death toll passes 400,000

The number of coronavirus-related deaths recorded around the world has now reached 400,013, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

The US university - which started compiling its data soon after the outbreak began in China late last year - says there have been more than 6.9 million confirmed cases.
 
Afghanistan has recorded 30 coronavirus deaths in the past 24 hours - its biggest daily rise.

The total number of confirmed cases has also increased to 20,342.

The capital, Kabul, suffered its worst day, with an additional 23 deaths. The city's governor, Mohammed Yaghoub Heidari, warned that the actual number of infections in the city could be much higher than official figures show.

From Sunday, the wearing of masks in public places is compulsory in Afghanistan; two-metre physical distancing must also be maintained.
 
These are the latest headlines globally as the coronavirus death toll continues to rise, and while protests take place in the US and many other countries against racism and police brutality.

The number of people confirmed to have died of coronavirus has passed 400,000, according to the latest figures from the Johns Hopkins University.

Brazil has removed months of data on Covid-19 from a government website amid criticism of President Jair Bolsonaro's handling of the outbreak. The country has already recorded more than 35,000 coronavirus-related deaths.

Big rallies have taken place across the US and have continued on Sunday in Rome and Copenhagen against racism and police brutality. The protests were sparked by the death of George Floyd.

The Vatican has announced there are no more cases of coronavirus among Holy See employees - the governing body of the Catholic Church - and others inside Vatican City.

The pandemic is a "devastating blow" for the world economy, according to World Bank President David Malpass.
 
Italy reports 53 new deaths

Italy has reported 53 Covid-19 deaths, against 72 the previous day, and 197 new cases, down from 270 the day before, the Civil Protection department said.

The total death toll now stands at 33,899, the agency said, the fourth highest in the world after those of the United States, the UK and Brazil.

The number of current infections fell to 35,262 from 35,877 the day before. There were 287 people in intensive care on Sunday, down from 293 on Saturday, maintaining a long-running decline.

The northern region of Lombardy, where the outbreak was first identified, remains by far the worst affected region, accounting for 125 of the 197 new cases reported on Sunday.

The agency said some 2.627 million people had been tested for the virus as of Saturday, against 2.599 million on Saturday, out of a population of around 60 million.
 
The number of people confirmed to have died of coronavirus has passed 400,000, according to the latest figures from the Johns Hopkins University.

Brazil has removed months of data on Covid-19 from a government website amid criticism of President Jair Bolsonaro's handling of the outbreak. The country has already recorded almost 36,000 coronavirus-related deaths

The row between the US and China over the coronavirus outbreak has flared again with a US senator accusing Beijing of trying to block the development of a vaccine in the West

The Vatican has announced there are no longer any cases of coronavirus among employees of the Holy See - the governing body of the Catholic Church - and others inside Vatican City

The pandemic is a "devastating blow" for the world economy, according to World Bank President David Malpass
 
Italy has reported 53 new coronavirus deaths - down from 72 the day before - and just 197 new cases.

The country's total death toll since the outbreak there started in February now stands at 33,899, the fourth highest in the world after the United States, UK and Brazil.

The picture also continues to improve in Canada, which reported 70 new deaths with the virus. That's an overall increase of 0.9% - from 7,703 to 7,773. Canada also reported 722 new cases on Saturday.

Russia, in contrast, recorded almost 9,000 new coronavirus cases in the last 24 hours. It also reported 134 new deaths, taking the overall total to 5,859.
 
France reports 13 more coronavirus deaths, total at 29,155

France’s coronavirus death toll, the fifth-highest in the world, rose by 13 on Sunday to 29,155, the government said.

The number of people in hospital intensive care units fell by six to 1,053, a smaller decrease than the previous day but extending a steady drop in critical cases since a peak of over 7,000 in early April, according to data posted on a government website.

The total number of people being treated in hospital for COVID-19 fell by 18 to 12,461.

The number of confirmed cases of COVID-19 rose by 343 to 153,997.

According to Reuters calculations, if probable cases of coronavirus in long-term care homes are added, France’s total number of cases stands at around 190,000, the ninth-highest tally in the world on that basis, now slightly below that in Peru.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-h...irus-deaths-total-at-29155-idUKKBN23E0Q7?il=0
 
Brazil's government has stopped publishing a running total of coronavirus deaths and infections, prompting claims by experts it is an attempt to hide the true extent of the outbreak in the country.
 
Action! Film-makers back to work in New Zealand after coronavirus

New Zealand’s capital has had an extra buzz of excitement over the past week since Hollywood director James Cameron and his crew flew in to film the much-anticipated sequel of the epic science-fiction film “Avatar”.

The film is among a handful of productions kicking off in New Zealand as it begins to open up after containing the novel coronavirus, and looks to its film industry to give its battered economy a boost.

New Zealand’s borders remain closed to foreigners but the government gave special permission for the 55 crew members working on the “Avatar” sequel to jet in on a chartered plane.

“Certainly, the fact that we are able to start earlier than some countries is great, much as it’s distressing to see that the pandemic is still such a challenge around the world,” said Annabelle Sheehan, chief executive of the New Zealand Film Commission.

New Zealand’s mountains, meadows and forests, made famous by “The Lord of the Rings” trilogy, have drawn several major film productions over recent years.

About 47 productions were underway when Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern imposed a tough lockdown on March 26 to stop the spread of the coronavirus.

It was a great success and the virus has been almost eliminated in New Zealand, which could be among the first countries in the world to return to normal this week, apart from the closed border.

Avatar producer Jon Landau posted a picture of himself and director Cameron after landing last week and said they would self-isolate for 14 days in line with government rules.

“Your country has become a leader in how to deal with something like this, and I think films will want to come,” Landau told Radio New Zealand in an interview, referring to the coronavirus campaign.

With people around the world cooped up at home, pressure is on film-makers and other content creators to make new material and get it out.

But what’s holding them back is the lack of safe places to work, industry experts say. Now New Zealand is an option.

“We’ve had a few international enquiries and that’s on the back of our COVID-free status,” said Gary Watkins, chief executive of Wellington-based Avalon Studios, which was used for the filming of the 2017 Scarlett Johansson starrer “Ghost in the Shell” and will also help with the new “Avatar”.

Wellington is home to multi-million dollar studios and production facilities including director Peter Jackson’s Weta Digital, where “The Lord of the Rings” and “The Hobbit” trilogies were brought to life.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/us-h...n-new-zealand-after-coronavirus-idUKKBN23E0XA
 
From Monday, most people arriving in the UK will have to quarantine for two weeks

Some groups are exempt such as road haulage workers and travellers from the Republic of Ireland

The move is controversial, with airlines and travel companies saying it is unjustified

With zero active case, New Zealand will move to its lowest level of lockdown at midnight local time

New York City begins opening up, with hundreds of thousands expected back at work

A single coal mine in Poland has been found to be the source of hundreds of new cases

Infections in Saudi Arabia top 100,000, the health ministry said on Sunday

There are almost 7 million recorded virus cases globally, with more than 400,000 deaths
 
Congratulations to New Zealand, more and more Liberal women leaders are going to be to be trusted now.

https://www.cnn.com/travel/article/queenstown-tourism-new-zealand-coronavirus-intl-hnk/index.html

New Zealand has no single active Covid-19 infection, officials said on Monday, after the last remaining patient recovered.

That's after more than two weeks of no new infections.

Later on Monday, the government of Jacinda Ardern will announce whether it'll remove the remaining social distancing restrictions.

New Zealand had one of the world's strictest lockdowns for weeks and successfully stopped the pandemic from escalating.

There have been 1,504 confirmed cases in New Zealand, and 22 deaths.
 
Guatemalan president to work remotely after 18 staff get coronavirus

Moving back to the Americas: Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei said on Sunday that 18 employees at his office and on his security detail have tested positive for the novel coronavirus, so he will work remotely and the presidential offices will be disinfected, Reuters reports.

“I and the vice president will carry out our activities remotely. We’re healthy. We’ve been tested. We don’t have coronavirus,” Giammattei said in a televised address.

The Central American country has registered 7,055 confirmed cases of coronavirus and 252 fatalities from the pandemic
 
The Philippines has reported 579 new confirmed cases of Covid-19 today, and eight deaths. Malaysia has reported seven new confirmed cases, and no deaths.
 
Moscow mayor announces easing of lockdown

The mayor of Moscow has announced a timetable for removing most of the coronavirus restrictions currently in place.

This is despite a stubbornly high number of new cases in the city each day – around 2,000 per day for the past fortnight.

The period of "self-isolation" officially ends on Tuesday, meaning that everyone – including the over-65s – can move about the city freely again for the first time since the end of March.

Sergei Sobyanin said the move was possible because the city had managed to "avoid a catastrophe" thanks to the strict measures it took.

He said that the pandemic, "slowly but surely" was fading – with fewer hospital admissions and fewer new cases – and so the city could return to "normal life", step by step.

"Don’t forget, the risk has fallen but not gone away," he said.

The announcement comes two weeks ahead of the re-scheduled Victory Day Parade in the city on 24 June. President Vladimir Putin’s big set piece event of the year had to be postponed from 9 May.

It is also three weeks before a nationwide vote on constitutional reforms that would allow Mr Putin to stay in power for another two terms, should he choose.

From Tuesday, hairdressers and beauty salons reopen, while theatres and circuses and musicians can begin to rehearse again. Cemeteries also reopen their gates.

Restaurants, cafes, libraries, museums and zoos reopen on 16 June.
 
An outbreak in Polish mines - and other Europe updates

Poland is temporarily closing 12 coal mines to stop the spread of the virus. Here's more on that and other stories from around Europe:

Poland recorded the highest number of new cases in the EU on Sunday – 575 - due to an outbreak at the Zofiowka mine. Many infected miners have not shown symptoms, which has helped to spread the virus. Poland is the EU’s largest producer of hard coal, but its power stations have enough stocks to generate electricity. Covid-19 cases and deaths overall remain quite low in Poland, compared with western Europe

In the Republic of Ireland thousands more businesses have reopened. It is now in Phase 2 of a four-phase plan to ease the lockdown, so most shops are reopening, though not yet those in shopping malls. People can now travel up to 20km (12 miles) from their home, or anywhere in their own county

Denmark's easing began in mid-April, and on Monday its Phase 3 started, with one more phase to go. Danes can now meet in groups of up to 50, and gyms and swimming pools are reopening, though with social distancing rules in place
 
Brazil sows further confusion by releasing contradictory sets of COVID-19 data

RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - After removing cumulative numbers for how many people have died in Brazil of coronavirus from a national website, the government sowed further confusion and controversy by releasing two contradictory sets of figures for the latest tally of infection cases and fatalities.

Initially, data sent to journalists by the ministry on Sunday evening said Brazil now had a total death toll of 37,312 and total cases of 685,427. That meant, although the ministry did not break out these daily numbers, that in the previous 24 hours the country had registered 1,382 new deaths and 12,581 new cases.

But later on Sunday, the ministry updated its online data portal with completely different figures. The government website that publishes coronavirus data put the day’s dead at 525 and new cases at 18,912. It did not publish a cumulative total.

The Health Ministry did not respond to questions about the different numbers.

The divergence comes as the government over the weekend removed from public view months of national data on the epidemic, which critics said was another attempt at hiding the soaring death toll.

That followed a move last week to push back the release of the daily tally from around 5 p.m. to near 10 p.m, after the country’s main television news program has aired.

Far-right President Jair Bolsonaro has come under growing criticism for the way his government has handled the data and his general approach to the pandemic, which he has regularly played down and called “a little flu.”

Brazil is now one of the main epicenters of the global pandemic, with the second highest number of confirmed cases only behind the United States, and a death toll that last week surpassed Italy’s.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...radictory-sets-of-covid-19-data-idUSKBN23F1NK
 
More than 100,000 new cases have been reported in nine of the past 10 days - WHO chief

Global economy tipped to contract by 5.2% this year - World Bank

UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock: "R" rate is below 1 in all regions

UK records its lowest daily rise in coronavirus deaths since before lockdown on 23 March

Most people arriving in the UK have to quarantine for two weeks

New York City begins reopening, with as many as 400,000 people getting back to work
 
Google Maps to alert users about COVID-19-related travel restrictions

Google is adding features on its Maps service to alert users about COVID-19-related travel restrictions to help them plan their trips better, the Alphabet Inc (GOOGL.O) unit said on Monday.

The update would allow users to check how crowded a train station might be at a particular time, or if buses on a certain route are running on a limited schedule, Google said.

The transit alerts would be rolled out in Argentina, France, India, Netherlands, the United States and United Kingdom among other countries, the company said here in a blog post.

The new features would also include details on COVID-19 checkpoints and restrictions on crossing national borders, starting with Canada, Mexico and the United States.

In recent months, the company has analyzed location data from billions of Google users’ phones in 131 countries to examine mobility under lockdowns and help health authorities assess if people were abiding with social-distancing and other orders issued to rein in the virus.

Google has invested billions of dollars from its search ads business to digitally map the world, drawing 1 billion users on average every month to its free navigation app.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/us-h...-19-related-travel-restrictions-idUKKBN23F26N
 
From Tuesday, people in Moscow will be allowed to move around the city whenever they like

Moscow's mayor said this was possible as hospitals were discharging more people than they were admitting

But there remain concerns about a rush to reopen as the city still records 2,000 infections a day

The UK recorded its lowest daily death toll since 22 March - 55 people died with Covid-19

The WHO said that the pandemic was worsening globally, even as it seemed to be easing in Europe

In Brazil, the number of cases passes 700,000, but a controversy is growing over its data

There are more than 7 million infections globally, with over 400,000 deaths
 
Face masks to remain compulsory in Spain

Wearing face masks will be compulsory in Spain until the coronavirus epidemic is over, Health Minister Salvador Illa says.

The measure will "remain in place until we permanently defeat the virus, which is when we have an effective treatment or vaccine against it", he added.

Since 21 May, it has been compulsory for everyone aged six and over to wear a mask in public where it is not possible to maintain a 2m (6ft) security distance from other people.

When the state of emergency formally ends on 21 June, the measure will remain in place, with the government introducing a fine of up to €100 (£89) for non-compliance. The new regulation will, however, slightly reduce the security distance to 1.5m.

The virus has killed more than 27,000 people in Spain but with the epidemic under control, the country has been easing out of lockdown.
 
Paris prosecutor opens probe into handling of COVID-19 crisis

PARIS (Reuters) - The Paris prosecutor’s office has opened a preliminary inquiry into the authorities’ response to the coronavirus epidemic, to determine whether any criminal offences might have been committed.

The prosecutor said in a statement the court had received 62 complaints about the handling of the crisis by public bodies, including government ministries, local authorities and nursing homes.

In France, 29,209 people have died from coronavirus infection and there are 154,188 confirmed cases.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...nto-handling-of-covid-19-crisis-idUSKBN23G1X6
 
More than 100,000 new cases have been reported in nine of the past 10 days - WHO chief

Lockdowns have saved more than three million lives in Europe, an Imperial College study estimates

Global economy tipped to contract by 5.2% this year - World Bank

UK records its lowest daily rise in coronavirus deaths since before lockdown on 23 March

Most people arriving in the UK have to quarantine for two weeks

New York City begins reopening, with as many as 400,000 people getting back to work
 
COVID-19 updates:

Tanzania's president declares the country 'coronavirus-free'

Deaths jump in Brazil amid controversy over data

Pakistan reports its deadliest day yet of the outbreak
 
Brazil's Supreme Court has ordered the health ministry to resume the publication of figures for deaths and infections from the coronavirus.

The ministry controversially removed pages of detailed virus data over the weekend and said it would no longer publish cumulative totals.

The move triggered widespread condemnation of the administration of President Jair Bolsonaro, who has pushed for lockdowns to be lifted despite the increase in Covid-19 deaths.

But Supreme Court judge Alexandre de Moraes said on Tuesday that the government's actions "made it impossible" to monitor the spread of the virus and implement adequate controls.

Brazil has more than 700,000 confirmed cases - the second-highest in the world behind the US - and the death toll is now more than 37,000. The BBC's Katy Watson in Sao Paulo says that because Brazil tests so little, the real numbers are believed to be far higher.
 
Here are the latest developments in the world coronavirus outbreak so far on Tuesday:

The World Health Organization’s Covid-19 technical lead backtracked on her comment that asymptomatic transmission of the virus was “very rare”. “I think that it’s a misunderstanding to state the asymptomatic transmission globally is very rare,” Dr Maria Van Kerkhove said, noting modelling suggesting 40% of infections could be transmitted by people without symptoms.

There have been sharp rises in reports of violence against women across Latin America, already a hotspot for gender-based violence, since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, the International Rescue Committee has said. Meghan Lopez, the IRC’s regional director for Latin America, said some women and girls were stuck with perpetrators 24 hours a day.

The world faces a food crisis worse than any seen for at least 50 years, the UN has warned. Social protections for poor people are urgently needed as the looming recession following the Covid-19 pandemic may put basic nutrition out of reach.

A supreme court judge in Brazil has ordered Jair Bolsonaro’s administration to resume publishing complete Covid-19 statistics. His government sparked outrage on Saturday by purging the health ministry website of data on to pandemic and announcing it would stop publishing the death toll or number of infections.

Nearly one in five people in Iran may have been infected with coronavirus since the country’s outbreak, a health official said. This meant the virus was “much less lethal than we or the world had anticipated”, said Ehsan Mostafavi, a member of the taskforce set up to combat Covid-19.

Face masks will remain compulsory in all public spaces even after Spain’s Covid-19 state of emergency ends on 22 June. “The message is one of prudence and caution,” said the government spokeswoman, María Jesús Montero. “Until there is a vaccine or a treatment, the virus remains a threat. We can’t think that the danger has gone.”

Fifty-two Cuban medics who flew to Italy to help doctors treat Europe’s first mass coronavirus outbreak returned home to a heroes’ welcome. The medical brigade, comprising 36 doctors, 15 nurses and a logistics specialist, arrived in Milan on 22 March and were the first ever to be deployed to a European country.

Up to 600 deaths in Kano, northern Nigeria, most within a single week in April, were caused by an undetected outbreak of Covid-19, officials said. Government investigations, which began after reports of hundreds of deaths caused alarm in Nigeria’s second largest city, linked 50-60% of 979 “mysterious” deaths to the virus.

Spain is not discussing any travel corridor with Britain, a Spanish foreign ministry source has said, after a UK tourism lobby group said corridors allowing unrestricted movement with a number of countries would open from 29 June. Spain is discussing with other European Union countries whether and how to allow tourism from Britain and other states, the source told Reuters.

German exports and imports slumped in April, posting their biggest declines since 1990 as the coronavirus crisis slashed demand and adding to a gloomy outlook for Europe’s biggest economy.

China’s education ministry has warned that Chinese students should consider whether to study in Australia because of a string of “incidents of discrimination” targeting people of Asian descent.

Indonesia has reported its biggest daily rise in Covid-19 infections. The country’s health ministry recorded 1,043 new cases in the past 24 hours, bringing its total to 33,076. There were also 40 new deaths, bringing the total number of fatalities to 1,923.

Coronavirus may have been present and spreading in Wuhan as early as August last year, according to a study that analysed satellite imagery of car parks outside major hospitals and search engine data.
 
Brazil reports 32,091 new coronavirus cases and 1,272 deaths

Brazil reported 32,091 new cases of coronavirus and 1,272 new deaths for the last 24 hours, the Health Ministry said on Tuesday.

The South American country has so far recorded 739,503 confirmed cases of the virus, the second highest level of contagion after the United States, and 38,406 people have died, the third highest death toll worldwide.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-h...irus-cases-and-1272-deaths-idUKKBN23G357?il=0
 
Top US infectious disease expert Dr Anthony Fauci says the virus is his "worst nightmare"

He warns the crisis is not over as many countries, including the US, begin relaxing lockdown rules

In the UK, NHS waiting lists could double to 10m by the end of the year, health officials warn

Meanwhile PM Boris Johnson will later announce plans to further ease lockdown restrictions in England

The number of cases in India's Mumbai overtakes Wuhan with 51,000; meanwhile authorities in Delhi warn that cases there could reach half a million

Brazil's government will start publishing regular Covid-19 data again after a Supreme Court order

There have been more than 7m infections globally, with 3.37m recoveries and more than 411,000 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University
 
The head of the Pan-American Health Organisation (PAHO) has warned that coronavirus is spreading "exponentially" in many areas of the region, which is now home to "nearly half" of all Covid-19 cases.

Dr Carissa Etienne said the virus was still spreading aggressively in countries including Brazil, Peru and Chile, and was increasing in places where it had previously been limited, including Venezuela and Haiti.

Climactic factors such as the winter and hurricane season will pose a considerable challenge to efforts to combat the illness, she warned in a virtual press briefing organised by PAHO.

"Winter fuels respiratory infections... that can rapidly spread in ca older climate and as more people gather indoors to stay warm," she said.

As of 8 June, more than 3.3 million coronavirus cases have been reported in Latin America and North America. Brazil has the world's second-highest number of cases, and has recently had more new deaths than any other nation.
 
Germany and Austria to lift border controls

Germany will lift border controls with Switzerland, France, Austria and Denmark on Monday, Interior Minister Horst Seehofer has announced.

Austria is to drop checks at its border with Italy and end quarantine requirements for more than 20 European countries from Tuesday.

Border controls between Austria and Germany have already been lifted, but the new move means Austrians can return from holiday destinations like Italy and Croatia without having to go into quarantine or show a negative test.
 
Italian prosecutors to question PM over virus outbreak

Prosecutors in the northern Italian city of Bergamo say they will question members of the government, including Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, over their handling of the coronavirus.

The prosecutors said they would summon Mr Conte and others as "informed persons" - that is without attributing any crime to them.

It comes as a group of 50 relatives of victims in Bergamo - one of the worst-hit parts of the country - filed legal complaints over how the pandemic was handled. They say they and their relatives were abandoned during the crisis. The group, which calls itself Noi denunceremo (we will denounce), says it is seeking justice rather than revenge or compensation.

Prosecutors say they will initially ask officials why they did not immediately isolate the "hot spot" municipalities of Nembro and Alzano Lombardo when northern Italy began locking down in February.

Mr Conte has not publicly commented.
 
Boris Johnson announcing plans to further ease lockdown restrictions in England, at Downing Street briefing

People living alone in England will be able to stay at one other household from Saturday by forming a "bubble"

A further 245 people have died with Covid-19 in UK across all settings, the latest daily government figures show

The global economy will contract by 6% in 2020, the OECD says - but a bounce-back could take place next year unless there is a second virus wave

Italian prosecutors say they will question PM Giuseppe Conti and other government members over virus response

Top US infectious disease expert Dr Anthony Fauci warns the crisis is not over despite many countries easing restrictions

There have been more than 7m infections globally, with 3.37m recoveries and more than 411,000 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University
 
France’s death toll has risen by only 23 – well below the average daily increase of 53 seen over the last two weeks – to 29,319. That is the fifth-highest nominal total in the world. On Tuesday, 87 deaths were reported.

But the number of new confirmed cases was up by 545 to 155,136 after that figure stayed below the 500 threshold during the last three days, Reuters has reported.
 
Belgian prince faces €10,000 fine for breaking lockdown rules

Prince Joachim has already apologised for breaching Spain's quarantine rules when he travelled to the southern city of Córdoba last month.

Now he will be up to €10,400 (£9,200; $11,800) out of pocket too.

The 28-year-old prince, a nephew of King Philippe of Belgium, travelled to Spain last month for what the palace had described as an internship and a "family event". He later tested positive for Covid-19 and health officials had to get in touch with people he had been in contact with.

According to local reports, the prince has been fined for failing to observe the necessary 14-day quarantine and attending two meetings or parties.

If he pays up within 15 days, he only needs to pay half the fine.
 
The pandemic will have "dire" economic consequences globally, a report has warned. The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development said global output could shrink by 7.6% this year

France is likely to suffer 800,000 job losses in coming months as a result of the pandemic, its finance minister has said
Japan’s lower house of parliament attempted to offset the economic impact of the outbreak by approving an emergency budget worth more than £230bn ($293bn; 258bn euros)

Some European countries are set to lift their border controls. Germany will open its borders with Switzerland, France, Austria and Denmark on Monday, while Austria is to end quarantine requirements for more than 20 European countries

In Italy, prosecutors say they will question members of the government over their handling of the outbreak. PM Conte said he would be questioned on Friday over his government's response in the northern city of Bergamo

In the US, several members of the Washington DC National Guard tested positive for Covid-19 after being deployed to the recent Black Lives Matter protests
 
Brazil's COVID-19 death toll nears 40,000

Brazil registered 772,416 confirmed cases of coronavirus on Wednesday, with 32,913 new infections in the last 24 hours, as the world’s second worst outbreak after the United States continued to surge.

With another 1,274 fatalities, the death toll in Brazil has reached 39,680, the world’s third highest after the United States and Britain.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-h...-19-death-toll-nears-40000-idUKKBN23H3GU?il=0
 
US cases pass the two million mark, according to Johns Hopkins University

The US has the most recorded cases in the world, followed by Brazil and Russia

Infections are still rising in 21 US states even as restrictions continue to be relaxed

A former adviser to the British government says an earlier lockdown could have halved the UK death toll

Mexico City will start large-scale testing, diverging from the federal government

Disneyland announces phased reopening in July

Coachella music festival, originally rescheduled to October, has been cancelled

There have been more than 7.3 million infections globally and more than 416,000 deaths
 
A further 8,779 cases of coronavirus have been reported in Russia, bringing the country's total above 500,000.

The official national death toll rose to 6,532, after a further 174 Covid-19 deaths were recorded in the last 24 hours.

According to a tally kept by Johns Hopkins University, Russia now has the third highest number of infections worldwide, behind only the US and Brazil.

But it has recorded lower numbers of deaths than a dozen other countries.
 
Russia surpassed 500,000 cases after 8,779 new infections were reported by health officials. The death toll stands at 6,532, a number the World Health Organization has cast doubt over.

Neil Ferguson, an epidemiologist at Imperial College London, whose modelling helped set the UK's coronavirus strategy, says that the country's death toll could have been halved if lockdown had been introduced a week earlier. The UK has more than 291,000 cases and at least 41,000 deaths.

Students' mental health is in focus in post-lockdown China, amid an increase in the number of suicides. In one Shanghai district, there have been 14 suicides by primary and secondary school students so far this year.

More than 7.36 million people have now been confirmed to have the coronavirus and at least 416,000 have died, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.
 
Health Secretary Matt Hancock says the Test and Trace system is "critical" to control the virus

More than 31,000 close contacts identified during the first week of the test and trace system in England

US cases pass the two million mark, according to Johns Hopkins University

Number of confirmed cases in Russia passes 500,000 - third highest in the world, behind the US and Brazil

Shutting down US economy for a second time is not a viable option, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin says

There have been more than 7.3 million infections globally and more than 416,000 deaths
 
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