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Coronavirus threat to world peace and stability, UN chief warns
Here is the full story about the comments of UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres on Thursday and other major developments in the pandemic.
The head of the United Nations called the coronavirus pandemic the “fight of a generation” and a threat to world peace and security.
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warned the UN security council that the pandemic had the potential to increase social unrest and violence, which would greatly undermine the world’s ability to fight the disease.
It was, he said, the most serious UN test since it was founded 75 years ago and had already hampered efforts to resolve international, regional and national conflicts.
Mass burials on the island of the Bronx
New York, since the 19th century, has used Hart Island to bury New Yorkers with no known relatives or whose family cannot organize a funeral.
Typically, 25 bodies are buried each week by low-income inmates working on the island, which is located off the east coast of the city’s Bronx district and is only accessible by boat.
That number began to increase in March as the new coronavirus spread rapidly. They are now burying about two dozen bodies a day, five days a week, said Jason Kersten, a spokesman for the correction department, which oversees the burials.
More about Japan now.
According to reports, Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike and the Japanese government have resolved a dispute over how the capital’s restaurant and entertainment scenes should be covered by a month-long state of emergency declared this week in response to a Sharp increase in Covid-19 infections.
Koike had disagreed with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, for his refusal to support stricter restrictions in business in Tokyo and six other areas covered by the statement.
On Friday, Japanese media reported that Koike had bowed to pressure to allow beauty salons, barber shops, DIY stores and hardware stores to remain open, but they were asking restaurants to close at 8 p.m.
Koike will create a fund for companies that meet its closure requests, public broadcaster NHK said. Abe had rejected calls to compensate for such deals, raising concerns that many would remain open throughout the state of emergency.
Kenji Shibuya, director of the Institute for Population Health at King’s College, London, warned that the friction between Koike and the Abe administration was at risk of mitigating the impact of social distancing measures aimed at preventing the type of explosive outbreaks seen in China, the United States, and parts of Europe.
“The tension between Koike and the cabinet will definitely damage the impact of the emergency declaration,” Shibuya said. “There is zero chance of reaching 80%,” he added, referring to Abe’s goal of social distancing.
Second death in New Zealand
A second death has been linked to Covid-19 in New Zealand, the health ministry said.
A woman in her 90s who contracted the disease in a nursing home in Christchurch.
New Zealand’s first greedy death was March 29 on the west coast; a woman in her 70s with underlying health problems.
After four days of declining numbers, 44 new crown cases were announced today, up from 29 yesterday. “We can continue to report more people recovered than new cases combined,” the ministry said in a statement. “The combined total of confirmed and probable cases in New Zealand is 1,283.”
16 people are being treated in hospital for the disease, including 5 in the ICU.
Yesterday, 4520 tests were conducted across the country, and 40% of the cases had links to travel abroad.
Updated
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