[ad_1]
02:59
14 new confirmed cases of coronavirus in China
The Chinese National Health Commission reported 14 new confirmed cases of coronavirus on May 9, the highest number since April 28 and only one case the day before.
Of the new cases, two were imported infections. The remaining 12 confirmed cases were transmitted locally, including 11 cases in north-eastern Jilin province.
The newly discovered asymptomatic cases were at 20, the highest since May 1 and up to 15 from the previous day, according to the health commission. No new deaths were reported, he said.
The total number of confirmed coronavirus cases in the country reached 82,901 as of May 9, while the total number of deaths from the virus was 4,633, he said.
On Sunday, the Jilin province raised the risk level of coronavirus in the city of Shulan from medium to high after a group of 11 cases in Shulan was confirmed.
The move came after all areas in China were considered low risk on Thursday.
Reuters
Updated
02:43
Three members of the US Coronavirus Task Force. USA Quarantined
The Associated Press reports that three members of the White House coronavirus task force were quarantined after contact with someone who tested positive for Covid-19.
Dr. Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, will be “teleworking for the next two weeks” after he was determined to have a “low risk exposure” to a person in the White House, the CDC said in a statement. statement on Saturday night. The statement said he was feeling well and has no symptoms.
The Food and Drug Administration confirmed that FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn had contacted someone who tested positive and was quarantined for the next two weeks. It was negative for the virus.
Anthony Fauci, a high-profile member of the White House coronavirus response team, is considered to be at relatively low risk based on the degree of his exposure, according to a representative from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID).
Fauci, the 79-year-old NIAID director, has tested negative for COVID-19 and will continue to do so regularly.
On Friday, Vice President Mike Pence’s press secretary tested positive for the coronavirus, making her the second person working at the White House complex to test positive this week. A member of the military who was serving as one of Trump’s valet aide tested positive for Covid-19 on Wednesday.
President Donald Trump, who publicly identified the affected Pence aide as spokeswoman Katie Miller, said he was not concerned about the spread of the virus at the White House.
Updated
02:29
New Zealand to decide tomorrow on relaxation of restrictions
On Monday, the New Zealand cabinet will decide whether to downgrade the country’s alert system from Level 3 to Level 2. With less than a dozen cases of the virus registered last week, it is widely assumed that the country will reduce its alert level, allowing domestic travel. , the opening of bars and restaurants and the expansion of “bubbles”, which means that people can leave home to meet friends, family or even online dating. Schools and workplaces will also reopen.
The country’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern described New Zealand as “halfway to Everest” in her battle with the virus, which has claimed 21 lives.
02:24
Australian state of New South Wales to reduce closure restrictions on Friday
NSW Prime Minister Gladys Berejiklian confirmed that the state shutdown will begin to slow on Friday, after only two new cases of the virus were reported on Sunday.
The relaxed rules will allow outdoor gatherings of up to 10 people, which means it is the first time since the new rules were introduced that people will be able to leave the home for recreational activities. Berejiklian says a 10-person gathering could be physical training, sitting in a park, or “having some kind of outdoor gathering.”
NSW is Australia’s most populous state. The new Queensland restrictions will begin next Saturday, Victoria will not announce theirs until Monday, and the ACT has already modified its restrictions.
In other changes for NSW:
- Cafeterias and restaurants can have 10 customers at a time
- Visitors to the home will also increase from two to five. That includes adults and children.
- Religious gatherings or places of worship can now include up to 10 people.
- Weddings will increase from five people to 10, and funerals will increase to 20 people or 30 for external service.
- Regional travel restrictions will not change.
“Having a population the size of New South Wales, seeing our cases go from a high of about 200 a day to a small handful is a wonderful achievement. We don’t want to see any of this lost. We need to ignite our economy. We need people to go back to work. We need to see some normalcy come back. But we cannot breach any of the current restrictions. No matter what you are doing, when you leave your home, you must maintain social distance. “- Premier NSW Gladys Berejiklian
Updated
02:00
Blocking restrictions are eased in parts of Europe
France and Spain, two of the countries most affected by the coronavirus, are preparing to get out of the confinement, since the number of cases worldwide exceeds 4 million.
Amid the barrage of deaths, some European countries cited signs of progress that they said justified slowing back toward some version of normalcy, reports the French news agency AFP.
French authorities said Saturday that the day’s death toll of 80 was the lowest since early April. Nursing home deaths also fell sharply when France prepared to relax restrictions on public movement imposed eight weeks ago.
“I was really scared” about the reopening, said Maya Flandin, manager of a Lyon bookstore. “It is a great responsibility to have to protect my staff and my clients.”
French health officials warned that “the epidemic is still active and is evolving,” and the state of emergency remains in effect until July 10.
In Spain, about half the population will be able to go out on Monday for limited socialization, and restaurants will be able to offer some outdoor service as the country begins a gradual transition that will last until June.
However, fears persisted of a viral resurgence if the restrictions were lifted too quickly: “The virus has not disappeared,” said Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez.
Belgium is also easing some restrictions on Monday, and in some parts of Germany bars and restaurants reopened on Saturday with more easing scheduled for Monday. In general, however, the situation in Europe is still far from normal.
Updated
01:46
Tesla CEO Elon musk He is threatening to take the factory and headquarters out of his California company after local authorities stopped him to reopen the electric car factory due to the Covid-19 risk, the Associated Press reports.
In a lawsuit filed in federal court, Tesla accused the Alameda County Health Department of overstepping federal and state coronavirus restrictions when it prevented Tesla from restarting production at its factory in Fremont. The lawsuit contends that workers at the Tesla factory can work during the California home stay order because the facility is considered “critical infrastructure.”
Musk has been ranting about the stay-at-home order since the company’s earnings were released on April 29 of the first quarter, calling for fascist restrictions and urging governments to stop taking people’s liberty.
Updated
01:37
Hundreds crowd US national parks. USA, circumventing the rules of social distancing
The reopening of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park on the border of Tennessee and North Carolina in the US USA It has attracted hundreds of people, many of whom don’t wear masks, knock down barricades, and stand together in mile-long lines to see the sights.
Park’s spokeswoman Dana Soehn told the Associated Press that many people wore no masks or social distancing, and that visitors from 24 different states took the weekend.
President Donald Trump has prioritized the reopening of national parks as a sign of significant progress against the invisible enemy of the pandemic, even as cases increase in an outbreak that has devastated the U.S. economy.
01:37
Global cases exceed 4 million
In another grim landmark of this pandemic, global cases 4 million have passed, with deaths in more than 278,750. The United States has the highest number of infections at 1,307,676, followed by Spain at 222,857. Russia is rapidly approaching 200,000.
The United States also tops deaths, with 78,746, followed by the United Kingdom (31,662) and Italy (30,395).
01:16
Obama Criticizes Trump’s Covid-19 Response As “Chaotic”
An explosive tape has emerged of the former President of the United States, Barack Obama, describing President Trump’s handling of the coronavirus crisis as “an absolutely chaotic disaster.”
In the recording, obtained by Yahoo News, Obama discusses Joe Biden’s chances in the upcoming presidential election with his alumni association.
“This upcoming election at all levels is very important because what we are going to fight is not just a particular individual or a political party. What we are fighting against is against these long-term trends in which being selfish, being tribal, being divided, and seeing others as enemies has become a stronger drive in American life. And, by the way, we are also seeing it internationally.
“It is part of the reason why the response to this global crisis has been so anemic and patchy. It would have been bad even with the best governments. It has been an absolutely chaotic mess when that mindset – of ‘what’s in it for me’ and “to annoy everyone else” – when that mindset becomes operational in our government. “
Obama continues to discuss the Justice Department’s decision to drop the case against Michael Flynn, Trump’s former national security adviser who pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about his contacts with Moscow.
Read the full report here:
Updated
Hello and welcome to our global coronavirus blog, Eleanor Ainge Roy today at the helm.
These are the most important recent developments, including that global cases have exceeded four million:
- The coronavirus has killed at least 278,756 according to the Johns Hopkins tracker. The infections worldwide are 4,020,878. The highest death toll is the United States, at 78,693.
- Former US President Barack Obama has called Tthe rump virus response “an absolute chaotic mess”. The former president of the United States harshly criticized his successor’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic during a conversation with former members of his administration, according to a recording obtained by Yahoo News.
- Germany’s plans to restart competitive football next Saturday suffered an early setback after the entire Dynamo Dresden team was quarantined for two weeks after two positive tests for coronavirus among the players.
- Lagos, Nigeria’s largest city, could return to the closure to stop the coronavirus if residents continue to ignore social distancing rules, the governor warned Saturday. Since loosening the five-week restrictions, people have been seen overwhelming markets and banks despite orders being held to avoid mass meetings.
- Indonesia has reported its largest daily increase in infections, with 533 new confirmed cases, totaling 13,645. But with Indonesia’s low test rate criticized by medical experts, it is feared that the number of infections in the country, which has the world’s fourth-largest population, is much higher than official figures show.
- The number of people who died from coronavirus infections in France increased by 80 to 26,310 on Saturday, the health ministry said. This is a much smaller daily increase than the day before when it was 243.
Let us begin.
Updated
[ad_2]