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Mexico reported 375 new coronavirus cases on Saturday, bringing the country’s total to 4,219 cases and 273 deaths, the Health Ministry said.
German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas on Saturday condemned the attack on French people traveling to border areas, which has erupted amid the coronavirus pandemic, reports AFP.
“Coronavirus knows nothing of nationality. It is the same for human dignity. It hurts me to see how some of our French friends have been insulted and attacked by Covid-19, ”Mass posted on Twitter.
Such behavior is completely unacceptable. And also: we are in the same boat ”, he added.
Maas’s tweet came in response to a similar apology post by Anke Rehlinger, economy minister in Saarland state, which borders France’s Great East region.
“I apologize to our French friends for these isolated incidents.”
A few days earlier, the mayor of a small border town, Gersheim complained of “a certain hostility towards our French friends” in his district, including people who were spit on.
One had been told to “go back to your crown-crowded country,” added Michael Clivot.
The French consul in Saarland, Catherine Robinet, confirmed that there had been “isolated” incidents against French citizens in the region, but urged not to “generalize” anti-French sentiment, adding that she had also received numerous messages of support.
Some people in France have also reacted badly to Germans in the country, he added.
China reports 99 new cases, with no deaths
Mainland China reported 99 new cases on Saturday, of which all but two were imported. The country’s national health commission said no one had died from the virus on Saturday.
The two local cases were in Heilongjiang, the northernmost province in China and bordering Russia.
Of the 97 imported cases registered, 43 were in the city of Shanghai.
No new cases were reported in Hubei, the province where the outbreak is believed to have started.
The elderly may have to be kept isolated until the end of the year to protect them from the coronavirus, Head of the EU, Ursula von der Leyen has said.
“Without a vaccine, we have to limit contact with the elderly as much as possible,” he told the German newspaper Bild.
“I know it is difficult and that isolation is a burden, but it is a matter of life and death, we must be disciplined and patient.”
“Children and young people will enjoy more freedom of movement than older people and people with pre-existing medical conditions,” he said.
He said he expected a European laboratory to develop a vaccine by the end of the year.
To ensure that people can be vaccinated quickly, authorities are already in talks with producers to prepare for global production, he added.
In Australia, more than a thousand people will land ashore after weeks stranded abroad, reports the AAP.
Travelers who traveled from Peru, Uruguay, India and Nepal will cross Sydney and Melbourne on Sunday before being transferred to hotels for two weeks of quarantine.
Almost 100 of them spent weeks stranded on an Antarctic cruise off the coast of Uruguay, while another 63 left Kathmandu on a Canadian government-backed flight.
“Thanks also to (the) Canadian High Commission in New Delhi and the Government of Canada. Doing what you did remotely … I take my hat off, “Australian Ambassador to Nepal Peter Budd tweeted Saturday night.
Puerto Rico, which has reported more than 780 Covid-19 cases, and at least 42 deaths, will continue its blockade until at least May 3.
Governor Wanda Vázquez announced Saturday that people must stay inside by 9 p.m. at 5 am. and just leave home outside those hours to buy food or medicine or go to the bank. Non-core companies will remain closed.
However, he lifted all license plate restrictions and said that hardware and auto repair shops can operate once a week on limited hours.
Everyone is still required to wear a face mask to enter any business, as Health Secretary Lorenzo González warned that the peak of cases is not expected until early May.
Updated
King Salman of Saudi Arabia approved an extension of the kingdom’s curfew until further notice, the state news agency (SPA) reported early Sunday.
The country has been under a curfew from 7pm to 6am since March 23, due to the speed at which the coronavirus is currently spreading.
The capital Riyadh and other major cities were under a 24-hour curfew last week.
The Pope has urged people not to “give in to fear” in his Easter speech.
“Easter offers a message of hope in the darkest hour of the people” Pope Francis he said at a nightly vigil on Saturday in St. Peter’s Basilica. The public was excluded due to the pandemic, and Catholics worldwide followed his service and other Masses on television or online.
“Do not be afraid, do not give in to fear: this is the message of hope,” said the Pope.
“It is addressed to us today. These are the words that God repeats to us this very night. “
He encouraged people to be “messengers of life in a moment of death,” again condemning the arms trade and urging those in the best situation to help the poor.
Hello, welcome to The Guardian’s continued international coverage of the coronavirus pandemic. Thanks to Molly Blackall and other colleagues in London for helping us get through the last day. This is Helen Davidson, in Sydney, to take you through here.
If you want to follow the blog focused on Australia, you can find it here.
For specific US updates. USA, Visit the US blog USA Here.
Here is a quick summary of the latest international developments.
- the global death toll has reached 108,281, according to the Johns Hopkins University tracker.
- For the first time in history, the 50 states of EE. USA are now under disaster declarations, after Wyoming became the final state to advertise.
- Pope Francisco has urged people not “give in to fear” in his Easter speech. The event was cut short due to the coronavirus, with just two dozen attendees, a smaller choir, and no processions or baptisms.
- British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said that owes its life to the NHS. He has been in the hospital since Sunday night and has spent three nights in intensive care.
- British opposition parties and high-ranking conservatives have come together to ask the British government to reopen Parliament.
- Seven African states have asked authorities to explain the allegations of African mistreatment in guangzhou city, many reported being evicted, repeatedly tested for coronaviruses without results and being rejected and discriminated against in public.
- The Kremlin has warned that Moscow hospitals are under pressure. after a “large influx” of coronavirus cases.
- The World Health Organization has warned that Belarus must take more action to fight the coronavirus, as they enter a new phase of infection. Belarus still hosts football matches, and its president, Alexander Lukashenko, has downplayed the restrictive measures. In recent weeks, he said that drinking vodka and bathing in saunas could help fight the virus.
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