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03:13
New Zealand Announces NZ $ 50 Billion Fund for Country Recovery from Covid-19
Turning away from Australia for the second time to nearby New Zealand, where finance minister Grant Robertson said his government could reduce unemployment to pre-coronavirus levels in two years by announcing on Thursday a NZ $ 50 billion fund for Covid-19 Country Recovery along with its Annual Budget.
The figure, which is about 17% of New Zealand’s GDP and 17 times more than what a New Zealand government typically allocates to new spending in its budgets, was “the most significant financial commitment” that the country’s leaders had made “in modern history,” said Robertson.
The spending, which includes an extension of the government’s Covid-19 wage subsidy, as well as spending on training and learning, public housing and infrastructure, will be financed by steep long-term loans and could save 138,000 jobs according to Treasury models. provided by the Government.
The announcement came when New Zealand recovered a third day in a row with no new Covid-19 cases and the government’s blocking restrictions on the country were further loosened, with open restaurants and shops allowing to open and people allowed to socialize outside their homes. for the first time, in groups of no more than 10.
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Wisconsin supreme court reverses stay in governor’s home order
The Wisconsin Supreme Court on Thursday reversed the state order to stay home, ruling that Governor Tony Evers overstepped his authority by extending the order until the end of May.
The ruling reopens the state, raises the limit on the size of meetings, allows people to travel as they please, and allows closed businesses, including bars and restaurants, to reopen. The Tavern League of Wisconsin quickly posted the news on its website and told members, “YOU CAN OPEN IMMEDIATELY!”
Decision 4-3, written by conservative court judges, also undermines Evers’ authority to curb the spread of the coronavirus and will compel the Democratic governor to work with the Republican legislature as the state continues to grapple with the outbreak.
It is regularly cited as the most hated word in the English language and even Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau visibly struggled while using it. But now the word “wet” is being implemented forever: in a song written by a New Zealand school principal that aims to help children observe patterns of social estrangement.
Shirley Șerban, from Lake Brunner School on the South Island, wrote the song Moist Breath Zone as a health and safety message for students returning to school after the closure of Covid-19.
“I will share my news, but my food is only for me. If I smell your breath, I will sit alone. Always wash your hands, make them soapy, full of foam,” he sings.
“And stay out of my wet breathing zone!”
A wet breathing zone is the area where you can feel or smell another person’s breath.
The song has been well received by the New Zealand Ministry of Education, which called Șerban’s effort “fantastic.”
01:09
Italian doctors find link between Covid-19 and inflammatory disorder
Doctors in Italy reported the first clear evidence of a link between Covid-19 and a rare but serious inflammatory disorder that has required some children to undergo life-saving treatment in intensive care units.
The mysterious condition emerged last month when NHS chiefs issued an alert to doctors after hospitals admitted multiple children with a mix of toxic shock and symptoms seen in an inflammatory disorder known as Kawasaki disease.
On Tuesday, doctors at Evelina London Children’s Hospital announced the death of a 14-year-old boy, the first known death from the condition in Britain. Between 75 and 100 children are receiving treatment across the country. Typical symptoms include fever, rashes, red eyes, chapped lips, and abdominal pain.
Doctors suspected from the start that the coronavirus played a role in the new disorder by triggering an excessive immune reaction in children, but there was no evidence that the two were linked.
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Moscow says it attributed more than 60% of coronavirus deaths in April to other causes
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