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India coronavirus cases third-highest globally: Live updates

  • July 06, 2020

 

  • Officials in Texas are warning that hospitals in the United States state could soon be overwhelmed if coronavirus cases continue to surge.
  • The border between the Australian states of Victoria and New South Wales will be closed at midnight on Tuesday for the first time in a century.
  • More than 11.4 million people around the world have been diagnosed with the coronavirus and 533,781 have died, according to Johns Hopkins University. Nearly 6.2 million have recovered from the disease.

Here are the latest updates:

Monday, July 6

09:37 GMT – Britain’s Pret A Manger to shut down shops and cut jobs

With a 74 percent drop in sales compared to the previous year, British coffee and sandwich chain Pret A Manger said it will no longer reopen 30 UK shops.

The food chain also said that it would cut jobs across its remaining outlets as a result of the major hit the pandemic had on customers’ demand.

09:13 GMT – Mapping India’s confirmed cases

India’s hardest-hit state is Maharashtra – home to the country’s financial hub of Mumbai. There the virus has particularly hit densely populated cities such as New Delhi (99,000 cases), Mumbai (84,000 cases) and Chennai (68,000 cases).

Below is a state-wide map of COVID-19 cases in India:

 

08:47 GMT – Fiji reports first coronavirus case in 78 days

Fiji reported its first coronavirus case in 78 days after a 66-year-old man tested positive upon his return from India. 

“We’ve confirmed a border case of #COVID19 among a returning citizen while he was securely in the confines of government-funded quarantine,” said in a tweet Acting Permanent Secretary for Health James Fong, adding this case represents “zero risk to the public”.

08:25 GMT – France: tour guides demand support 

Several dozen Paris tour guides protested outside the Louvre museum calling for more support from the government as the pandemic has greatly damaged the tourism sector.

Paris tour guides hold posters depicting Mona Lisa painting by artist Leonardo da Vinci during an action at Le Louvre museum courtyard to warn on their working conditions

Despite France’s announcement in May of measures worth 18bl euros ($19bl) to support the sector, tour guides such as Margot Schmitz said these funds were not reaching her category. “The government is turning a deaf ear,” Schmitz told Reuters ahead of the protest. “We have no voice.”

The Louvre – which reopened on Monday for the first time in four months – said it was expecting 7,000 visitors on its first day, but after an initial flurry managers anticipate that numbers will only be a fifth of pre-outbreak levels.

08:07 GMT – Egypt silences critics over virus outbreak

As Egypt tries to curb the spread of the coronavirus, security agencies have tried to silence criticism over the government’s handling of the health crisis.

From a doctor writing an article on the fragility of the country’s health system to a pharmacist posting online about a shortage of medical supplies, at least 16 people have been arrested since February, according to the Associated Press citing human rights groups.

“Every day I go to work, I sacrifice myself and my whole family,” said a front-line doctor in greater Cairo, who spoke to AP on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals. “Then they arrest my colleagues to send us a message. I see no light on the horizon.”

07:38 GMT – China detains professor who criticised Xi over coronavirus

Law professor Xu Zhangrun, an outspoken critic of the Chinese government, was detained by authorities, the AFP reported citing friends of the man. 

Zhangrun had previously published essays criticising President Xi Jinping over the coronavirus pandemic and his efforts to consolidate power.

According to one of his friends who spoke on condition of anonymity, Zhangrun was taken from his home in suburban Beijing by more than 20 people.

07:20 GMT – How coronavirus spread across India

India has nearly 700,000 confirmed coronavirus cases, with nearly 70 percent of total cases reported in June alone. This sharp increase has taken India from seventh-highest most affected country in the world at the end of May to third-highest today. Only Brazil and the US have more confirmed cases, respectively 1.6m and 2.8m. 

Below is an animated graphic that shows how the coronavirus spread across Indian states since March.

 

07:12 GMT – Drones light up Seoul sky with messages

The sky in Seul lit up with hundreds of drones in a spectacular showcase of motivational and awareness messages.

Three hundred unmanned aerial vehicles formed images with messages reminding people of key precautionary measures, expressing gratitude for medical personnel in the frontlines of the pandemic as well as thanking all South Koreans for their collective efforts.

Seoul drones

06:52 GMT – Pakistan cases cross 231,000 mark

Pakistan registered 3,344 new cases of the coronavirus on Sunday, taking the overall numbers to 231,818, with 50 deaths taking the death toll to 4,844. 

Pakistan’s mortality rate from the coronavirus remains relatively low, at 2.08 percent, and authorities claim they have controlled the rapid spread of the virus through the use of “smart lockdowns”.

Testing is reduced, however, with roughly 22,000 tests carried out on Sunday, compared to a peak of over 31,000/day. 

People attend Friday prayers along a sidewalk at a business area, after Pakistani authorities re-imposed lockdowns in selected areas in an effort to stop the spread of

06:32 GMT – UK hopes for socially distanced cultural performances 

Britain hopes to permit outdoor and socially distanced performances at cultural venues, said minister Oliver Dowden, after announcing a nearly $2 billion investment in the arts.

“I want all our cultural institutions to return to normal,” the culture minister told Sky News.

“Very soon I hope we will be able to permit outdoor performances and then later over the summer be able to have socially distant performances and have pilots to look at other innovative ways that performances can return.”

05:45 GMT – Pakistan health minister tests positive

Pakistani Health Minister Zafar Mirza said he tests positive for COVID-19.

“I have isolated myself at home taking all precautions. I have mild symptoms. Please keep me in your kind prayers. Colleagues, keep up the good work!” he said on Twitter. 

 

Hi, this is Virginia Pietromarchi taking over the live blog from my colleague Kate Mayberry.

 

04:50 GMT – India records 23,000 new cases; third worst-affected in world

India reported more than 23,000 new cases of coronavirus on Monday, overtaking Russia to become the country with the third highest number of coronavirus cases in the world.

India has confirmed a total of 697,413 cases, compared with Russia’s 680,283.

The caseload is about eight times that of China which has a similar sized population.

Offiicals in the northern city of Agra say that because of the rise in cases, the Taj Mahal, which was scheduled to reopen on Monday, will remain closed.

Read the full story here

Outbreak of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Agra

04:00 GMT – Broadway star dies of COVID-19 at age of 41

Broadway star Nick Cordero has died of coronavirus.

The 41-year-old Canadian, who was nominated for a Tony for his role in Bullets over Broadway, had been in hospital for three months and had had his right leg amputated as a result of the disease.

His wife, Amanda Kloots, announced his death on Instagram. The couple had a one-year-old son together.

“God has another angel in heaven now,” she wrote. “I am in disbelief and hurting everywhere. I can’t imagine our lives without him.”

03:15 GMT – Mexico’s President rejects comparisons with European death tolls

Mexico’s president Andres Manuel Lopex Obrador refused to compare Mexico with European countries on Sunday as the country’s coronavirus death toll mounted.

Mexico now has 30,639 deaths, the fifth highest in the world, overtaking France.

“The population of Spain and France is smaller than that of Mexico,” Lopez Obrador said in a video message posted to YouTube. “For every one who has died in our country, three have died in Spain. We cannot compare this.”

Mexico has a population of 127 million, compared with 67 million in France and 47 million in Spain.

The five countries with the highest death tolls:

  1. US – 129,946
  2. Brazil – 64,867
  3. UK – 44,305
  4. Italy – 34,861
  5. Mexico – 30,639
Source: Johns Hopkins University

03:00 GMT – The Louvre to reopen on Monday

After four months of closure, the Louvre in the heart of Paris is due to reopen at 9am local time (07:00 GMT).

All visitors are required to book a time slot and wear a mask inside the buildings, while efforts have been made to avoid overcrowding.

The Salle des Etats where the Mona Lisa is displayed and which is usually jam-packed, will have separate entry and exit points.

Translation: One day until we reopen. The Mona Lisa is ready to welcome you once again.

02:20 GMT – Saudi Arabia announces new domestic controls for COVID-19

Saudi Arabia has announced new health protocols for this year’s Hajj, which will be open only to domestic pilgrims. 

Touching the Kaaba will be banned and a social distancing space of one and a half metres enforced during mass prayers and while circling the Kaaba.

Access to Hajj sites at Mona, Muzadalifah and Arafat will also be limited to those with Hajj permits from July 19 until August 2, according to the state news agency.

outside image - blog - Hajj

01:45 GMT – Bolivia’s health minister diagnosed with coronavirus

Bolivia’s health minister Eidy Roca has been diagnosed with the coronavirus, the third member of the country’s cabinet to be confirmed with the disease in four days.

Roca is in a stable condition and “strictly complying with the safety protocol that inlcudes isolation, medication and care,”  according to a statement from her office.

00:50 GMT – Victoria/NSW border closure confirmed

Victoria’s Premier Daniel Andrews has confirmed the state border with New South Wales (NSW) will be closed at midnight on Tuesday in Australia.

Victoria, which has sealed off a number of Melbourne suburbs and imposed a draconian lockdown on nine public housing blocks, said it had 127 new cases of the coronavirus. It now has 645 active cases.

00:20 GMT – Australia’s New South Wales to close border with Victoria

The Australian state of New South Wales is to close its border with neighbouring Victoria after a surge in locally-transmitted coronavirus cases in Melbourne.

The closure will take effect on Tuesday, according to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

23:00 GMT – Hospitals in some parts of US pushed to brink

Hospitals in some parts of the United States are in danger of being overwhelmed.

All beds are occupied in parts of Texas – one of the states worst hit by the resurgent virus.

“Our hospitals here in Harris County, Houston and 33 other cities … they’re into surge capacities,” Lina Hidalgo, the county’s chief executive, told ABC television in the US.  Her comments were echoed by Houston mayor Sylvester Turner, who said the system could be “overwhelmed” if the outbreak was not brought under control.

Steve Adler, the mayor of Austin, has also expressed concern that hospitals could soon reach breaking point.

“If we don’t change our trajectory, then I am within two weeks of having our hospitals overrun. And in our ICUs, I could be 10 days away from that,” the mayor told CNN.

—-

Hello and welcome to Al Jazeera’s continuing coverage of the coronavirus pandemic. I’m Kate Mayberry in Kuala Lumpur.

Read all the updates from yesterday here.

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