Hello and welcome to Al Jazeera’s continuing coverage of the coronavirus pandemic. I’m Kate Mayberry in Kuala Lumpur.
Here are the latest updates.
More than 100 people defied fears of a second wave of coronavirus infections to queue from as early as 5am outside Chanel in Seoul to buy the French brand’s luxury goods ahead of an expected rise in prices.
54-year-old Lee Ji-yeon told Reuters she was hoping to get a handbag for her daughter who is getting married. Her future son-in-law was queuing at a Chanel concession in a department store, she said.
“We’ve been to the Chanel store several times before and agonising whether to buy it or not,” Lee said. “Since the prices are going up, we decided to buy it now.”
There has been a spike in coronavirus cases in Seoul after an outbreak linked to clubs and bars, with 119 cases across the country now linked to the 29-year-old who tested positive in early May.
London mayor Sadiq Khan says it’s “too early” to be discussing the resumption of the Premier League and other high-profile sports in the UK capital because the country is “still in the grips of this crisis, and hundreds of people (are) dying every day”, the Evening Standard reported, citing a spokesman for the mayor.
Arsenal, Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur are among the five Premier League clubs in London.
The possibility of games resuming next month got a boost after the government said elite-level sport could resume behind closed doors from June 1.
Teams have been told no tackling will be allowed once training resumes as part of a package of measures to protect people from the virus.
Gai Dongping, the vice mayor of Jilin in China’s northeast, has told reporters the six new cases confirmed on Wednesday morning raised the risk of the virus spreading further and the city was stepping up measures to curb and contain the virus.
The city is the second biggest in the province of the same name and lies nearly 100 kilometres (63 miles) east of the capital Changchun.
The coronavirus pandemic is slowing efforts to help people in Vanuatu and other parts of the Pacific, after Cyclone Harold tore through the region a month ago destroying homes and livelihoods.
Michel Kerf, who heads the World Bank in the region, said the cyclone had been a “shocking reminder” of Vanuatu’s vulnerability to natural disasters.
Read more here.
The government of Iceland says it plans to ease restrictions on international arrivals no later than 15 June and expects to be able to give travellers a choice between a COVID-19 test on arrival, or two weeks quarantine. A final decision will be made at the end of the month.
“When travellers return to Iceland we want to have all mechanisms in place to safeguard them and the progress made in controlling the pandemic,” Thordis Kolbrun Reykfjord Gylfadottir, Minister of Tourism, Industry and Innovation said in a statement. “Iceland’s strategy of large-scale testing, tracing and isolating have proven effective so far. We want to build on that experience of creating a safe place for those who want a change of scenery after what has been a tough spring for all of us.”
Iceland has already revised the quarantine regime that was first imposed in January, with essential workers and those involved in vital infrastructure eligible for a modified quarantine that does not require then to stay at home. The scheme will be extended to film makers, scientists and some others from May 15.
China’s National Health Commission has confirmed seven new cases of coronavirus, six of them in the northeastern province of Jilin where the city of Shulan increased its risk level from medium to high at the weekend.
The new cases were found in Jilin, the province’s second-biggest city, with five of them linked to an earlier case in Shulan. The city of Jilin has temporarily suspended train services as a result of the outbreak.
Jilin Railway Station in #Jilin City, NE China’s Jilin Province, announced temporary suspension of departures and ride-through services starting 6:00 am Wednesday after the province reported a cluster of #COVID19 cases. pic.twitter.com/onXljSyg6D
— People’s Daily, China (@PDChina) May 13, 2020
China’s other case was found in a traveller returning to Shanghai.
Brazil’s confirmed cases of coronavirus surpassed Germany on Tuesday as the country recorded 881 deaths in 24 hours – the highest since the outbreak began.
Brazil has confirmed 177,589 cases of coronavirus, compared with 170,508 in Germany.
The country’s president, Jair Bolsonaro, has sought to downplay the disease and is now battling with state governors over a presidential decree he signed on Monday designating beauty salons and gyms as “essential” services that would allow them to open during lockdowns.
At least 10 governors have said they will not comply with Bolsonaro’s decree.
“Bolsonaro is walking towards the precipice and wants to take all of us with him,” Rio de Janeiro Governor Wilson Witzel wrote on Twitter.
Americans have become more critical of President Donald Trump over the past month as the coronavirus outbreak in the country has deepened, according to a survey released on Tuesday.
A Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll shows 56 percent of those surveyed now disapprove of Trump, up five points from a similar poll in mid-April. Trump’s approval rating slipped four points to 41 percent.
It also found that 46 percent of registered voters would back Democratic challenger Joe Biden in the November 3 election, while 38 percent would vote for Trump.
Read all the developments from yesterday (May 12) here.