Coronavirus Live News: UK Secretary of Health ‘Cannot Rule out’ restrictions in England as thousands in Berlin protest

The opposing manifestation of the coronavirus brakes turns off the green for the German capital; The Australian state has 18 deaths and 94 cases; India sets a new record with more than 77,000 cases. Follow all live updates

Russia said Saturday that 111 other people had been killed by the new coronavirus in the last 24 hours, bringing the official death toll to 17025. The Russian Working Group on Coronavirus reported 4,941 new cases, bringing its national total to 985,346, the fourth number of cases. in the world.

Operations resumed at the world’s largest gold mine in Indonesia, the company running it Saturday announced after staff blocked the site to protest the ban on visiting their families due to virus problems.

Miners from the Grasberg complex in Papua’s easternmost region reached an agreement with US operator Freeport, who said he would resume bus transportation for staff to return home.

This week, more than 1,000 workers demonstrated on the mine’s main front of the mine over the resolution of cancelling the bus to Timika city in reaction to considerations of the spread of coronavirus infections.

Many staff members had been unable to leave the high-altitude open pit mine which is also a primary copper mine for six months.

Freeport spokeswoman Riza Pratama told the AFP on Saturday that the obstacle had risen after a long negotiation.

In Berlin, the police, who deployed 3,000 officials to control the crowds during a march expected to succeed at 20,000, are ready for the violence imaginable as antivirus activists urge social media fans across Europe to arm themselves and reunite. Activists, angry at Berlin’s resolve to ban protests after protesters at a recent demonstration wore a mask or kept their distance, flooded the city with thousands of requests for more protests over the weekend. “The rallies planned through several projects for August 29 opposed to the crown policy of the federal and state governments can take place,” the court said. In reaction to the resolution, Berlin Interior Minister Andreas Geisel said the court had given the protesters the chance to demonstrate that they could comply with the estrangement measures. “I call on everyone to come to Berlin together without violence,” he said.

In England, the government has issued recommendations on how to continue with an outbreak of coronavirus.

Paul Whiteman, general secretary of the NAHT Directors Guild of Directors, called the moment of the new direction “reprehensible.” He said: “Weeks ago, it was clear that a blocking recommendation was needed. The government’s resolve to publish this at nine o’clock on Friday night on the holiday weekend before the return of the maximum schools is absolutely reprehensible and demonstrates a general lack of respect for the well.” -be of school leaders and their teams.” The resolution confirms that the government simply does not perceive the commitment and professionalism of directors who will feel compelled to act immediately.

Thousands of coronavirus skeptics are expected to arrive in Berlin on Saturday for a massive demonstration of pandemic restrictions.

Police said they would show up and strictly monitor compliance with masking and social estrangement, and Berlin police leader Barbara Slowik warned that if the protesters met virus safety standards, the police would transparent the dominance “very quickly.”

“We won’t be willing to see tens of thousands of other people come together and create dangers of infection,” he added.

In the past, the Berlin city authorities did not allow Saturday’s demonstration to take place, fearing that the estimated 22,000 protesters would not remain at a distance of 1.5 meters (five feet) or fail to meet the requirements of the face mask.

The ban sparked outrage from organizers and their supporters, who flooded social media with messages promising to protest anyway, and some even called for violence.

But on the eve of the demonstration, the Berlin Administrative Court sided with the protesters, saying there was no indication that the organizers would “deliberately ignore” social estrangement regulations and endanger public health.

Hello everyone. My call is Sarah Marsh and I’m a reporter for the Guardian. I bring you the latest updates on coronavirus from the UK and beyond. Please stay in touch while painting today if you have any tips, comments or concepts to share. You can contact one of the channels below. Thank you very much in advance.

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Confusion about confinement rules is being used through some as an “excuse” to violate regulations in England, a police leader said. Andy Rhodes, the head of the Lancashire Police, said there was a “global difference” between other people acting rather and those who “bratly” forget the regulations. “What we’re looking for here is provided, so if we think other people have an idea about it and they’re Array, we got ahead and took care of the situation,” he told BBC Breakfast on Saturday. “The vast majority of the time in the count, the police simply give recommendations and ask others to do things differently.” (But) we had other people who obviously braidedly forgot about the regulations and arranged a wedding for two hundred other people. . “There is no one anywhere who can misinterpret existing regulations and say that two hundred other people in their back garden, at home or in a domain will be fine.” There is a global difference between other smart people who do their maximum productivity to laugh and are a littleArray and the rest of the people who obviously forget the general rules that the rest of us are trying to follow. “Being is a good excuse for some other people right now.” His comments come when Home Secretary Priti Patel promised to take strong action against illegal ravings in the UK, with fines of up to 10,000 for organisers. Rhodes said replacing the restrictions would “inevitably” lead to confusion, but that offenders risk cutting off some “freedoms” that began to return. He suggested that others be practical and “make the most of” social activities of choice. “Because it’s a holiday weekend, what we’re telling other people is to make sense, to respect the paintings other people have made to see and organize occasions in a moderate way, if they’re online, etc.” Said.

In the UK, decisions to tighten local restrictions on coronavirus blocking deserve not to be “imposed” through the government, Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham said. The former labour minister called for more negotiations and agreements between Westminster and local government on these issues. His comments came after the government made the decision to ease closing measures in parts of the northwest starting next week. Burnham told BBC Breakfast: “I think we will negotiate better what awaits us in autumn and winter if the government listens to local leaders, they know their communities.” It wasn’t just in Greater Manchester that we were ahead. In Bradford, communities were largely divided; some are still restricted, some are not.

“Then you have the scenario where some other people in part of the street are limited and some are not.

“My main message to the government is that you will have to impose such things from London when you go to communities in this way, it will have to be via negotiation and agreement.

“And that will have to be a basic precept that we agree on before we approve any extras in what will be a very difficult year.”

Burnham said communities “care” about how decisions are made. “Imposing such decisions without agreement or negotiation is certainly not the right way forward.

In the UK, Conservative MP Tobias Ellwood said a “draconian action” might be needed if the public did not stick to physical estrangement regulations, suggesting that the government could simply take melamine curtains more powerful than local locks. He told Times Radio: “It’s a lasting emergency and until a vaccine arrives, there’s a national resolution, there’s a responsibility, a duty of each and every One of the Array individuals… also the government has to stay in the country and that’s where Matt Hancock works. Rishi Sunak will have to be sure that the economy works. “If the country, if Americans don’t stick to regulations, then, in the end, Array … we cannot break the propagation chain and, therefore, draconian action is necessary. “We prefer it to be local, but absolutely, if this R score is too high, it’s a warning to each and every listener: make sure you’re making social distance so we can get you involved.” emergency, I repeat. Until there’s a vaccine, that’s the new popular one we have to get used to. “

Namibia will lift blocking restrictions, allowing foreign travel, reopening and alcohol intake on the floor from September, President Hage Geingob announced Friday, but has prolonged an overnight curfew as Covid-19 cases continue to rise.

The southern African country of 2 million more people now has 6,906 cases of Covid-19 and the disease is not yet under control: of its 6 five deaths, five and five were in August alone. But as with other southern African countries, leaders are assessing the effect of the virus on the enormous economic and social damage caused by the closures. “The virus will probably stay with us for a prolonged era and we will have to be informed to live with Array. Learning to live with the virus means adapting our attitudes and behaviors to lessen the damage it can cause to our country. Geingob said in a televised speech. He announced that a curfew from 8 pm to 5 am at the post in the capital, Windhoek, and in the Erongo region, covid-19 hot spots, will take you all over the country.

But Hosea Kutako International Airport will open its doors to foreign travelers from Tuesday, while schools, vocational education providers and universities will be able to take face-to-face courses from September 7. Outdoor restaurants and hotels in Windhoek and the Erongo region, which are the highest affected, can start promoting food and alcohol to consume on site, the president announced.

In England, national restrictions cannot be ruled out if coronavirus instances accumulate this winter, said Health Secretary Matt Hancock, who also hinted that restrictions would possibly not ease at Christmas to avoid a ‘accumulation’ in the covid-19 number. Speaking to The Times, Hancock said countries in other parts of the world were already experiencing a wave of moments, adding that it was a “very serious threat.” Describing the worst-case scenario, he said the UK can also combat the spread of influenza and coronavirus, while others spend more time indoors.

He continued: “Cases are increasing and we want to stay in extensive local closures or take additional action at the national level. We don’t rule that out, but we don’t want to see it.” Bbc Newsnight reported that an ‘assumption of making reasonable plans at worst’ presented to the government warned that there may be up to 81,000 additional deaths attributed to Covid-19 between July and Next March. The broadcaster indicated that the situation had been presented in a document approved through the Scientific Emergency Advisory Group (Sage) for the Cabinet Office at the end of July.

France reported an increase of 7379 new cases of coronavirus in 24 hours, according to Public Health France figures released friday night. This is the highest number of new cases since March 31. A former audit of the government’s Covid-19 online website suggests that it is the highest moment since the figures began to be published through the fitness government on March 2.

The number of new patients admitted to the hospital remains solid (up to 241) as is the number of resuscitation admissions (up to 32). The number of deaths attributed to Covid-19 has increased to 20 in the last 24 hours to achieve a total of 30,596 since the start of the epidemic. Currently, 320 clusters are being investigated, 31 more than the previous day. The consistent percentage of positive tests is 3.9%. Accumulation cannot be explained only through a build-up in the tests, which is lately positioning itself in more than 800,000 tests consistent with the week. The health government aims to succeed in 1 million tests on weekdays through the end of September. Public Health France states that “the transmission dynamics (of the virus) are increasing strongly and is of great concern.” There has been an increase in the number of other people with Covid-19 symptoms, rather than being asymptomatic as reported last week. All ages are affected, however, there is a stable accumulation in cases among young adults. The acceleration comes at the end of the long summer holidays and just before the start of the new year, (the return) the wonderful resumption of professional and school life in the country next week. All students are expected to finish school on Tuesday or Wednesday, dressed in masks if they are over 11 years old. All school staff will have to wear a mask. It is now mandatory to wear a mask in public outdoor spaces in Paris and 3 suburbs, as well as in Marseilles and Strasbourg. In the face of a sudden increase in cases in the Far East, the Lower Rhine government has forced an outdoor mask in all cities of more than 10,000 inhabitants.

In England, secondary schools in regions where the number of Covid-19 instances is much higher may be subject to a rotation formula that limits the number of pupils attending.

On Friday night, just days before millions of students returned to school, the government issued new guidelines. The Education Secretary said the adjustments were an “absolute last resort.”

Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Association of School and University Leaders, said, “Many [teachers] will wake up to locate after weeks of making plans to open schools and ask for a Plan B, regardless, as we entered for a weekend. has fallen despite everything in his inbox and the polite reaction is a feeling of tiredness and resignation of inevitability.

“Here we are still at the last minute [getting something] for which we were accused of treason.”

He said it very late and that it’s “extremely frustrating to be with his foot back.”

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I’ll cede the ground to my colleague Sarah Marsh in London. I’ll leave you with some of the key occasions for today. Thank you for reading and staying safe.

A “Nightingale moment” is needed for young people, offering more funding, more education for counselors and counselors at the school, england’s Children’s Commissioner said.

Citing the gigantic effort to build Nightingale hospitals for thousands of Covid patients in a matter of weeks, and the $35 billion leave program to save jobs, Anne Longfield says the recovery of young people after months of school goes by and will have a profound mental impact.

Longfield says young people made a massive sacrifice for the pandemic and urges the government to step up their aid to the most disadvantaged.

Read more of your interview in this article through my colleague Sally Weale:

Australia will supply up to $2 million in non-public protective medical equipment, adding gloves, gowns, masks and thermometers, to the Indonesian army (TNI) as a component of a defense cooperation program between the two countries, Australian Defense Minister Linda Reynolds said.

“Covid-19 brings new situations and demanding times to our two countries,” Reynolds said in a statement.

“As the Australian Defence Force in Australia, the TNI plays a key role in supporting Indonesia’s reaction to Covid-19.

“Just as Indonesia helped us with this year’s wildfire crisis, we are pleased to be able to help our Indonesian friends in those dubious times.”

The Royal Australian Air Force will send the PPE to Halim Air Force Base in Jakarta.

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