Berlin police have arrested 300 people in the German capital after demonstrators failed to keep their distance and wear masks as instructed.
Berlin Interior Minister Andreas Geisel called the organization an “extremist.” Seven police officers were injured.
Recently, under the law before a legislative committee, the state would establish for the first time minimum proportions of nurses per patient, adding a popular nurse for each of the two patients in the extensive care units.
In a tweet, Turkish Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said 1,549 new ones had been reported, bringing the total to 267,064.
The death toll increased by 39 to 6,284, the minister said.
Detroit, Michigan, has about 400 volunteers to help create a memorial to citizens who died of coronavirus.
France has reported 5,453 new coronavirus cases, and the health ministry has described the situation as “worrying” following a spike the previous day when the country registered its highest number of cases since mid-March.
On Friday 7,379 cases were recorded, its biggest daily figure reported since France imposed a lockdown at the height of the pandemic.
“In metropolitan France, the progression of the COVID-19 pandemic is exponential. The drive to expand transmission is a major concern,” the Ministry of Health said on its website.
The total number of COVID-19 deaths rose to 30,602 from 30,596 reported on Friday, according to the health ministry.
The United Kingdom has reported 1,108 new cases of COVID-19 over the past 24 hours, the government has said, down slightly from the figure recorded on Friday.
Protesters carried a wide range of complaints and banners indicating their opposition to vaccines, the mask and the German government in general.
Operations have resumed at the world’s biggest gold mine in Indonesia, the company that runs it said, after workers blocked access to the site in protest to being stopped from visiting their families over virus concerns.
Azerbaijan has extended some coronavirus lockdown restrictions, including the closure of its borders, until September 31 after a further rise in the number of infections, the government said.
Only an incredibly limited number of spectators will attend the race, as the Cote d’Azur region is now designated as a “red zone”, a hot spot for the virus.
Initially, 5,000 spectators were allowed to watch. Today, a few dozen have the honor of taking on the start and end of the first stage.
The increase comes after Ukraine this week imposed a transitional ban on the maximum entry of foreigners into the country until 28 September and extended the blocking measures until the end of October to involve a recent increase in cases.
The country has reported a total of 116,987 infections and 2,492 deaths from the virus.
Russia’s Coronavirus Working Group reported 4941 new cases, bringing its national level to 985346, the fourth number of cases in the world.
The government has said the real number of infected people is likely significantly higher than the confirmed cases.
Malaysia has extended its movement restrictions on the occasion of a pandemic, adding a ban to foreign tourists until the end of the year.
Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin said in a televised confrontation that global bodies were on the rise and that the country had noticed sporadic virus groups even though the stage was under control.
The Australian state of Victoria recorded its lowest accumulation of new coronavirus cases in nearly two months, but the government warned that there would be no rush to lift restrictions on social distance.
Pandemic restrictions in the country began on March 20. The new, quieter regulations are expected to last at least until September 20.
Researchers in Nevada have reported what could be the first documented case of coronavirus reinfection in the United States, following previous reports this week from Hong Kong and Europe.
The effects have still been published or reviewed through other scientists, but have been published on a study site.
At least 33 states continue to propose tests to others who have been exposed to COVID-19 and have no symptoms, rejecting rules published through the CDC this week that testing would likely be unnecessary.
Reuters said 16 states did not immediately respond to requests for comment and North Dakota said it had not made a decision.
Michael Mina, an assistant professor of epidemiology at Harvard’s TH Chan School of Public Health, told the agency, “These are states that almost all oppose the new guidelines.”