The Nikkei Asian Review tracks the spread of the new coronavirus from The city of Wuhan in central China.
Global instances have reached 27,719,952, johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
The death toll internationally has reached 901,050.
To see how the disease has spread, see our virus tracking tables:
Here are the advances (Tokyo time):
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Thursday, September 10
10:02 a. m. , South Korea confirms new cases, up from 156 a day ago. Total infections reached 21,743 with 346 deaths.
9:10 a. m. , China reports seven new cases wednesday, up from the previous day’s two. All new instances have been imported and involve travelers from abroad. China has spent 25 consecutive days of local transmission.
9:00 a. m. Orders for critical machinery in Japan rose 6. 3% in July to last month, according to government data, a respite from the weakness in pandemic-induced capital expenditure.
8:00 am The global death toll from coronavirus has exceeded 900,000, and the total number of infections exceeds 27. 7 million, according to Johns Hopkins University. The United States remains the most affected country, with more than 190,000 deaths and more than 6. 3 million cases. . Brazil has the current number of deaths, with more than 127,000, and India’s number 3 has counted nearly 74,000 deaths.
7:40 a. m. The Australian state of Victoria reports 51 new cases and seven deaths from the virus, up to 76 cases and 11 deaths a day earlier.
At 5:30 a. m. M. , Tokyo will withdraw its call for restaurants and karaoke in the 23 districts of the capital on Tuesday to close at 10 p. m. M. The metropolitan will also lower its alert point a bit. Tokyo reported 149 new cases on Wednesday, up from 170 the day before.
At 5:15 a. m. , US stocks rallied after a three-session sell-off in primary-generation stocks. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 440 points, or 1. 6%, and the S
4:45 a. m. The International Olympic Committee is confident in its arrangements and in those of the Japanese government for next year’s Tokyo Olympics, but says all scenarios will be discussed in the coming weeks amid the ongoing pandemic.
“In the coming weeks, positions will be taken in extensive discussions related to other COVID-19 countermeasure scenarios,” IAO President Thomas Bach said at a press conference after an executive board meeting.
3:05 am President Donald Trump declared to reporter Bob Woodward in a recorded interview on February 7 that he deliberately downplayed the coronavirus prior to this year, even though he knew it to be “fatal” and much more serious than the seasonal flu, The Washington Post and another media report.
“It’s a fatal thing,” Trump told Woodward in one of the journalist’s interview series with the president for his next book, Rage. The Washington Post and CNN have won initial copies of the book.
2:30 a. m. The indoor dining room can be resumed in New York at 25% of the city’s capacity as of September 30, said Governor Andrew Cuomo, a major landmark for the city that has been affected by the coronavirus crisis.
The announcement comes more than two months after Governor and Mayor Bill de Blasio ended an earlier plan to reopen restaurants.
2:20 a. m. Nippon Paper Industries, one of Japan’s industry leaders, will begin printing paper sales on Tuesday, according to the company, which fights viruses with steel ions, and awaits a request for paper to be used in menus. from restaurants and hospitals.
2:00 a. m. Prime Minister Boris Johnson announces new restrictions on social gatherings in the UK and says there is a transparent desire to act after an increase in COVID-19 infections.
Johnson says teams of more than six people will be banned from meeting, in what he calls a “rule of six. “
1:45 p. m. Pope Francis, masked in public for the first time, warns of “the emergence of partisan interests” in the fight opposing coronavirus and the pursuit of gains in the vaccine race, Reuters reports.
12. 30 p. m. British drug manufacturer AstraZeneca could resume testing for its experimental coronavirus vaccine next week, the Financial Times reports, which mentions others related to the trials.
The London-listed company suspended global trials of its potential COVID-19 vaccine after an unexplained illness in one participant, slowing down its movements as the resolution noted as a minimum on customers for early deployment.
Wednesday, September 9
10:55 p. m. Jakarta Governor Anies Baswedan said the Indonesian capital will once again impose large-scale social restrictions as it continues to see an increase in COVID-19 cases. The move, which comes 3 months after Jakarta eased restrictions and moved to the so-called new normal, deals a blow to an Indonesian economy that has been hit by the pandemic.
Starting Monday, nonessential staff will have to paint from home, entertainment venues and schools will close again, and restaurants and cafes will open for takeout and delivery.
Jakarta had a total of 49,397 cases shown Wednesday, the worst in the country. “If there are no Array restrictions . . . until September 17, all COVID-19 ready beds will be fully occupied,” the governor said.
10:10 p. m. Singapore will distribute touch search tokens across the country starting next Monday in an imaginable way to better monitor the spread of COVID-19, according to Vivian Balakrishnan, Smart Nation Initiative Tax Minister.
TraceTogether tokens are the length of a giant keychain and are intended for others who struggle with the government-backed touch tracking app of the same name. A pilot program will be introduced to force others to use the token or app to register their access. in safe locations.
9:10 p. m. The University of Hong Kong reports that a coronavirus vaccine candidate evolved through its laboratory and two partners have been approved for human clinical trials. The two partners are Xiamen University in China’s Fujian province and Beijing Wantai Biological Pharmacy, a company controlled by China’s third richest man, Zhong Shanshan.
21:00. The organizer of the International Aviation and Aerospace Expo in China said the occasion was still scheduled for November, reversing this afternoon that it had been canceled due to the pandemic, Reuters reports. “If there is a change, check the official data and the website,” said a spokesman, adding that the past was his “prediction. “
8:30 p. m. Greenhouse gas concentrations in the environment came to a record this year, according to a United Nations report, which appears that economic recessions in the pandemic have had little long-term effect, according to Reuters.
7:45 p. m. Phase 3 trials of a CanSino Biologics COVID-19 vaccine in China may begin on September 20 or later this month “at the latest,” an official from CanSino’s local wife told Reuters. Daily infections in Pakistan have dropped drastically, adding loads up from thousands in June, however, the official says that does not mean the virus is no longer present. The Ad5-nCoV vaccine and placebo injections should arrive next week.
3:31 p. m. British Health Secretary Matt Hancock said AstraZeneca’s resolve to suspend coronavirus vaccine trials is a challenge, but would not hinder vaccine progression efforts, according to Reuters.
3:09 pm The Chinese company CanSino Biologics says that expert opinion on its candidate vaccine should not be followed “blindly” until sufficient knowledge of clinical trials is available.
2:25 p. m. The organizer of China’s most giant air show cancelled the November event due to the pandemic, and China’s biennial aviation and foreign aerospace display, which attracts giant corporations such as Airbus, Boeing and Commercial Aircraft Corp. China, was postponed to 2022, the organizer said.
14:04 India reports 89,706 cases in the last 24 hours, up from 75,809 the day before, bringing the country’s total to 4. 37 million, while the death toll has risen from 1,115 to 73,890. Hotels, restaurants and clubs can reopen in New Delhi on a trial basis until September 30 under strict protection regulations.
Meanwhile, a partial reopening of schools for schoolchildren in grades 9-12 would be allowed “on a voluntary basis” as of September 21, preventive measures such as physical distancing and the mandatory mask are followed.
13:02 Maruti Suzuki, India’s largest automaker, leads the resumption of new car sales, while the country has the highest number of cases in the world. On September 1, he announced that passenger car sales had increased by 21% by comparison. every year, while the cars are being asked to expand before the holiday season in India.
12:20 p. m. Indian school tech unicorn Byju’s has raised $ 500 million in new investment directed through Silver Lake. The most recent boosted the valuation of the Bengaluru-based online education business to $ 10. 8 billion.
11:50 am Malaysia’s labour-heavy palm oil industry can simply recruit drug addicts and recovering prisoners to address the shortage of foreign workers. “We are even contacting the Malaysian Drug Prevention Association, as well as the Department of Prisons, in search of premises,” according to a statement Tuesday through the Malaysian Palm Oil Association.
11:32 a. m. South Korea confirms 156 new cases, up from 136 a day ago. The country’s total infections reached 21,588, with 344 deaths. The government plans to extend a special value of the fourth budget of 7 trillion won ($5. 8 billion) to the owners of small businesses affected by the pandemic.
11:09 a. m. The value of the factory gate in China fell for the seventh consecutive month in August, but at the slowest rate since March, suggesting that the world’s second-largest economy continues to emerge from the economic recession. coronavirus. The manufacturer’s value index fell 2. 0% from a year earlier in August. This was in line with expectations in a Reuters poll, but the drop was more modest than the 2. 4% drop in July.
10:30 a. m. The foreign ministers of the 10-Member Association of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations kicked off their annual meeting on Wednesday with the coronavirus pandemic, territorial disputes in the South China Sea and the Rohingya refugees more sensitive to the agenda.
10:15 a. m. On Tuesday, Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro proposed administering a Russian coronavirus vaccine to some 15,000 political candidates in the upcoming parliamentary elections so they can safely make a crusade.
9:06 a. m. AstraZeneca suspends a complex trial of one of the major applicants for the COVID-19 vaccine after a suspected serious adverse reaction in a test participant, reports Fitness News Stat News, which mentions an AstraZeneca spokesperson.
7:41 am Slack Technologies says revenue growth, a key indicator of long-term revenue, slowed this quarter. The operator of the office messaging app also said it took $ 11 million in the first part of the year due to pandemic concessions. The company introduced credits, fees and a shorter billing era for users to weather the economic downturn. The news causes its shares to drop 18% after the final bell.
6:11 a. m. Thailand is embellishing its capital in the hope of bringing back the southeast Asian nation, turning a 30-year-old stranded railway assignment into a tree-lined pedestrian walkway on a stretch of Bangkok from the Chao Phraya River.
6:10 am Nine primary vaccine developers from the US and Europe have committed to meeting clinical criteria on their control vaccines. Pfizer, GlaxoSmithKline and AstraZeneca are issuing what they have called a “historic commitment” to address the considerations that protection will be adequately addressed in the vaccine race.
Johnson
05:30 AM. U. S. crude oil futuresBy fourth direct session, with the West Texas Intermediate benchmark playing a minimum of three months. With the summer driving season over, demand is expected to decline for the rest of the year.
4:40 Tokyo Gas bought a stake in a US shale fuel project, component of a spending frenzy through the Japanese energy provider to tap into the customer market from the pandemic-induced commodity crisis .
2:40 a. m. Sweden, which has attracted attention for coming to a pre-pandemic lockout prevention, reports its lowest rate of positive coronavirus control effects to date. Just 1. 2% of coronavirus controls. last week they tested positive despite a record number of tests carried out, according to authorities, according to media reports.
12:30 p. m. Air in the United States is recovering, but it is still well below pre-pandemic levels. The U. S. Department of Transportation has not been able to do so. But it’s not the first time He said airlines carried 21. 4 million passengers in July, up from June 16. 5 million, but 73% less than in July 2019, according to a Reuters report.
Tuesday, September 8th
10:20 p. m. An organization of fitness experts from the Japanese government will meet soon to decide whether to lift coronavirus restrictions on the length of hearing at events, said Yasutoshi Nishimura, Minister of Economic and Fiscal Policy. The assembly will take position on Friday.
The government had planned to eliminate the 5,000-person limit by the end of August, but the uprising limit was delayed until the end of September.
8:46 p. m. India won an offer from Russia to conduct a test and manufacture its COVID-19 “Sputnik-V” vaccine, several Indian corporations are recently reading the proposal, an Indian government official said.
8:03 p. m. The Malaysian government is reminding the public of physical contact, adding punches, as a form of greeting, as the number of new coronavirus cases in the country has reached a three-month high. Clenched fists together, replaced the classic handshake.
7:14 p. m. La South Africa’s economic production fell by 51% in the quarter of 2020, its fourth consecutive quarterly contraction, as a strict blockade to curb COVID-19’s detained economic activity.
6:20 p. m. South Korea’s Celltrion will begin production of advertisements for its investigational remedy for COVID-19 this month, as it continues its clinical trials of the antibody drug. The company said it plans to apply to regulators for emergency use of the drug soon and will begin mass production, likely up to around 1 million doses, before receiving that approval.
5:30 pm. Japanese Olympic Minister Seiko Hashimoto said the postponed Tokyo Games will be held next year “at all costs. ” Hashimoto said: “Everyone involved in the Games is running in combination to prepare, and the athletes are also making great efforts for next year. We have to organize the games at all costs. “
5:20 p. m. Philippines reports 3,281 new infections, up from 1,383 the previous day, bringing the country’s total to 241,987. The country also recorded 26 more deaths, bringing the total number of deaths to 3,916.
5:10 pm Indonesia reports 3,046 new infections, more than 2,880 recorded a day earlier and bringing the national total to 200,035. There were also one hundred new deaths overnight, bringing the total to 8,230 in the number of coronavirus deaths in Southeast Asia.
4:11 p. m. The Hong Kong government has yet to take social distancing measures on Friday. Up to 4 more people will be allowed to gather in public, and several closed facilities will be reopened, adding museums, mahjong halls, ice skating rinks and a maximum of indoor and outdoor sports facilities.
3:30 p. m. Tokyo reports 170 new infections, up from 75 the previous day, but the number of patients in condition decreased by 3 between Monday and 21.
2:30 p. m. Japan’s professional baseball and football leagues are calling on the government to ease the 5,000-viewer restriction on games as infections subside. Nippon Professional Baseball and J-League managers need to increase maximum attendance to 20,000 or 50% of site capacity, whichever is lower.
13:55 India reports 75,809 new infections in the last 24 hours, down from a total of 90,802 in a single day the previous day, bringing the country’s total to 4. 28 million. He also showed 1,133 deaths, the maximum in one day, resulting in death. toll at 72,775.
12:50 p. m. Chinese President Xi Jinping said China has acted with brazen and transparency in relation to the coronavirus outbreak and that it made concrete efforts that have helped save tens of millions of lives around the world, Reuters reports. He also said that China, by fitting in the first primary economy to re-expand the pandemic, has demonstrated its strong roles and vitality.
10:45 a. m. The Japanese government approves spending 671. 4 billion yen ($6. 32 billion) on emergency budget reserves for safe coronavirus vaccines. The government said it hopes to get enough vaccines for each and every citizen until the middle of next year.
At 9:30 a. m. , China reported 10 new instances by Monday, up from 12 a. m. the day before. All instances were imported, involving travelers. China marks the 23rd consecutive without local broadcasts.
8:55 am The Japanese economy at a revised rate of 7. 9% between April and June compared to the previous quarter, generating an annualized rate of decline of 28. 1%, according to the Cabinet Office An initial estimate of a contraction of 7. 8% had advised an annualized rate of fall of 27. 8%.
8:40 a. m. Japanese family spending fell by 7. 6% in July compared to the previous year for the tenth consecutive month of decline, according to government data. The steepest drop in the 1. 2 percent drop in June when the epidemic resumed in July. The average expenditure for families of two or more people in genuine terms is 266,897 yen ($2,510).
6:33 a. m. Large Asian tech corporations have thrived in recent months despite the coronavirus pandemic, as the call to stay in the house reshapes the ranks of the region’s most sensitive winners in favor of corporations such as online stores and chip makers.
4:20 a. m. As Japan’s ruling party prepares to elect a new leader almost certainly for the next prime minister, the coronavirus pandemic means there are no national speaking tours and a more limited debate audience for lawmakers authorized to vote.
3:10 a. m. La Chinese biotechnology says the initial effects of its coronavirus vaccine candidate seem to show that it is safe for the elderly, producing a slightly weaker immune reaction in them than in younger subjects, Reuters reports.
01:20 a. m. Spain becomes the first Western European country to register a total of 500,000 coronavirus infections on Monday, Reuters reports, bringing knowledge of the ministry of fitness, which has noticed an increase in infections since it reopened.
1:00 am. The World Health Organization is working with China on foreign approval for any Chinese COVID-19 vaccine, said Deputy Director General Mariangela Simao in Geneva. “We have shared data and foreign approval of vaccines,” he said.
Monday September 7
11:50 p. m. India has begun to gradually resume the subway in the country’s cities after a five-month shutdown to prevent the spread of coronavirus.
11:30 p. m. The Tokyo Olympics will be held next year, whether or not the coronavirus pandemic ends, said a senior International Olympic Committee official, John Coates, quoted through japanese media, mentioning an AFP interview.
8:55 p. m. Russia will begin providing its COVID-19 vaccine to volunteers this week as a component of a trial following vaccine registration, the tasS news firm quoted Health Minister Mikhail Murashko as saying.
8:24 p. m. Etihad Airways of Abu Dhabi will monitor the medical and quarantine prices of passengers if they contract coronavirus on one of their flights, Reuters reported.
20:05 Vietnam is expected to reduce this year’s economic expansion target to 2-2. 5%, following the slowdown due to the pandemic that hit exports, tourism and foreign direct investment.
7:25 p. m. Malaysia’s fitness government reports 62 new cases, the highest peak since early June, as the government began banning long-term immigration passes from highly infected countries, Reuters reported.
7:17 p. m. Iran reports 2,152 new cases, the largest accumulation in 10 days, bringing the number of infections nationwide to 388,810.
5:40 p. m. La Burmese leader Aung San Suu Kyi is taking flight since the first time of his election campaign, setting the stage for worsening coronaviruses. The country reports forty-five new cases after 100 On Sunday, the largest accumulation since its first reported infection in March.
5:20 p. m. Indonesia reports 2,880 cases and 105 deaths, bringing the country’s total to 196,989 infections and 8,130 deaths. Figures released today mark the lowest accumulation of infections in six days.
5:10 p. m. Philippines reports 1,383 cases, its lowest accumulation in just about 8 weeks. There were 15 new deaths, bringing the country’s total to 3890.
4:56 p. m. Chinese drug manufacturer Sinovac Biotech begins administering thousands of its experimental vaccines to prevent an outbreak in the company as the race for an advertising vaccine enters complex clinical trials.
3:15 p. m. Tokyo reports 75 new infections, marking the lowest count since July 8 and underlining a downward trend since mid-August.
13:25 India reports the highest daily accumulation recorded, achieving 90,802 instances in the last 24 hours, up from 90,632 the previous day and raising the country’s total to more than 4. 2 million. India has now surpassed Brazil as the highest affected country at the time. The death toll in the country went from 1,016 to 71,642.
13h00. Chinese exports in August rose 9. 5% from a year earlier, according to customs data, their biggest gain since March 2019. The third consecutive monthly accumulation comes as the partner country’s industry is loosening coronavirus lockdowns. Imports, however, fell 2. 1%, extending a 1. 4% drop in July, suggesting a slowdown in domestic demand.
12:20 p. m. Australian banks say they have asked borrowers to start repaying their loans after a six-month hiatus due to the coronavirus. The Australian Banking Association said its members had begun contacting the holders of 260,000 mortgages and 105,000 advertising loans to see if they could resume bills once. the deferrals expired this month and the next. Australian lenders have deferred A $ 274 billion ($ 200 billion) in loans.
11:27 a. m. The Japanese government has obtained crisis loans from a state-backed lender for Nissan Motor, Nikkei reports, a move that could leave taxpayers at the mercy of the long-term losses of troubled automotive. Japan granted 180 billion yen ($1. 7 billion) in loans to the automaker. Of this total, 130 billion yen are guaranteed through government.
11:00 a. m. South Korea reports 119 new infections, the lowest build-up in more than 3 weeks, bringing the country’s total to 21,296 cases with 336 deaths.
9:10 am Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison says the first batches of a possible COVID-19 vaccine will arrive in January 2021 The government has reached a production agreement with CSL to produce an AstraZeneca vaccine and Oxford University, with 3. 8 million doses Morrison said will be delivered in January and February. The Australian state of Victoria is reporting 41 new cases, up from 63 the previous day and the smallest build-up in a day since June 26.
8:50 a. m. China reported 12 new infections on Sunday, up from 10 a. m. the day before. All instances were imported, involving travelers, marking the 22nd consecutive day with no local transmission.
3:00 am Coronavirus instances are expanding into 22 of the 50 US states. But it’s not the first time In a haunting end to a Labor Day holiday week it is historically filled with a circle of family gatherings and parties to mark the end of summer, according to an analysis by Reuters. states where instances are expanding lately are in the less populated areas of the Midwest and South.
At 1 a. m. , Britain recorded 2,988 new cases, compared to 1813 the day before and the highest overall since May 23. However, the death penalty remains low, with two deaths reported within 28 days of positive COVID-19 control in the last 24 hours.
Sunday, September 6
11:30 p. m. The city of Da Nang, in central Vietnam, announced that it will resume flights and all other transportation facilities on Monday after its resolution to the rules of social estating. Instead of a national blockade, Vietnam is applying a more specific technique to regions experiencing epidemics.
6:47 p. m. South Korea reports the smallest buildup of coronavirus infections in 3 weeks, remaining below two hundred for the fourth consecutive day, as stricter restrictions crown a momentary wave. 24 hours until Saturday, from 168 the day before.
17:52 Indonesia reports 3444 new cases of coronavirus, bringing the total to 194109, according to the knowledge of the Ministry of Health’s website. The Southeast Asian country also reports 85 new deaths, bringing the total to 8025, the number of coronavirus deaths in Southeast Asia.
3:35 p. m. Australian coronavirus hotspot state Victoria is extending a hard lockdown on its capital Melbourne through September 28, with the infection rate declining more slowly than expected. The hard blockade ordered on August 2. it now represents about 75% of the 26,282 instances in the country and 90% of its 753 deaths.
3:24 p. m. India has added more than 90,000 cases of the new coronavirus, a daily global record, according to the knowledge of the Federal Ministry of Health. There were 90,632 new cases in the 24 hours before Sunday, while the death toll increased from 1,065 to 70,626. The country is expected to move to Brazil on Monday as the peak in the affected country through general infections and will not be the United States.
11:14 am South Korea reports the least buildup of coronavirus infections in 3 weeks, remaining below two hundred for the fourth consecutive day, as stricter restrictions crown a momentary wave. The Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 167 instances of the new coronavirus in the 24 hours through Saturday, up from 168 the day before.
10:32 a. m. Mainland China reported 10 new instances of COVID-19 on Saturday, unchanged from the previous day, according to the national fitness authority. The National Health Commission said all the new instances had been imported, marking the 21st consecutive day with no locally transmitted infections.
9:37 am Mexico recorded an additional 122765 deaths above pandemic expectations through August, the Ministry of Health said Saturday in a report on the highest mortality rates, suggesting that the actual coronavirus figure may be much higher. COVID-19.
7:21 am Brazil recorded 30168 most shown cases of the new coronavirus in the last 24 hours, as well as 682 deaths from the disease, announced saturday the Ministry of Fitness. The country has recorded 4. 1 million cases of viruses since the start of the pandemic, while the official death toll has increased to 126,203, according to ministry data.
01:29 Portugal reports 486 new cases of coronavirus on Saturday, its largest accumulation since the week it lifted its blockade in May. Accumulation raised the cumulative total to 59,943, said the DGS fitness authority. Portugal has reported only 1,838 deaths to date, a consistent population rate with that of many other European countries.
Saturday, September 5
10:05 p. m. The drug manufacturer Sanofi expects its long-term vaccine to charge less than 10 euros ($11. 88) according to the injection, said the company’s director in France, Olivier Bogillot. “The value is not fully established. We are evaluating production prices for the coming months. . We’ll be below 10 euros,” Bogillot told France Inter radio. When asked about his rival AstraZeneca, which is expected to be worth around 2. 50 euros, Bogillot replies: “The hole worthwhile for us is possibly that we use all our internal resources, our own scholars, our own study centers. AstraZeneca outsources component of its production. “
8:22 p. m. Protests opposing measures to prevent the spread of coronavirus in Melbourne, Australia, turn violent after many others defied closing orders and marched through the streets. Protesters, without masks, collide with police, resulting in at least 15 arrests. Melbourne, the capital of The State of Victoria, has been closed for six weeks.
6:23 p. m. Pope Francis will make a stopover in the Italian city of Asses next month, his first open-air Rome since the pandemic hit the country in February, and point to a new encyclical, said a spokesman for the Catholic Church. In the form of papal writing, they deserve to concentrate on what the Pope believes deserves the look of the global postpandemic. “The stopover will take place in private, without the participation of the faithful,” the spokesman said.
16:45 Four other countries agree to conduct complex clinical trials for candidate vaccines of the National Biotec Group of China and Sinovac Biotech. Serbia and Pakistan are among the new countries that have accepted Phase 3 trials, and corporations seek more knowledge abroad amid the decline In new cases in China. CNBG Phase 3 trials are expected to involve another 50,000 people in approximately 10 countries. The Sinovac candidate vaccine, which is currently being tested in Brazil and Indonesia, also obtains approvals from two other countries for phase 3 trials, although the company does not call countries because the data is confidential.
4:22 p. m. Rival drug brands are making plans and jointly commit not to seek government approval for vaccines until proven safe and effective, the Wall Street Journal reports, as the vaccine race intensifies. and Johnson and Johnson promises to make public protection and well-being a very sensible priority and seeks to make some public trust, the allocation says.
four: 01 p. m. The total number of coronavirus cases in India surpassed four million with a record accumulated on Saturday, making it the third country in the world to exceed this threshold, after the United States and Brazil. India added 86,432 cases of the new virus on Saturday, a world record, according to the knowledge of the Federal Ministry of Health. Infections have accumulated across the country, adding to the capital New Delhi and the giant states of Maharashtra and Karnataka.
To stay up-to-date with previous developments, check out last week’s latest updates.
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