Paris and Marseille declared “red zones”; New Zealand adds thirteen infections to a total of
France is expected to announce further measures over the next two weeks to stop the spread of Covid-19 in the workplace, Employment Minister Elisabeth Borne said On Sunday after Paris and Marseille were declared “red zones” and the country recorded the main news in the publication. blocking infections.
Borne told the Journal du Dimanche that the government would consult with the union next week on the measures, which come with a mandatory mask in collective spaces and unventilated herbal meeting rooms, but not necessarily in individual offices.
The minister also stated that house paintings deserve to be the norm whenever it can be imagined in the areas of the country where the virus is actively spreading, and that she would consult with the public aptitude authority on its recommendations for open offices, adding the installation of plexiglass. screens among painters.
Both the capital and the Branch of Bouches-du-Rhane have been classified as spaces where the coronavirus “actively circulates”, an administrative measure that will allow government prefects to impose new restrictions when they deem it necessary.
Paris expanded on Saturday parts of the city where masks are now mandatory, adding popular tourist spots such as the dominance around the Eiffel Tower and the Louvre to its list of bustling grocery shopping streets, markets and nightlife advertised on Monday.
Marseille has also added more mandatory mask zones. It is now necessary to cover your nose and mouth in public in the busiest spaces of several French cities where physical distance is difficult, in particular Nice, Rennes, Lille, La Rochelle, Lyon and Bordeaux.
France’s national fitness firm, Public Health France, reported 3,310 new infections on Saturday in more than 24 hours, a record since the country left the blockade in mid-May.
He said that some, though not all, of the build-up was due to a large build-up of evidence, he warned that the proportion of positive tests was increasing.
In the meantime, the Netherlands has added Paris and the Bouches-du-Rhane region, Brussels, Madrid and several Spanish regions to their orange warning list, a precaution opposed to all that is still essential and it is not easy for returnees to be quarantined for 14 days.
Britain is also on the list because of the 14-day quarantine it has imposed on travellers from the Netherlands, however, those returning from the UK are not required to be quarantined when they return home.
More than 650 other people tested positive for coronavirus in the Netherlands in the 24 hours prior to Saturday, bringing the country’s last week overall to 4508, more than 1,000 more than last week.
The rules proofing travellers avoid the use of public transport in Wales, for must-see travel, will be eliminated from Monday.
The Welsh government is telling others to act responsibly and avoid traveling during peak hours when possible, as the number of coronavirus cases continues to decline.
Face cover on public transport is still mandatory for others who cannot use it for medical reasons.
According to the measures announced last week, other people in Wales will be able to see more family and friends from 22 August.
Up to 4 families will come in combination to form a long single family and up to 30 other people will also participate in an indoor meal after a wedding, civil society or funeral if you can keep the social distance.
The essential recommendation was only abandoned in England on 17 July.
Meanwhile, in Russia, 4969 new cases of coronavirus have been confirmed, bringing the national total to 922853, the fourth number of cases in the world.
The reaction center to Russia’s coronavirus crisis said 68 other people had died in the past 24 hours, bringing their official death toll to 15,685. He added that another 732,968 people have recovered.
The Philippines has recorded 3,420 new cases of coronavirus and 65 more deaths, the Ministry of Health announced.
The country has recorded a total of 161,253 infections and the number of deaths from Covid-19 has increased to 2,665 according to ministry data.
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Northern Ireland’s leading clinical adviser warned of the threat of complacency after the immediate accumulation of Covid-19 cases in the region last week. Professor Ian Young said it is “inevitable” that there will be a significant buildup of coronavirus cases if others stop following social estrangement regulations designed to prevent the spread of the disease.
The rate of reproduction of the virus is estimated to be between 1.2 and 2.0, according to the Northern Ireland Department of Health. There were 242 cases last week, with 74 positive tests announced on Friday alone; only another 237 people tested positive in July.
“We spent probably two months with very little evidence of the virus,” said Young, who is also part of the UK government’s Emergency Advisory Group. “No deaths for maybe 18, 20 days in a row; very few patients in hospitals. In this context, it is really difficult for other people not to forget the importance of [social estrangement] behaviors. People relax and go back to what we consider normal. And if that happens, it is inevitable that we will see a new increase or a significant increase “.
Read the full report through James Tapper and Henry McDonald of The Guardian here:
Parts of Penang Island in Malaysia are back under strict motion orders after more than a hundred days dubbed “Happiness Without Covid,” the Straits Times reports.
This comes after a 58-year-old woman was diagnosed with the virus on Friday and two new cases were reported On Saturday.
According to the article, street vendors can only serve takeaways, and restaurants and cafes can accommodate consumers in the restaurant, they will have to strictly adhere to operating procedures.
No form of overcrowding is allowed.
Ms. Nor Fazila Jaafar, 33, who works in a Malaysian grocery store near the elevator-free apartments where the 58-year-old woman lives, said on Saturday morning that she will have to avoid allowing dinner.
“Business is so bad. We cooked less, but we only sold 30% of the food throughout the morning and afternoon,” he said.
“We discovered that our rice came here from the store where patient Covid-19’s daughter works.”
More information about the confusion in U.S. schools, De Reuters in Nebraska, where a school district said Saturday that it had canceled categories after members tested positive for the new coronavirus, the last state in which commands were interrupted after in-person learning resumed.
Three members have the virus that causes Covid-19 and 24 others to be quarantined for exposure in the Broken Bow School District, about three hundred miles west of Omaha, Superintendent Darren Tobey said in a statement.
Kindergarten and 6 categories. to 12. Grades are canceled until August 24.
President Donald Trump has turned the reopening of schools into a re-election crusader problem, threatening to withdraw the federal budget if establishments do not; however, the resumption of instruction has run into unrest in several states this week.
There is no national plan to reopen schools and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos has suggested districts resume user categories when they think it is safe.
This led to a patchwork of policies, ranging from Republican Gov. Pete Ricketts saying he will surely resume face-to-face learning in Nebraska to Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham postponing categories until September 8 in New Mexico.
Australian Shadow Government Service Minister Bill Shorten has tried to target the country’s privatized nursing homes, while accusing the federal government of failing to oversee the pandemic formula.
The former Labour leader asked how privatized centers can simply “serve two masters,” benefit and care, as adequate care for the elderly, that is, those with fitness disorders such as dementia, not inconsiderable.
“That’s the problem,” he told ABC. “Caring for the elderly with a diagnosis of dementia is cheap. So if we need to make a profit and you need to take care of people, then you create gaps in the system.
“Australian society Covid-19 has revealed things that have been overlooked. And if you paint in the formula and they make the hard, hard paints, you have to paint in several centers just to make a living.”
Sydney Girls High School will be closed for cleaning on Monday after a student tested positive for Covid-19. Scheduled HSC verification exams will be postponed, the school said in a Facebook post.
“The school will not be operational for the presence of staff and students on site to give the school time for the contact search to be complete and for the school to be cleaned up. All staff and students are encouraged to isolate themselves during the contact search. »