Italy reported 1,071 new infections on Saturday; PHE report on school transmission levels Deaths in Australia exceed 500
A total of 67 cases of coronavirus and 30 outbreaks were detected in England in June, according to Public Health England.
The fitness firm released on Sunday the effects of a degree of coronavirus transmission on educational establishments after they reopened on 1 June.
He found that Covid-19 infections and epidemics were “rare.” In June, the number of young people attending any school environment rose from 475,000 to more than 1.6 million.
The report adds that there is a correlation between the regional occurrence of Covid-19 and the number of epidemics in educational institutions, which “underlines the importance of controlling network transmission”.
The 67 cases occurred mainly in the number one schools and the first years of training and affected 30 academics and 37 staff members.
No young person was admitted to the hospital, but an instructor was hospitalized and admitted to intensive care for respiratory assistance.
German finance minister Olaf Scholz said the European Union’s stimulus package was a long-term measure that a short-term solution to the coronavirus crisis, Chancellor Angela Merkel said, AFP reports.
“The stimulus fund is a real step forward for Germany and For Europe, a step we will return to,” said Scholz, who is also the Social Democratic Party’s Centre-left Candidate (SPD) to succeed Merkel in the 2021 election. . Funke newspaper organization on Sunday.
The measures taken under the plan, adding EU nations that agree to jointly factor the debtArray represent basic adjustments, the largest adjustments since the advent of the euro, the single currency at the turn of the millennium, Scholz said.
“These advances will inevitably lead to a debate on joint resources for the EU, which is a step forward of the European Union that works best,” he added.
Long and intense discussions were discussed before the 27 EU countries reached an agreement in July on their historic stimulus package of 750 billion euros, more than part of which will be paid in direct subsidies.
For the first time, the leaders gave the green tone to the joint debt, a concept that Germany had long rejected until the Covid-19 pandemic affected many European economies that had already been suffering for a decade since the last monetary crisis.
Scholz added that the way the vote is held in the EU to facilitate decision-making will be reformed.
“The EU will have to be able to act collectively,” he said. “To do this, we will have to have a qualified majority of votes in foreign and budgetary policy than forced unanimity.”
The Votes of the European Council reaches a ‘qualified majority’ with 55% of countries, which will have to come with Member States representing 65% of the EU’s 450 million inhabitants.
Dr. Dominic Pimenta resigned from his diology post after Boris Johnson’s leading adviser made his debatable journey.
Was it the decision?
Alex Moshakis talks to Pimenta 3 months later to find out:
The Philippines recorded 2,378 new coronavirus infections on Sunday, Reuters reports.
This is the smallest peak in nearly 4 weeks, however, the national count has increased to 189,601, even the highest in Southeast Asia.
In a bulletin, the Ministry of Health also reported 32 deaths, bringing the death toll in the country to 2,998.
Israeli police arrested 30 protesters after thousands of people gathered to call for The resignation of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for corruption fees and the handling of the coronavirus crisis.
It is estimated that up to 10,000 more people accumulated near the Prime Minister’s official in Jerusalem on Saturday night, with some musical gaming tools and others singing “Minister of Crime” and “You’re fired.”
A police officer broadcast in the early morning of Sunday said there were outbreaks of violence during the demonstration and that police officers were injured.
“During the protests, three police officers were injured through demonstrators,” police said.
Three of those arrested will appear in court on Sunday, he added.
The protests are not easy for Netanyahu to resign over several corruption allegations and his handling of the coronavirus crisis have intensified in recent weeks, and the minister has been scathing in his counterattack.
Earlier this month, Netanyahu accused Channel 12 and another personal television channel, Channel 13, of “spreading propaganda for left-wing anarchist protests” through a broad policy of demonstrations.
Israel praised its initial reaction to the coronavirus pandemic, but the government criticized amid a resurgence of cases after restrictions were lifted last April.
Netanyahu himself declared that the economy reopened too quickly.
The Italian government is not contemplating a new blockade of the coronavirus despite a stable build-up in the cases over the following month, health minister Roberto Speranza said.
Italy, one of the worst hit countries in Europe with more than 35,000 deaths, reported 1,071 new coronavirus infections on Saturday, surpassing 1,000 cases a day for the first time since the government calmed down its uncompromising blocking measures in May.
“We won’t have a new blockade,” Speranza told The newspaper La Stampa on Sunday, and said the existing scenario may not be compared to February and March, when the disease spreads uncontrolled and it is difficult to track and isolate the infected.
“I’m optimistic, albeit cautious. Our national fitness service is much stronger.
Speranza added that Italy had doubled the number of beds in extensive care units.
The number of new infections continues to decrease significantly than in Spain and France and the number of deaths is low.
In a separate interview with Corriere della Sera newspaper, Undersecretary of Health Sandra Zampa said she was convinced that Italy would not impose a national blockade, but did not ruled out restrictions in territories where there are spikes in infection.
At least thirteen other people were crushed or suffocated when revelers tried to flee a Lima nightclub attacked by police for violating Covid-19 restrictions, Reuters reports.
At least six were injured, in addition to three policemen, while 120 others attempted to escape the Thomas Restobar club on Saturday night. Police arrived to disperse a party on their flat for the time being, national police and government officials said.
Neighbors had alerted police to the tumultuous incident in the Los Olivos district of the Peruvian capital.
“In those circumstances, when other people start fighting to get out, it’s tumultuous, everyone opposes it,” Orlando Velasco of the national police told local PTR radio by Orlando Velasco.
A member of the Interior Ministry said the revelers had tried to sneak into herds through the only front door and found themselves trapped between the door and a staircase leading to the street.
Police arrested at least 23 revelers, the ministry said.
Peru ordered the closure of nightclubs and bars in March and banned the extended circle of family reunions on 12 August. The Sunday curfew is also in force.
Peru recorded a total of 585236 cases of coronavirus on Saturday, double the number reported on 2 July, while the number of known deaths increased to 27453.
The reopening of schools can lead to a build-up of coronavirus infections and force the reintroduction of some local blocking measures, the UK’s most sensitive medical advisers warn today.
At a joint meeting last night, leading doctors and assistants from across the UK said that if “there was no risk-free option,” more outdoor time in the classroom would create inequality, reduce children’s lives and exacerbate physical conditions. and intellectual aptitude problems.
Read the full report:
The renaissance of illegal raves is unique to England, as the French government followed up to quell the rise of mass summer gatherings. The AFP has this report:
The Ravers, known as “teufeurs” in the jargon of the French rear, speak of “resistance” opposed to a repression through security forces through the locals to repair order.
“The more they save us from the party, the more we celebrate,” said a teufeur and activist Grégoire alias Pontu, who uses a government pseudonym for himself.
Since the 1990s, the French “free party” movement has brought together techno music lovers who adhere to a nomadic lifestyle, living in small communities with a libertarian or anarchist ideology.
“Because of the pandemic, there have been fewer occasions this year than in previous years,” party organizer Robin told the AFP, asking to use his full name.
“But a lot of attention has been paid to those occasions and the repression has been much harsher.”
He works for Sound Fund, a settlement that provides legal services to rave organizers who face fines or have devices confiscated by the police.
The agreement has been called in to help in 22 cases of forfeiture this year, adding 4 on the holiday weekend of August 15. The number is twice as high as in 2019, Robin noted.
Police at the national gendarmerie said they would answer AFP questions about the situation.
However, one regional official said that the most recent national strategy to be verified is to limit the duration of demonstrations once they begin by blocking all access roads. The official added that site evacuations remained a rarity.
“We cannot allow 5,000, 6,000 more people to gather shirtless, masked or without respecting the regulations on viruses,” said the young Interior Minister, Marléne Schiappa, in July during a rave that attracted another 4,000 people to the niavre branch in central France.
Police in the southern region of Lozere blocked a plateau in the Cévennes National Park where 7,000 people, young children, attended an illegal three-day festival in mid-August.
The Lozére, France’s least populous department, has been spared the worst Pandemic of Covid-19, which has claimed more than 30,000 lives across the country.
As infection rates rise again, citizens were furious at the dangers posed by the event.
About two hundred gendarmes blocked the mountain before slowly filtering the ravers and seizing devices such as loudspeakers and electric power generators.
Thanks to the forfeitures, the government can locate the organizers of the occasion that threaten fines of up to 3,500 euros for illicit parties.
If the fine includes “sound aggression”, the penalty can be up to one year and 15,000 euros.
The UK government has prolonged its ban on tenants for a month, but they still face harassment and violence from landlords in an unregulated market, my colleague Tom Wall reports:
Hadie Touray feels nervous on the edge of her bed in a windowless room in Leyton, east London. He’s been living by candlelight since the contracted creditors running for his landlord ripped the fuse out of the garage counter. Now they threaten to cut off the water source and even the hotel to violence if it’s not on weekends.
While the risk of a fine of 10,000 euros that will soon be introduced looms over illegal English rave organizers, James Tapper examines how quarantine is contributing to a more socially remote renaissance of the nightclub culture of the 1990s:
He started with DJs broadcasting his live sets on social media. From there, it’s a small step toward organized occasions like Moondance and Zoom Dance, with thousands more people coming in from their couches to pay attention and dance in the jungle, old-school hardcore and vintage house.
Read the full report:
Hi, I’m Aaron Walawalkar in London. I will advise you through the latest global progress in the pandemic over the next few hours.
Feel free to contact articles or tips about DM policy on Twitter @AaronWala or by email.
By Sunday morning, India had surpassed 3 million cases of coronavirus, and the country was leading the world in new infections.
This comes when Mexico has surpassed 60,000 deaths and South Korea has reported its highest number of Covid-19s since early March, with epidemics spreading from a Seoul church and political protests.
Read my colleague Alison Rourke’s full report:
In the UK, our main article this morning discusses the government’s plans to reopen in September, which labour leader Keir Starmer is now “at risk” say is due to the incompetent handling of the exam fiasco.
Labour said:
I need to see the young people go back to school next month and I hope the Prime Minister will fulfill that commitment. However, the compromise is now at serious risk after a week of chaos, confusion and incompetence on the part of the passing government component.
This occurs when the country’s leading medical officials warned that more unsiathed time would increase inequality and opportunities for children in life, and could exacerbate physical and intellectual fitness problems.
In an interview, Chris Whitty, England’s leading medical officer, said the chances of young people dying for Covid-19 were “incredibly low.”
Read the full one here:
All this on my part: now I will pass the ground on to my colleague from London, Aaron Walawalkar, who will keep you up to date on the latest developments.