Live coronavirus: Russia to begin vaccine trials in 40,000 people; Europe reports 26,000 new instances a day

Russia will start the vaccine massively next week; WHO warns of higher average new cases in Europe; African CDC reports fall in new cases

The Moroccan government has imposed strict controls on Casablanca and Marrakech, the economic and tourist capitals of the North African country, following an outbreak of coronavirus cases.

Several neighborhoods in both cities had to be cordoned off and opening hours for restaurants, cafes and public parks were reduced.

Several beaches were closed in Casablanca, Morocco’s largest city with 3.3 million inhabitants, following the measures imposed tuesday near the capital, Rabat.

Partial closures were ordered on Tuesday in Rabat and the port city of Tangier, with armoured cars deployed on the streets and police checkpoints.

Covid-19 infections have been underway since early August, reaching a rate of 1,000 new cases, equal to the country’s country of 35 million.

Wednesday’s deaths total more than 1,500 cases and 29 deaths.

Morocco has shown a total of more than 46,000 instances of Covid-19, more than 740 deaths.

Health Minister Khalid A’t Taleb, who has been criticized on social media, acknowledges that the sector wants 62,000 ambulances and 30,000 more medical staff.

Italy reported a sharp increase in Covid-19 infections, and the country recorded 845 new cases of coronavirus, 203 more than on Wednesday.

These figures recorded within 24 hours had been observed since 16 May.

Six other people died from the virus. The total number of instances is now greater than 256,118. The death toll is now 35,418.

Most of the people who tested positive in recent days are tourists returning from Greece, Spain, Malta and Croatia.

For this reason, last Friday, the government forced the arrivals of these 4 countries to be tested for the virus. Rome said it also contemplates adding France to the list.

On Thursday, media reported that the new buildup of coronavirus infections could jeopardize the reopening of schools, which is the government’s most sensible priority.

However, later that day, the government denied the reports. “Schools will reopen and every effort will be made to reopen them safely,” Education Minister Lucía Azzolina told TG1.

Eswatini will roll out an ambitious post-coronavirus economic recovery plan, the government said, countering claims that King Mswati III is depleting the state’s coffers to finance a luxury lifestyle.

The 18-month, 18-month and 18-month programme aims to revive the long-standing economy of Africa’s last absolute monarchy with the personal sector.

“Eswatini is open to business,” Prime Minister Ambrose Dlamini of the small south African country of 1.2 million people, formerly known as Swaziland, told the AFP.

“We give assurances to investors that if they bring their cash to the country, the kingdom of Eswatini is a politically sound country,” he said.

The economy is expected to decline by 6.7% this year due to the effect of the Covid-19 pandemic. So far, the virus has caused 4,058 infections, accounting for 79 deaths, according to a Johns Hopkins University count.

The recovery plan will be aimed at about a hundred projects in the tourism, agriculture, mining and manufacturing sectors, among other sectors.

The sector is expected to finance about two-thirds of the money, and the rest comes from government and foreign monetary institutions.

The government also dismissed as “disinformation” accusations that King Mswati III dug the state’s coffers at the expense of his subjects, a belief motivated by the recent acquisition of a rolls-Royce car fleet.

“Contrary to everything she reads, Her Majesty respects intelligent governance and integrity and supports the personal sector 100 percent and surely there is no interference in this area,” the Prime Minister said.

Officials protested last October to ask for a higher payment after a fleet of limousines was delivered to the royal family.

Finance Minister Neal Rijkenberg said the king, like other monarchs, is traditionally rich and can do whatever he wants with his own money. “We just want to be transparentArray … and that it’s not taxpayers’ money that’s spent on what used to be called Rolls-Royces.

King Mswati III was crowned in 1986, when he was only 18 years old. He criticized for his tastes and expensive expenses.

Eswatini ranks 144th out of 189 countries in the UN Human Development Index. Approximately two-thirds of its population is below the poverty line.

Swedish activist Greta Thunberg suggested german Chancellor Angela Merkel be “brave” in the fight against the climate crisis as she seeks to revive a weather movement overshadowed by the coronavirus pandemic.

The 17-year-old travelled to Berlin to meet Europe’s top tough leader just two years after she left school for the first time to call for more climate action, triggering Friday’s global movements for the future.

Thunberg joined through co-activists Luisa Neubauer of Germany and Belgians Anuna De Wever and Adelaide Charlier, all of whom wore a mask on their way to the chancellery from Berlin’s main exercise station.

During 90 minutes of talks, young activists said they had suggested Merkel fight carbon emissions with the same urgency and drastic measures deployed by leaders in the war opposing Covid-19.

Thunberg at a press convention after the meeting:

We thearray leaders.. brave enough to think long-term.

We leaders to mobilize, assume duty and treat the climate crisis as a crisis.

She said Merkel, as the current president of the EU’s rotating presidency, had “a massive duty but also a great opportunity” for the EU to honour its commitments under the Paris weather agreement.

Merkel said after the talks that both sides had agreed that “warming is a challenge that industrialized countries have a special duty to face,” his spokeswoman Steffen Seibert said in a statement.

The Fridays for Future motion is once seeking to mobilize other young people after the coronavirus, and efforts to prevent its spread have forced them into their street protests in recent months.

With the outbreak of coronavirus cases and less than two weeks of school holidays, opposition parents, teachers and politicians in Spain are critical of the government’s plans to reopen classrooms.

The government’s latest knowledge showed that infections peaked at 7,609 on Friday, the highest point since March, before falling to 3,715 on Wednesday.

However, the decline would possibly not be a trend, as decreases have been constantly followed through new highs in recent weeks.

“Not a circle of single Spanish relatives knows what will happen to their young people when the school year begins,” said Pablo Casado, leader of the conservative opposition People’s Party, accusing Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’s left-wing government of letting the country guess.

“We let a whole generation of young people have delays in schooling because of a lack of planning,” he said.

In Spain’s decentralized political system, each region is guilty of regulating back to school, the central government is expected to provide national directives next week.

In Madrid, where more than 1,500 new cases were reported on Wednesday, the regional government has ruled out delaying face-to-face classes, putting pressure on the families they run.

“We need to be a little careful with the reopening date of the schools,” assistant assistant fitness officer Antonio Zapatero told Reuters. “Perhaps, because of the positive point, we will have to reconsider that we open [schools] through age.”

However, the deputy regional director, Ignacio Aguado, was in favor of the return of the youth to school.

Frustrated by what they described as a lack of resources and a lack of good security measures, the capital’s teachers’ unions called for a series of moves in the first weeks of September.

With more than 370,000 cases, Spain has the number of total infections in Western Europe.

He forced some restrictions back after the end of his strict blockade in late June.

Its total death toll is about 29,000. However, the death toll of around 20 deaths in line with the day in August is well below 800 deaths in line with the day at the end of March.

Thailand has tried to allay fears of a momentary wave of coronavirus infections, after a woman tested positive after being quarantined about two months ago on her way from abroad.

Thailand spent 87 days without national transmission, however, the announcement of a woman who tested positive for Covid-19 on Tuesday in Bangkok, who returned on 24 June, has raised considerations about a new epidemic in a country that has so far been cleared of contagion elsewhere. . Training

Authorities said that the woman is unlikely to be contagious and that she would possibly have stuck the virus in the United Arab Emirates or in her home province of Loei, on the border with Laos.

“Possibly it would have swelled in the last 3 months, in Dubai or Loei, but not in Bangkok,” Taweesin Wisanuyothin, spokesman for the government’s Covid-19 task, said in a briefing.

She said the 35-year-old had tested negative twice since Tuesday and that 24 others in contact with her in Loei and Bangkok would also be tested.

“There’s nothing to worry about. She wears a mask all the time and is no longer sick,” Taweesin added.

Thailand is returning to generally after recording only 58 Covid-19 deaths and 3,389 instances since January, less than 2% of the 178,000 instances in the Philippines, the highest overall in Southeast Asia.

Some Asian countries that have reported controlled epidemics have reported a resurgence, adding Vietnam, where cases have more than doubled since the virus resurfaced in July after 3 months of network infections.

Fears of a return to the virus shook Thai markets, with stocks falling to 1.2% on Thursday and baht with a 0.6% drop, fearing it would further hamper efforts to revive an economy for record annual contraction.

Professor Surasak Leelaudomlipi, director of Bangkok’s Ramathibodi Hospital, said that only lines of the virus had been discovered in women and that experts were “pretty sure” that it was not contagious.

Nigeria is a partnership between state and personal governments to accentuate testing and tracking coronavirus cases after foreign flights resume this month, said the director of Nigeria’s Center for Disease Control (NCDC).

Nigeria will reopen its airports for foreign flights from 29 August. They have been closed since 23 March to all flights essential to help combat the Covid-19 pandemic in Africa’s most populous country.

State governments are guilty of detection, yet the influx of travelers will increase pressure on the government already requested in Nigeria, which has recorded 50,488 cases that have resulted in 985 deaths.

Lagos, Nigeria’s largest state and the epicenter of the epidemic, has two hundred plotters with a population of 25 million, less than one consisting of 100,000, about 14 consistent with 100,000 in Turkey, for example.

NCDC DIRECTOR General Chikwe Ihekweazu said conversations had been held with personal companies about imaginable associations of testing and tracking in some states.

“Public-private models are being studied. Lagos and Abuja are the main locations, and from there we will be informed what to do with the other 3 foreign airports,” Ihekweazu told Reuters.

He said the arrivals can be expected to contribute financially to their tests, as they made the decision to travel.

International airports will reopen first at the Lagos grocery shopping centre and the capital Abuja, which have had the maximum cases, and then in the towns of Kano, Port Harcourt and Enugu.

National aviation resumed last month and this new reopening is a component of the authorities’ efforts to reduce the effect of the pandemic on Africa’s largest economy.

Singing is no more threatening than talking about the option to propagate Covid-19, British scientists said, adding that volume is the ultimate life threat factor.

Last week, the UK government amended its rules to allow professionals and non-professionals to resume rehearsals and performance of a song, aligning the required social distance with the same Covid-19 regulations and the need for additional mitigation.

This resolution was based on a study by scientists at the University of Bristol, who tested the amount of aerosols and drops generated through 25 professional singers who performed singing, speaking, breathing and coughing exercises.

Researchers found that the mass of aerosol produced increased sharply with an increase in the volume of making a song or talking, up to 20 to 30 times.

However, making a song does not produce many more sprays than speaking at a similar volume, and there is no significant difference in the production of aerosols among other genres such as choir, musical theater, opera, jazz, gospel rock or pop.

Jonathan Reid, director of ESPRC’s Center for Doctoral Training in Aerosol Science, said:

The study showed that transmission of viruses in small aerosol residues generated when singing or speaking is also possible, as activities generate a similar amount of waste.

Our studies have provided a rigorous clinical basis for Covid-19’s recommendations that art venues serve artists and the public safely by ensuring that spaces are well ventilated to reduce the threat of airborne transmission.

The World Health Organization has identified the option of coronavirus aerosol transmission after inland space-related outbreaks, as the choir practice, but has asked for more evidence.

The test is a prepress, which means it has still been peer-reviewed.

England’s and hint programme reached 71.3% of the known contacts of new covid-19 instances in the last week, compared to last week.

In the week leading up to August 12, another 4,803 people were transferred to the verification and traceability formula after a positive covid-19 check, of which 78.8% was reached and asked to provide contacts.

Of the 16,897 contacts identified, 71.3% were reported and called for self-isolation, up from 74.2% last week.

A circle of relatives of hikers showed up for a Mediterranean cruise after leaving their excursion alone for sightseeing, violating the ship’s new anti-Covid regulations, the company said.

The Great MSC, a component of MSC Cruises’ fleet, was the first main cruise ship sent to the Mediterranean after a long blockade due to coronavirus.

He left Genoa on Sunday for seven days at 70% of passenger capacity, as part of a series of measures taken to reduce the threat of coronavirus infection on board.

The anonymous Italian circle of relatives had landed in the port of Naples on a day near the island of Capri, but then left the organization and ventured alone despite past warnings, the MSC said.

The circle of relatives was denied access to the ship.

“By leaving the organized shore excursion, this circle of relatives broke the ‘social bubble’ that MSC Cruises created so that they can enjoy their scale on land and therefore not be allowed to board the ship,” he said in a statement. Statement. Statement.

MSC attempted to detect the disruptions found through the smaller cruise operator, the Norwegian Hurtigruten, before this month, when dozens of passengers and the team tested positive for Covid-19.

The health government is concerned that passengers may have inflamed citizens at ports along the Norwegian coast on day trips.

The MSC stated that its protection protocol exceeds national and commercial standards. He says he pre-filters the stopover sites to make sure the social distance can be maintained, sterilizes the vans and buses before and ensures that the tour guides and drivers are well provided with masks.

The global cruise industry, which will gradually recover after all ships ran aground in March, has been criticized by the physical fitness government for misusing the initial outbreak.

“Now we have a call for the disease.” These were the words of the Director of the World Health Organization (WHO) in a historic announcement on 11 February 2020. At the time, there were only 393 cases of a mysterious new respiratory disease outside China, and at most life continued as usual. Arrangement “Covid19. I’m going to spell it: COVID launches a new one,” he continued. We did not know that this strangely technical word would not only be a familiar call, but a call that defined time.

On the same day, the Coronavirus Study Group of the International Committee on Virus Taxonomy, which studies the circle of relatives of viruses that includes Sars, Seas and safe strains of the non-unusual cold, published an article. He re-signed the pathogen that was once called 2019-nCoV, the “n” meaning “novel”. The new call was “Coronavirus 2 of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome” or Sars-CoV-2.

Fast-forward until August 2020, and those two terms, as well as the coronavirus itself, have been used billions of times. New words usually enter the language gradually, as trends increase (think “selfie”) or a new import becomes popular (as with foods like oranges and avocados). But pandemics are not like this: they spread and attack us on clinical terms and jargon as society struggles to adapt to each and every frightening new presence.

We analyze Covid-19 in Covid; the sars-CoV-2 express coronavirus is for the maximum component now ‘coronavirus’, and has been joined through ‘pandemic’ (for some in Australia, the ‘pando’), ”rona’ and even ‘miss Rona’. There are terms to describe reports similar to the virus: other people suffer from ‘happy hypoxia’, ‘covid toe’ or ‘long journey’. Previously, niche words and words have become familiar as they are implemented for the social effects of the crisis, from “close” to “come out” and “shelter in place.”

Massive testing of Russia’s first prospective Covid-19 vaccine to offload national regulatory approval will involve more than 40,000 people and be monitored through a foreign study organization when it launches next week, the allocation advocates said.

These are the first main points on the form and duration of the next complex trial of the vaccine administered through its developers, whose objective is to dispel the considerations of some scientists about the lack of knowledge provided through Russia so far.

The vaccine, called Sputnik V in homage to the world’s first satellite introduced through the Soviet Union, was acclaimed and effective by the Russian government and scientists after two months of small-scale human trials, the effects of which have not been made public. Still.

But Western experts were more skeptical, caution opposed its use until the approved evidence and regulatory measures were taken around the world and successful.

“Several countries are waging a war opposed to the Russian vaccine,” said Kirill Dmitriev, director of the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), which supports the vaccine, in a briefing.

Knowledge of vaccines will be in a university magazine e late this month, he said.

Russia has won up to one billion doses of vaccines internationally and has the capacity to produce 500 million doses in line with annual production associations, he said.

A director of the Gamaleya Institute in Moscow, which developed the vaccine, said 40,000 others would be interested in mass testing at more than forty-five medical centers in Russia.

Knowledge is provided to the World Health Organization, Dmitriev said, and to several countries participating in the complex trial, adding the United Arab Emirates, India, Brazil, Saudi Arabia and the Philippines.

Sputnik V has already obtained approval from national regulators, President Vladimir Putin and other officials to designate Russia as the first country to allow a Covid-19 vaccine.

However, the registration took place before the start of the large-scale trial, commonly known as the Phase III trial, which was considered through many to be a mandatory precursor to registration.

At least 4 other Covid-19 vaccines are recently in Phase III trials worldwide, according to WHO records.

Belgian schools will reopen on 1 September at the beginning of the school year, and young people over 12 and teachers will have to wear masks, Prime Minister Sophie Wilmes said.

“The goal is a wave at the moment, today we see that the stage is stabilizing and improving,” he said at a press conference. “It’s very important that young people go to school.”

Belgium has noticed a downward trend in new cases in recent days. Brussels, home to EU and NATO establishments, has reported increases, albeit at a downward level.

With 9,959 coronavirus-related deaths to date, the country of another 11 million people has one of the world’s consistent resident mortality rates consistent with Covid-19. The number of instances is 78,897.

Wilmes eased restrictions on the number of others who are allowed to attend public events, doubling it to two hundred for indoor and 400 outdoor events.

Buyers will be able to enter two, while a Belgian circle of relatives or other persons living in combination will only be able to meet five other people, a restriction that was imposed last month and will now extend until the end of September.

Short-term home rental company Airbnb has imposed an indefinite global ban on all parties and occasions in indexed locations on its platform, as it tries to meet the criteria of social estrangement due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

“The introduction of a global holiday and occasion ban is of public health interest,” Airbnb said in a statement, adding that the holiday ban applies to all long-term bookings.

The new regulations come with an occupancy limit at 16 years.

The lack of bringing the ravens of the Tower of London to boredom and blows them up.

Legend has it that the monarchy and the Tower of London will fall if its six residents crown the fortress.

The birds, known as the guardians of the tower, are shrouded in myths and huts on the south lawn. There are seven in total: the six needed, plus one spare.

The tower closed on March 20 and reopened weeks ago. However, few tourists have returned.

The number of summer visitors would exceed 15,000, but due to the coronavirus pandemic, it was reduced to less than 800 depending on the day. As a result, birds are worried about having more company.

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