South Korean epidemic, protests in Belarus, Kamala Harris: His briefing on Monday

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By Carole Landry

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Good morning.

We are covering a coronavirus outbreak related to a church in South Korea, Kamala Harris’ family circle in India and the development of protests in Belarus.

Health officials rush to review thousands of members of the Sarang Jeil church and their contacts after at least 193 cases of coronavirus gave the impression in the last 4 days in Seoul and the surrounding province of Gyeonggi.

On Sunday, President Moon Jae-in called the church crisis the biggest challenge faced by fitness officials since an outbreak five months ago at the church in the central city of Daegu.He pledged to “take decisive action, adding compliance measures.”

A debatable church: Church-leading pastor Sarang Jeil called for a public uprising to overthrow M.Moon and was one of the most common driving forces of conservative Christian rallies that opposed him in central Seoul, adding a Saturday.

New restrictions: Over the weekend, the government tightened regulations in Seoul and Gyeonggi Province, banning spectators from participating in baseball and soccer games.The government has the strength to ban giant gatherings and close services such as karaoke rooms, nightclubs and buffet restaurants.if they do not implement measures such as mask requirements.

Here are updates and maps of the coronavirus epidemic.

In developments:

The Australian state of Victoria has extended its state of emergency, imposed in March, until 13 September.Victoria, which is at the heart of the country’s epidemic, reported 279 new cases and 16 deaths from the virus on Sunday.

Britain has recorded 1,040 new cases and five deaths in 24 hours, the government announced Sunday.The country has recorded more than 1,000 new infections for six consecutive days.

A new study has found that obesity in men increases the death threat from Covid-19, however, this appears to be the case for women.

He instilled wonderful confidence in Ms. Harris’ mother, Shyamala Gopalan, who went to the United States in the 1950s, young and lonely, and made a career as a breast cancer researcher.When Ms. Gopalan admitted a doctorate, at the University of California, Berkeley (with no one in the family circle knowing she had applied for), P.V.Gopalan didn’t hesitate to pay.

Quote: “One thing he firmly believed in was that, whether he was a son or a daughter, they too would have to be educated,” said Ms. Harris’ aunt Sarala Gopalan, who has a well-known gynecologist.I don’t know who he was, though, he was.

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