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Stay informed at a glance with top 10 stories
Stay informed at a glance with top 10 stories
Stay informed at a glance with top 10 stories
Stay informed at a glance with top 10 stories
WINDOW ROCK, Ariz. – Navajo Nation fitness officials say confirmation of a new death raises the number of coronavirus deaths to 500. The Navajo Nation reported the subsequent death on Friday night, as well as 14 other instances shown from COVID-19. This brings the total number of other people inflamed to 9780. But this includes 165 cases that occurred between early April and mid-August and were recently known as COVID-19 related. Navajo officials said 94,099 other people had been screened for the coronavirus and that 7032 had recovered. The Navajo Nation lifted its order to remain in the house on August 16, but is asking citizens to faint for emergencies or items.
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HERE’S WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE VIRUS EPIDEMIC
– Detroit to honor 1,500 coronavirus deaths
— Italy tests record 99,000 for virus, turn up 1,444 cases
– Anchoring and grilles to reopen
– Nurses in line with the COVID-19 pandemic in New York are asking the state to adopt minimum staffing criteria before a new wave of infections.
– Shia Muslims practice the solemn sacred day of Ashoura, which mark with large and bleak meetings, in the shadow of the coronavirus pandemic.
– Tour de France cyclists passed through a hospital in Nice where fitness is traumatized by their war against coronavirus.
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Track the AP pandemic in http://apnews.com/VirusOutbreak and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak
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HERE’S THE MOST THAT’S HAPPENING:
HONOLULU — The Hawaii Department of Public Safety says that three inmates and one staff member at the Oahu Community Correction Center tested positive for COVID-19.
Now there are more than 300 people who tested positive at the Honolulu facility, adding 256 inmates and 53 employees, Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported.
At the beginning of the pandemic, several defense teams raised considerations about protecting other people crammed into prisons and prisons across the state and discussing the threat of epidemics.
Since then, the Hawaii Supreme Court has won pending orders for defendants incarcerated for misdemeanors and misdemeanors in order to open an area on the premises.
On Friday, the State Department of Health reported that more than 7,800 cases of coronavirus and 59 deaths, 265 new cases shown and 4 deaths.
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PHOENIX – Arizona has reached a dark level of more than 5,000 coronavirus deaths.
The State Department of Health Services reported Saturday that 629 showed cases of coronavirus and 29 deaths, for a total of 5007.
Meanwhile, Arizona State University President Michael Crow said 452 academics had tested positive for coronavirus. More than partly involve off-campus academics in the Phoenix metro area.
Crow says 205 academics are lately quarantined on the Tempe campus.
MIAMI – Health in Florida is reporting 150 new deaths from COVID-19 and 3,197 new cases shown.
The new deaths raise the average number of deaths reported during the following week to 120. The number of new known cases is below peaks averaging nearly 12,000 consistent with the day in mid-July.
The rate of positivity in tests is on average less than 10% during the following week. The number of other people treated in Florida hospitals by a coronavirus is also declining since peaks of more than 9,500 on July 23.
Florida has recorded 619,000 and 11,246 deaths.
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ANCHORAGE, Alaska – Anchorage’s restaurants and bars will reopen Monday for a food service with some restrictions after city officials announced an emergency order update.
Anchorage Mayor Ethan Berkowitz replaced a four-week order that closed indoor catering institutions and caused industry complaints. That order expired on Sunday.
Updated regulation means that companies can resume catering at no more than 50% of their reinforcement capacity. Guests must practice social distance.
All employees, as well as consumers, should wear masks when not eating or drinking.
In Alaska, more than 5,000 people have tested positive for coronavirus since March and 37 have died.
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CHICAGO – Northwestern University first and sophomores will take courses remotely, the Chicago School announced.
The Chicago Tribune reports that Northwestern University officials had originally planned for undergraduate students to return to campus. The university also keeps the fraternity and sorority houses of women closed in the fall semester.
Third and fourth year students or graduate and professional systems are authorized on campus and can take courses remotely, on the user or at the same time.
Universities across the country have struggled with plans for the fall semester as the coronavirus continues to spread. The first outbreaks forced the principals of some schools to cancel user categories or for the fall semester.
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HILLSBORO, Missouri – A county south of St. Louis revoked a mask arrest warrant a day after it was approved.
The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports that the Jefferson County Health Center board voted unanimously on Friday to revoke the order. The county said the resolution came after the citizens involved on whether the council had informed the public well before discussing the order.
State Rep. Mary Elizabeth Coleman, Republican for Arnold, on Friday expressed fear of possible violations of the Sunshine Act. Jefferson County reported 2663 cases of coronavirus and forty-five deaths.
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ROME – All Italian regions have reported new cases of coronavirus after a record 99,000 tests and 1,444 more cases.
The ministry said the COVID-19 victim had raised Italy’s official death toll to 35,473 on Saturday.
Italy has nearly doubled its daily tests this month amid a surge in new infections, mostly among young people returning from vacation. While most are asymptomatic, the number of people requiring hospitalization and intensive care is creeping back up.
Italy, europe’s former epicentre of the virus, plans to start school on September 14. Unlike other European countries, Italy never reopened schools last spring.
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DETROIT – The city of Detroit has about 400 volunteers to help with a memorial to citizens who died of coronavirus.
A memorial walk at Belle Isle State Park is scheduled for Monday. Mayor Mike Duggan said Detroit Memorial Day to commemorate citizens who did not have the funeral because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Families will lead 15 processions in front of some 900 enlarged images of their enjoyed. Funeral cars will lead the processions. More than 1,500 Detroit citizens have died from headaches caused by the virus.
The audience can stop at Belle Isle to see the photographs on Tuesday and Wednesday. Duggan said: “We feel that it is vital and obligatory to give members of this network the opportunity to jointly celebrate the lives of the people we lost to this terrible virus. That’s how we started the healing process.”
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NICE, France – The French government has made it difficult for Tour de France groups to succeed at the baseline in Paris if a member is positive.
They said the groups would be kicked out of the race if two or more members of their staff tested positive for coronavirus within a week. The move was announced a few hours before the start of the first level of the three-week race in Nice.
He annulled a resolution through the governing framework of cycling that alleviates the Tour’s exclusion regulations on Friday. There are 30 members consistent with the team, which includes the staff.
This week, 4 members of the Belgian Lotto-Soudal team were sent home after “non-negative” coronavirus tests. The team said a mechanic and a runner’s assistant returned “a positive result and a suspicious result.” They both came out of the race bubble, with their roommates.
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BOSTON – This year’s Boston Marathon is a virtual occasion due to the coronavirus pandemic, but a week-long special will present the stories of runners as they travel the distance.
Amazon and WBZ-TV are joining for a “Boston Marathon Live” exhibition that will air every night from September 7-13. The exhibition is co-produced through the Boston Athletic Association, which organizes the marathon every year.
Registered runners will travel the distance of 26.2 miles (42.2 kilometers) and the percentage stories of their preparation, motivation and execution. Athletes can use a cellular app that the BAA implements to download their routes and arrival times.
The marathon is positioned in April. It was postponed until mid-September due to the pandemic and was cancelled in May for the first time in its 124-year history.
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NEW DELHI – India will gradually resume metro facilities on 7 September and ease its national restrictions as much as possible.
This is despite more than 75,000 cases of coronavirus reported for the third day in a row.
India’s Interior Ministry said sporting, entertainment, devotees and politicians with a limit of one hundred people will be allowed. Schools, universities, swimming pools and indoor theatres will be closed.
India has a total of 3.46 million cases shown and nearly 63,000 deaths, the third highest in the world, the United States and Brazil.
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SACRAMENTO, Calif. – California Governor Gavin Newsom and state legislative leaders agreed on a bill so that others are temporarily un deported.
The bill would prohibit evictions to tenants who did not pay their rent between March and August because of the coronavirus. Tenants should submit a document stating that they are in financial difficulty due to the virus.
Protections would continue beyond August if tenants could only pay at least 25% of their accumulated hire between September 1 and January 31. Evictions can resume on February 1.
The bill will not forgive late payments. Tenants still want cash. Landlords can simply sue them to get the cash back, and a judgment can simply order them to pay for it. But tenants simply can’t be evicted.
California’s court formula has halted maximum deportation and seizure procedures since April 6 due to the pandemic. But the protections ended on Tuesday, which led to considerations of a wave of evictions in a state that already has the largest homeless population in the country.
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BARCELONA, Spain – The police dismantled an illegal party in a warehouse in Barcelona, where 160 others were not dressed in masks and did not respect the social distance.
The revelers and two organizers were accused of not putting into force the health measures contrary to COVID-19, while another user was arrested for promoting drugs, according to a Saturday release through the Catalan regional police.
Since mid-August, nightclubs in Spain have been closed to stem a new wave of epidemics. The country ended a strict three-month blockade in June.
Social gatherings of more than 10 people are banned from Saturday in Catalonia. In the last 24 hours, 1,547 new cases have been reported, bringing the total number of cases to 128,396 in this region.
The number of coronavirus cases in Spain reaches 440,000, with the contagion rate in Western Europe. There were 29, 000 deaths.
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ELOY, Arizona – Immigration and Customs Enforcement has reported 233 cases of coronavirus displayed at one of its services in Arizona.
Infections at the La Palma Correctional Center in Eloy now total 356 cases. It is not known how many other people are being held in La Palma, however, ICE spokeswoman Yasmeen Pitts O’Keefe said the firm had recently prolonged viral testing to La Palma and had examined 1,000 inmates.
More than 21,000 more people are detained through ICE for violations of civil immigration across the country.
The Florence Immigrant and Refugee Rights Project, a defense organization that provides legal services, says the largest number of infections underscores the desire for immigrants not to be detained.
Defense teams across the country have filed several lawsuits in an attempt to lose vulnerable populations to the pandemic. ICE has sometimes released inmates with physical fitness problems.
The firm reported 850 new positive cases across the country on Friday for a total of 5,300 cases since the start of the pandemic.
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HOUSTON – The U.S. government detained youth at several major hotel chains because of the coronavirus pandemic instead of moving them to government-funded shelters.
Data released Friday show that since March, the Trump administration has used hotels to space out at least 660 children, the maximum of them without the company of a parent, before deporting them to their home countries.
Management says it cannot allow young people to remain in the United States because of the coronavirus pandemic. But the conflicting parties to U.S. immigration policy argue that the pandemic is being used to deny asylum or other protections under federal law.
Several hotel chains have been used to space out young people and at least 25 hotels and motels have been used since March to stop young people.
Marriott spokeswoman Connie Kim said the company issued a policy last month “that clearly states that institutions reject any request to use our hotels as detention centers.”
The American Civil Liberties Union has filed a lawsuit for the hotel’s detention. ICE declined to comment, raising an ongoing litigation.
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MIAMI – Authorities say two South Florida men used fake and stolen identities to borrow more than $3 million in coronavirus aid funds.
Records show that Jean Fleuridor and Hasan Brown appeared separately last week in a Miami federal court on counts of conspiracy charges for bank fraud.
According to a criminal complaint, Fleuridor, Brown and their co-conspirators introduced a plan in 2017 to defraud a Texas bank through some 700 false identities to create bank accounts and phantom businesses.
Prosecutors say the organization began using those fake identities and businesses this spring to fraudulently claim federal loans to financially help small businesses with the coronavirus pandemic.
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MULTAN, Pakistan – Pakistan’s foreign minister said his compatriots were fortunate that the coronavirus has caused only 6,284 deaths in Pakistan since February, less than projections that they could face 50,000 COVID-19 deaths through the end of August.
Shah Mahmood Qureshi says coronavirus cases are shrinking in Pakistan. He says the scenario is bad in neighboring India, where thousands of new instances are added every day. Pakistan has reported only 319 new cases and one death in the last 24 hours.
Pakistan has reported 295,372 cases since February, when the country’s first infection was detected.
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BERLIN – Tens of thousands of people are taking part in a demonstration in Berlin opposed to pandemic restrictions after a court overruled a government-issued ban in the German capital.
Some among the crowds waved Saturday flags of the American Reich, Russian or German, while others wore T-shirts that sold the conspiracy theory “Q” or denounced The limited regulations of Germany that require the use of masks.
The Berlin regional government had sought to ban the demonstration, convening previous demonstrations this month that regulations were not followed to prevent the spread of the virus. The protest organizers effectively appealed the decision, a court ordered them to make some social estrangement, a measure that was not implemented on Saturday.
In eastern Paris, a few hundred other people gathered to protest against new regulations on masks and other restrictions caused by the rise of coronavirus infections in France. Masks are now mandatory in public in Paris.
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BEIJING – About a third of students returned to school on Saturday in the Chinese capital, the start of the new school year was reeling due to coronavirus.
The first organization of 590,000 academics in Beijing included the 3 years of high school, the first and third year of the school and the first year of the number one school. Another 400,000 fellows are scheduled to start school on Tuesday and the last 520,000 on September 7.
Students and teachers should wear masks.
China reported new cases of coronavirus in the last 24-hour period, bringing its official total to 85,022. All new cases were arrived abroad. The death toll in the country remained at 4,634.
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