6:42 p. m Array: Students from Toronto’s top public schools will return to school next Thursday, with a two-day delay.
5:26 p. m. : Ontario public health offices report 184 new ones within 24 hours.
3:01 p. m . : Trump admits he knew COVID would be very deadly, says book
The latest news about coronavirus from Canada and around the world on Wednesday. This record will be updated on the day. Web links to longer stories if available.
8:21 p. m. : The Vancouver Airport Authority is stopping some primary infrastructure projects because it says the continued decline in air caused by the COVID-19 pandemic means they are no longer needed without delay.
The so-called CORE program component of a $ 9. 1 billion plan to build 75 projects over 20 years that began in 2018.
It included a new central application building, a geothermal heating and air conditioning formula and a floor transport center and a new parking lot.
The airport authority said in a press release that it will prioritize the fastest needs, adding screening and fitness tests and projects such as airfield infrastructure that take place when the airport is less busy.
6:42 p. m. : Students from Toronto’s top public schools will return to school next Thursday, a two-day delay the board has asked to establish and schedule.
In a virtual assembly on Wednesday afternoon, principals were informed that the start date of Tuesday, September 15, now goes back to Thursday, September 17 for all students, those in special school programs.
“Given the complexity of the scheduling and staffing process, we have adjusted the start dates for high school, in user and virtual,” administrators said.
On Tuesday, “students who attend specialized schools and students who participate in extended systems (developmental delay) in high schools will” start “and follow a semester program,” the council said.
Meanwhile, “all other higher school systems begin” on Thursday, adding those that adhere to embedded systems, such as those of autistic scholars or in the categories of gifted, in a “term” program, in which they take two categories at once. for about two months, attending every other morning for about 4 hours, before going home to be informed live and online.
5:26 p. m. : As of 5 p. m. on Wednesday, Ontario’s regional fitness offices reported 184 more cases of COVID-19 in the last 24 hours as the province’s infection rate continues to rise, to Star’s last count.
With Wednesday’s total, Ontario’s seven-day average for new instances is 166 instances consistent with the day. This is the measure over two months and nearly double what exercise sets reported less than a month ago on August 16, when the seven-day average hit a recent low of 85 instances consistent with the day.
Even with the increases, the infection rate remains well below the worst of the pandemic; Ontario has noted that the seven-day average of nearly six hundred day-consistent cases peaked in mid-April.
As has been the case in recent weeks, most new cases continue to occur in the Toronto metropolitan area. Toronto reported 58 new cases on Wednesday; Added peel 32; and the York 27 region. The Halton and Durham regions also reported rates higher than their recent averages, with 12 and nine new cases, respectively.
A new fatal case reported Wednesday in Peel.
The province has now recorded a total of 45,866 cases shown or likely of COVID-19, 2,855 deaths.
The vast majority of COVID-19 patients in the province have recovered since then, and the recent accumulation of cases has still resulted in a significant increase in hospitalizations or deaths. The province has 1,540 active cases of the disease, an increase in recent weeks.
Star’s count includes some patients reported as ‘probable’ COVID-19 cases, meaning they have symptoms and contacts or a history indicating that they are most likely with the disease, but have not yet earned a positive lab test. .
The province warns that its separate knowledge, disclosed daily at 10:30 am, would possibly be incomplete or outdated due to delays in the reporting system, saying that if there is a discrepancy, “knowledge reported through (health offices) being considered as the maximum updated”.
5:11 pm: Toronto Public Health reports an outbreak at a nursing home with six cases: one resident and five employees. A user is hospitalized Tuesday at the Donway Place outbreak. Toronto Public Health indicates that it is the site of the only active COVID. outbreak at a nursing home or Toronto hospital.
4:49 p. m. : WE Charity closing its Canadian operations.
Co-founders Craig and Marc Kielburger also plan to leave the Toronto-based youth organization once the transition to a new board of directors is complete.
The brothers blame the COVID-19 pandemic and the controversy over the liberal government’s plans for the Toronto-based youth organization to run a multimillion-dollar program of volunteer students.
The organization has lost many of its backers in recent months, which, according to Kielburger residents, has left it in dire financial straits.
WE plans to fire its Canadian in the coming months and sell all of its homes in Canada, adding its Toronto headquarters, to create an endowment fund that will fund the final touch of several projects that are still underway.
4:38 p. m. : The B. C. Pandemic Autumn and Winter Battle Plan. includes higher DETECTION of COVID-19, tactile studies, and a crusade to administer nearly two million influenza vaccines.
Health Ministry officials say they have the province prepared for COVID-19 outbreaks ranging from low to exceptional and are confident that the fitness formula can meet the challenges.
Officials say some of the arrangements come with the option to perform up to 20,000 COVID-19 tests, hire more than six hundred additional tactile markers, and purchase more than 1. 9 million doses of flu vaccine.
Officials say the plan will also focus on protecting the elderly, who are especially vulnerable to COVID-19, with increases in long-term care homes and the handling of 45,000 high-pressure flu shots. dosage for the elderly.
3:39 p. m. : Senior UN officials warned Wednesday that the COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated discrimination and other human rights violations that can fuel the conflict, and its oblique consequences overshadow the effect of the virus itself on the world’s most fragile countries.
UN political leader Rosemary DiCarlo and UN humanitarian leader Mark Lowcock painted a bleak picture at the UN Security Council of the global effect on the global pandemic that has covered the world, with more than 26 million displayed cases of COVID-19 and more. of 860,000 deaths.
Lowcock warned the council that the indirect effects on the economy and fitness of the crisis in fragile countries “will be a higher level of poverty, a decrease in life expectancy, more famine, less schooling and more child deaths. “
He said that about a third of cases and deaths occur in countries affected by humanitarian or refugee crises, or in countries facing the highest degrees of vulnerability. But the extent is unknown because the tests in those fragile countries are so low, and in some places, many other people are reluctant to seek help, worry about quarantine, or don’t care. get meaningful medical treatment, he said.
3:01 p. m. : U. S. President Donald Trump admitted to reporter Bob Woodward that he deliberately minimized the coronavirus before this year, even though he was aware that it was “fatal” and much more severe than seasonal flu.
“These are fatal things,” Trump told Woodward on February 7 in one of the 18 interviews they conducted for his book, “Rage. “
The Washington Post and CNN won initial copies of the e-book and released the main points on Wednesday.
“You just have to breathe the air, and it did,” Trump said. “And this is a very delicate question. This is a very sensitive matter. It’s also more fatal than even a serious flu. “
It’s a very different story than the one Trump tells the public, because he continually insisted that he would temporarily disappear and denigrated the Democrats’ considerations as an undeniable effort to dry him up.
“I sought to minimize it,” Trump told Woodward on March 19. ” I like to minimize it, because I don’t need to panic. “
“They are fatal things,” the president repeated to insist.
In his talks with Woodward in February, at a time when Trump continued to publicly minimize the threat of the virus and gave no transparent indications to the public about precautions, the president made it clear that he knew it was a threat.
Read the full story here.
2:06 p. m. : An updated picture of poverty across the country before the COVID-19 pandemic shows that those living well below the low-income line have been left behind.
Statistics Canada figures show that the average “poverty gap,” which measures the degree to which others are on average below the official poverty line, has increased from 31. 8% in 2015 to 33. 4% in 2018.
Although in the same period, the percentage of other people living further below the poverty line, explained as earning 75% below the line, fell from 7. 4% to 5. 4%.
The numbers are different from those released earlier this year, after Statistics Canada updated how it calculated the poverty line.
The firm says its recalculated figures recommend that fewer other people in Canada live on low incomes, but those still living in poverty haven’t noticed their cases improve.
Experts say the pandemic could widen the poverty hole this year, as the federal government’s plan is to move millions of Canadians to a new set of sources of income support.
1:54 p. m. : Ontario fell to 149 new instances of COVID-19 on Wednesday, adding just over 90% in Greater Toronto-Hamilton and Ottawa.
The Health Department figures came here a day after Prime Minister Doug Ford’s government said it would end any easing of pandemic restrictions for 4 weeks until it can assess the effect of reopening schools on the development of the spread. of the virus, which struck 702 Ontarians over the long weekend . . .
Read Rob Ferguson’s full story from Star.
1:45 p. m . : Manitoba Prime Minister Brian Pallister says the Legislature will function more strongly than overall when politicians return to the House next month, despite the existing COVID-19 pandemic.
The progressive conservative government will push through dozens of stagnant spending since spring, on topics ranging from electricity rates to grocery shopping hours on Sundays and public holidays.
You still have to officially approve an invoice that implements many measures in the spring budget.
The legislative meeting was suspended in the spring when the new opposition Democrats suspended proceedings for several days.
As the COVID-19 pandemic increased, the legislature withdrew and returned briefly, sitting one day a week with fewer politicians in their seats.
Pallister says negotiations with the opposition are ongoing, but the purpose is to have the legislature for weeks when it meets in early October.
1:20 p. m. : The principal of an Oakville Elementary School says a member tested positive for COVID-19 just days before students returned to class.
Gail McDonald told parents that the Oodenawi Public School reported the positive check on Monday.
She says the individual provided PA days to staff at school last week and no students were exposed to the virus.
Staff who had contact with the user were ordered through public fitness to be isolated for 14 days.
The director says it underwent an advanced cleaning before it reopened yesterday.
According to provincial guidelines, all schools must disclose COVID-19 instances to parents while protecting privacy.
12:55 p. m. Array: School bus cancellations are piling up in Ontario, and transportation providers say fears of the COVID-19 pandemic are exacerbating the bus power shortage in the industry.
Twelve bus routes in the Gray-Bruce and Thunder Bay spaces were canceled as of Wednesday, with providers citing the pandemic and similar fitness disorders as reasons to prevent drivers from working.
In Southbury, Ontario, the student consortium announced Monday that 23 routes will not operate for at least the first week of school because not enough drivers have returned to work.
Thunder Bay’s student transportation services imply that the average driving force age of a bus in the domain is 57 and that many do not have to paint due to age-related fitness hazards related to COVID-19.
The cancellations come weeks after considerations were raised through Unifor Local 4268, the union that represents bus drivers, calling for increased fitness and protection for the industry.
Bus transport has posed demanding situations as categories resume across the country, with considerations of physical distance on crowded routes and drivers on strike in Winnipeg this week.
11:50 a. m. : Quebec Fitness Report 180 new instances of COVID-19.
The province also announced 3 more disease-related deaths earlier this month and withdrew two more deaths after investigations decided they were not caused by COVID-19.
The province has now reported 64,056 people and 5,771 deaths.
No deaths have been reported in more than 24 hours, however, the number of hospitalizations has increased from 8 to 113, while cases in intensive care have decreased from one to 14.
11:50 a. m . : One of Quebec’s 3 closet ministers is sobbing after being in the presence of a local mayor whom the disease says has tested negative.
The Minister of Transport, Francois Bonnardel, said on social media that he was relieved by the result, but that he would remain in administrative isolation for another week.
11:35 AM: The federal government is creating a new national program for Black Canadians to download ad loans from national banks.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately affected black Canadians and has highlighted inequality in Canada.
The new program will come with $53 million for black business organizations to help marketers fund, advise, make monetary plans, and business training.
Another $6. 5 million will be used to gather knowledge about the state of black entrepreneurship and identify barriers that prevent black Canadians from succeeding in business.
Ottawa and 8 primary monetary establishments are also creating a loan program to finance black traders with loans between $25,000 and $250,000.
Support for black businesses is one of the demands made in June in a letter written through the Black Parliamentary Caucus calling on Canadian governments to deal without delay with systemic racism.
Read Alex Ballingall’s full story about the star.
11:30 a. m. : British Columbia students will attend COVID-19 orientation sessions this week amid a wave of new protocols to reopen schools as the pandemic continues.
Education Minister Rob Fleming said districts expected 85-90% of academics to attend in person, yet some parents and academics say they are frustrated by the lack of distance learning features, giant sleek sizes and inconsistent messages about physical distance.
In Merritt, BC, Crystal Young’s 18-year-old son Caleb is about to start his senior year in high school. Young said he knew if he would attend the on-user course on Monday, that is given the most recent report that 429 new instances of COVID-19 have been detected in British Columbia over the long weekend.
But she said classroom training was the most productive option for Caleb, who has autism and wants one-on-one at school.
Young said Caleb’s school had placed him in a small organization within a larger cohort of students, and that other people who ran a lot with him had to wear masks. He would also arrive at school at another time because of overcrowding, he said.
The mother of two is involved that learning teams with up to 120 high schools and 60 elementary students will contradict what she has taught her children about how to minimize social interactions.
11:00 a. m. : A. C. First Nation declared a state of emergency after confirming that 4 members had COVID-19 and several others reported symptoms of the virus.
A Tla’amin Nation report says citizens were ordered to take refuge to stop the spread of the virus while fitness officials seek contacts.
The community-affecting ordinance, located in the Powell River area, took effect Tuesday afternoon and members must remain where they are for the next 72 hours.
Access to the First Nation, about 170 kilometers northwest of Vancouver, has also been limited to a single access port and parents are encouraged to prevent their children from attending school this week.
A letter from Vancouver Coastal Health indicates that contact with the virus probably occurred at a vigil on September 3 or at a funeral the next day in Powell River.
Tla’amin’s state of emergency comes a day after the Provincial Gymnasium of British Columbia ordered the closure of nightclubs and banquet halls after COVID-19 cases arose in the province.
10:39 a. m Array: The Toronto International Film Festival will now require visitors to wear masks or masks at all times at its headquarters, TIFF Bell Lightbox, even when sitting in a cinema.
A few weeks ago, TIFF stated on its online page that masks were mandatory on site, but that they did not have to be used sitting inside the festival auditorium, which takes place thursday through September 19.
Such masking policy is permitted under existing government rules on COVID-19, however, after holders raised considerations on social media this week, TIFF updated its rules.
TIFF now says it has made the decision to close the stands at the Lightbox dealership, “eliminating this as a point of contact between consumers and staff that the festival adapted to the pandemic. “
10:10 a. m. (update): Ontario reports 149 cases of COVID-19, less than in recent days, with more than 17,600 tests performed and no further deaths were reported. Twenty-eight sets of public exercises report five or fewer cases, 21 of which do not report new cases. Toronto reports 50 cases, 41 in Peel and 16 in Ottawa.
10:05 a. m. (update): The Bank of Canada maintains its key interest rate target of 0. 25% and says it will remain there until inflation returns to the target.
The central bank policy rate has remained at its declining effective limit since March, when the COVID-19 lockdowns plunged the economy into a crisis.
In a statement released today, the central bank’s board of governors said recovery activity in the third quarter appears to be faster than expected in July.
But it warns against signs such as an asymmetric uptick in employment and moderate confidence, indicating a slow and volatile recovery process.
The bank says its key rate will remain near 0 until the economic slowdown is absorbed and the 2% inflation target is “reached in a sustainable manner”.
He reiterated that the central bank is in a position to do whatever is required to help the economy in its recovery from the COVID-19 crisis, which will come with continued purchases of federal government bonds.
9:18 a. m Array: In the latest sign of how it is thriving as others weaken the pandemic, Amazon said Wednesday that it was looking to recruit another 33,000 people for corporate and technological roles in the coming months.
This is the most jobs you can have at any given time, and Seattle-based online giant said recruitment wasn’t linked to the jobs it offered before the holiday shopping season.
Amazon can strengthen its workforce:it is one of the few corporations that has thrived during the coronavirus epidemic. People turned to it to order food, materials and other parts online, helping the company generate record profits and profits between April and June. This happened even though he had to spend $4 billion on cleaning products and pay overtime and bonuses for employees.
Demand was so high that Amazon struggled to deliver parts as quickly as usual and had to rent to another 175,000 people to help you pack and ship orders to your warehouses. Walmart and Target also saw their sales soar due to the pandemic.
8:45 a. m. : Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will meet with HXOUSE in Toronto on Wednesday, following an announcement and media availability. Small Business Minister Mary Ng and Hull-Aylmer MP Greg Fergus will be present.
8:21 a. m. : German security officials say thousands of extremists took part in a demonstration opposed to the country’s restrictions on coronaviruses last month that resulted in attempts by some protesters to the typhoon parliament.
The head of Berlin’s state intelligence services, Michael Fischer, told lawmakers on Wednesday that an initial examination of photos from the Aug. 29 demonstration indicated that “at least 2,500 to 3,000 right-wing extremists and Reich citizens they participated in the protests. “The Reich Citizens Movement challenged the legitimacy of the German Constitution after World War II; the movement encompasses far-right groups.
Fischer said those counted so far were known as right-wing extremists based on the clothing, flags, symbols and slogans they wore.
“But beyond that, there were also other people who participated in occasions that may not be known as right-wing extremists or Reich citizens because of their outward appearance,” Fischer said. He added that some of these protesters probably operated in the same circles as extremists considered hostile to the German constitution.
Attempts by some protesters to provoke a typhoon in the construction of the Reichstag parliament in Berlin have been widely condemned by the German authorities, but some lawmakers have also criticized the obvious lack of police readiness in the capital. Reichstag until reinforcements arrived.
Fischer stated that the government had obtained data prior to the protest that some participants had requested the assault on the parliament building, and security officials discussed the risk at an assembly two days before the event. But he insisted that officials did not anticipate that the protesters would put the plan into effect.
Police said a total of nearly 40,000 more people took part in the August 29 protests.
8:10 a. m . : Lululemon Athletica Inc. beat expectations as second-quarter profit fell despite a 2% increase in sales due to increased online revenue.
The Vancouver-based athleisure store says it earned $86. 8 million (USA). U. S. ) Or 66 cents according to the constant diluted percentage, compared to $125 million (US)U. S. ) Or 96 cents consistent with the constant percentage of the previous year.
Revenue for the era ending August 2 was $ 902. 9 million (US), compared to $ 883. 4 million (US) the previous year.
The company, which publishes reports in U. S. dollars, is expected to earn 54 cents according to a constant percentage of $842. 5 million, according to the monetary knowledge company Refinitiv.
The net source of revenue for corporate retail stores fell by 51% to $287. 2 million, while the net direct source of revenue for consumers was $554. 3 million, an increase of 155%.
7:30 a. m. (update): Amid developing considerations on a momentary wave of COVID-19 with an increase in new cases, prime ministers from Canada’s two most populous provinces are meeting with their chief ministers.
Prime Minister Doug Ford and Quebec Prime Minister Francois Legault will hold a summit Wednesday at the Hilton Toronto Airport in Mississauga to discuss plans for the economy and prepare for the resumption of the pandemic.
“We’re going to have a wonderful discussion,” Ford, who participates in French categories twice a week, said Tuesday before a dinner with Legault and their spouses.
“If you raise our population and that of Quebec, we are more than 60% of the total population and we have a voice when it comes to dealing with the federal government,” said the Ontarian.
But Ford, whose progressive conservatives have worked hard with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s liberals on the COVID-19 crisis, under pressure, Wednesday’s summit should not be a gang attack in Ottawa.
Read Robert Benzie’s full story from The Star
7:03 a. m. : A key negotiator seeking to play games with a Belgian coalition government has tested positive for COVID-19, co-negotiator Conner Rousseau said Wednesday, weakening hopes that one of the longest political deadlocks in the country may be broken soon.
Dutch-speaking liberal Egbert Lachaert has the coronavirus, forcing top politicians from six other centre-left and center-right parties to hold video conferences at the hotel as they try to develop a government agenda. Later on Wednesday, Rousseau said the other six leaders had tested negative.
7 A. M. A new report by the Ontario Chamber of Commerce indicates that affordable child care offerings, flexible operating arrangements and vocational education are indispensable to help women recover from the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The provincial industry organization says the fitness crisis is disproportionately impacting and is creating what it calls a “transfer,” with labor force participation falling to its lowest point in 3 decades.
To counter this trend, the Chamber suggests measures that come with immediate construction in child care spaces that allow physical remoteness, reserved the investment for a forward-looking moment of the COVID-19 wave, and advanced resources for parents of their children. with distance education.
The organization is also calling for long-term affordability and accessibility of child care to be addressed through investment, addressing the shortage of early childhood educators, and exploring child care through Workplace.
The report says women have more opportunities for flexible paints and opportunities to exercise in spaces where knowledge of the labor market recommends shortages.
6:04 a. m. : South Korea’s ambassador to France said his country had managed to impose an immediate reaction to the coronavirus in its previous reports on primary epidemics, in a French parliament hearing on Wednesday.
Speaking before a Senate commission of inquiry into how the government dealt with the COVID-19 crisis, Choi Jong-moon detailed South Korea’s effective efforts to combat the spread of the virus, adding by expanding testing.
6:01 a. m. : Canada’s prestige as a foreign winter sports host is being affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Cancellations that began in March when the coronavirus stopped the game resumed and Canada lost more World Cups and World Championships in 2020 and 2021.
However, Calgary is going to plug the drain.
With an eye toward Edmonton’s good fortune as an NHL hub city, Tourism Calgary and WinSport at Canada’s Olympic Park need the city to be a foreign hub for a game they are in a position to reveal.
“We’re in talks about some bubbles that might take place in Calgary,” Carson Ackroyd, Tourism Calgary’s senior vice president of sales, told The Canadian Press.
“With some of our key facilities, one of which is clear to WinSport, where do we have an herbal installation merit where bubbling can repeatedly attract to a location?”
5:07 a. m. : Pope Francis wore a face mask and used hand sanitizer on Wednesday as he called on the faithful to look out for the health of others and themselves in the face of the coronavirus pandemic.
Francis got rid of the mask while his car was parked in the courtyard of San Dámaso inside the Apostolic Palace, where last week he resumed his weekly public hearings after a close of COVID-19 for nearly six months.
4:59 a. m. : The new limits for six-person social gatherings in England are expected to remain in place for the “foreseeable future,” potentially until Christmas or even Christmas, British Health Secretary Matt Hancock said Wednesday.
Hancock said the new restriction for indoor and outdoor gatherings, which will take effect and become enforceable by law starting Monday, will provide “more clarity” to others and help keep the recent spike in new coronavirus cases at bay. .
One of the reasons for the care in the instances is that many other people have been in recent months, while the lockdown restrictions have been relaxed, adding how they relate to indoor and outdoor home gatherings. Scientists say that a transparent message is essential. they have to involve pandemics.
4:47 a. m. : A main fireplace overnight swept the largest refugee camp in Greece, which had been placed under the COVID-19 blockade, leaving more than 12,000 migrants in urgent need of shelter on the island of Lesbos.
In dramatic night scenes, migrants from the crowded Moria refugee camp, which originally intended to house some 2,000 people, fled fires in various locations and destroyed much of the countryside and surrounding olive groves. Protests also erupting involving migrants, insurgent police and firefighters. No injuries were reported.
4:15 p. m. : The Bank of Canada will say this morning what it will do with its key interest at a time when there is very little economic drama for the first time in years.
Central bank policy has remained at 0. 25% since March, when COVID-19 blockades plunged the economy into crisis.
Governor Tiff Macklem said in July that the rate would remain near 0 until the country is well on track to recovery and inflation returns to the bank’s 2% target.
4:02 a. m. : Leaders from the two provinces hardest hit by the COVID-19 pandemic are meeting in Mississauga to discuss economic recovery and physical preparedness.
Ontario Prime Minister Doug Ford and Quebec Prime Minister Francois Legault convened an inaugural summit to discuss what they consider key spaces for cooperation.
They say the provinces plan to combine the percentage classes learned from the pandemic and the tables to stimulate economic recovery and expansion by reducing barriers to foreign trade.
4:01 a. m. : British Columbia students will attend COVID-19 orientation sessions this week amid a wave of new protocols to reopen schools as the pandemic continues.
Education Minister Rob Fleming said districts expected 85-90% of students to attend school in person, but some parents and students expressed frustration at the lack of distance options, giant categories, and inconsistent messages about physical distance.
4:00 a. m. Array: Latest COVID-19 numbers showed in Canada at 4:00 a. m. EDT on September 9, 2020:
133,747 are displayed in Canada.
Quebec: 63876 shown (including 5770 deaths, 56162 resolved)
Ontario: 43536 shown (including 2813 deaths, 39196 resolved)
Alberta: 15093 shown (including 247 deaths, 13154 resolved)
_ British Columbia: 6,591 displayed (including 213 deaths, 4,978 resolved)
Saskatchewan: 1669 shown (including 24 deaths, 1587 resolved)
Manitoba: 1349 shown (including deaths, 940 resolved)
Nova Scotia: 1086 shown (including deaths, 1018 resolved)
Newfoundland and Labrador: 269 shown (including 3 deaths, 265 resolved)
_ New Brunswick: 192 shown (including 2 deaths, 186 resolved)
Prince Edward Island: shown (44 resolved)
Yukon: 15 shown (15 resolved)
Repatriated Canadians: Thirteen shown (thirteen resolved)
Northwest Territories: five displayed (five of which resolved)
Nunavut: no cases were shown
_ Total: 133,747 (0 presumption, 133,747 showed 9,153 deaths, 117,563 resolved)
1:25 am: Although Indonesia has recorded more coronavirus deaths than any other Southeast Asian country, it has also so far noticed the maximum number of deaths among medical personnel in the region, increasing long-term considerations of an effect in the country. fragility health care system.
The tribulations endured by Indonesian fitness personnel are for other people in the world: long operating hours, fully packed hospitals, and a lack of resources such as non-public protective equipment.
The Indonesian government was able to supply PPE to physical care staff after an initial shortage that caused doctors to wear plastic raincoats while working, but other disorders persist in the country, where more than two hundred medical staff, mostly doctors and nurses, have died from the virus.
Read Tuesday’s evolutionary dossier