Jumat, 27 Maret 2020

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson tests positive for coronavirus - CNN

On his Twitter account, Johnson said he had developed mild symptoms and was self-isolating.
"Over the last 24 hours I have developed mild symptoms and tested positive for coronavirus. I am now self-isolating, but I will continue to lead the government's response via video-conference as we fight this virus. Together we will beat this," Johnson wrote.
In a video, Johnson said he was experiencing a temperature and a persistent cough, which are key symptoms of the virus, and that he took a test on the advice of the country's chief medical officer, Chris Whitty.
"I've taken a test. That has come out positive," he said, adding that he was working from home and self-isolating. "And that's entirely the right thing to do."
"But be in no doubt that I can continue, thanks to the wizardry of modern technology, to communicate with all my top team to lead the national fightback against coronavirus," he said.
A government spokesperson said that the test was carried out in Downing Street by staff from the NHS, the country's public healthcare system.
Johnson joins a long list of government officials around the world who have been infected with the coronavirus.
Doctors say they're like 'soldiers preparing for battle,' as UK braces for worst of the coronavirus surge
Few heads of government, however, have contracted it.
The positive test comes just two days after the 71-year-old Prince Charles, heir to the throne, tested positive.
Johnson last met with Queen Elizabeth II on March 11, Buckingham Palace said Friday.
"The Queen last saw the PM on the 11th March and is following all the appropriate advice with regards to her welfare," the palace said in a statement.
The development also comes just over a week after a top government adviser on the virus, Neil Ferguson, said he believed he had been infected and warned: "There is a lot of Covid-19 in Westminster."
Ferguson had met with the Prime Minister, as well as Whitty, and Chief Scientific Adviser Patrick Vallance. It was not clear, however, where Johnson may have contracted the virus.
The infection also raises concerns over Johnson's fiancee, Carrie Symonds, who is pregnant.

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2020-03-27 12:56:28Z
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UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson tests positive for coronavirus, is experiencing 'mild symptoms' - CNBC

U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced Friday he has tested positive for the coronavirus, making him the first major governmental leader known to have contracted the disease.

Johnson, 55, said in a video posted to Twitter that he has developed "a temperature and a persistent cough," and that he would self-isolate at home.

"But be in no doubt that I can continue, thanks to the wizardry of modern technology, to communicate with all my top team, to lead the national fight back against coronavirus," Johnson said.

Johnson was tested for COVID-19 on Thursday on the advice of England's chief medical officer after experiencing "mild symptoms," a spokesman for No. 10 Downing Street said in a statement.

"The test was carried out in No 10 by [National Health Service] staff and the result of the test was positive," the spokesman said. "In keeping with the guidance, the Prime Minister is self-isolating in Downing Street."

Johnson's diagnosis offers one of the most potent examples yet of how the deadly and highly transmissible coronavirus has permeated life around the world at every level of society.

Two days earlier, the British royal household announced that Prince Charles, heir to the throne, tested positive for the disease. The 71-year-old Prince of Wales began displaying mild symptoms last weekend.

The coronavirus has hit home for other world leaders, as well.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Sunday decided to quarantine herself after being exposed to a doctor who tested positive for the virus.

Earlier in March, Sophie Gregoire Trudeau, wife of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, tested positive for the virus. The prime minister said he would isolate himself for two weeks as a precaution.

President Donald Trump and other top members of his administration, such as Vice President Mike Pence, have said they tested negative for the coronavirus. But the devastating economic impact of the draconian efforts being imposed to try to contain the spread of the disease has taken a toll on Trump's business empire: Trump Organization properties, including the Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida, have shuttered their doors in the peak of their seasons.

The White House also announced last week that the next meeting of leaders from the Group of Seven nations, scheduled for June, will be held via video conference rather than an in-person gathering at Camp David as was originally intended.

The virus, which is believed to have originated in the Chinese city of Wuhan, has quickly spread to more than 150 countries.

More than 533,000 cases have been confirmed worldwide, including at least 24,082 deaths, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

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2020-03-27 12:31:37Z
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In apparent victory for Netanyahu, rival Gantz drops allies, moves towards unity - CNN

The surprise move suggests Gantz will serve in a government led by the indicted Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu -- which would break one of his key campaign promises. In the end, the coronavirus seems to have done what the country's politicians could not do by themselves: bring them together at a critical time to move the country forward. The longest-serving leader in Israel's history now appears set to continue in his role in the near future, with the backing of his main rival.
Gantz had already been chosen to form a new government with the backing of the majority of the Knesset. His decision to become Speaker instead drew accusations of betrayal from his former supporters, and triggered the almost immediate break-up of the Blue and White party, formed a year ago and comprised of Gantz's Israel Resilience party and two smaller parties. The former IDF Chief of Staff now looks set to take Israel Resilience into Netanyahu's right-wing bloc to form a comfortable majority in the Knesset, Israel's parliament.
Warnings over harm to Israel's 'democratic system' amid coronavirus crisis
"I will do the right thing at this time of emergency," Gantz said in his first address from the Speaker's chair, striking a conciliatory tone in trying to explain his decision. "The people of Israel are justifiably looking to us and expecting us to keep supporting the sacred battle against the coronavirus and its effect. And no less justifiably, they are demanding that we safeguard our democracy, our national decorum and our unity."
The decision to pursue a national emergency government is a clear victory for Netanyahu, who is set to remain Prime Minister, despite being indicted on charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust and having failed to secure a governing majority after elections in April and September. He appeared to fall short once again after elections earlier this month, but Gantz's support should be more than Netanyahu needs to secure his own position.
Even so, a unity government built around Gantz's faction and Netanyahu's Likud party is not guaranteed yet, as both groups need to come to an agreement. Netanyahu had not issued any statements about Gantz's decision as of late Thursday night, while his Likud party issued a short statement only saying, "Reports on the details of negotiations are purely rumors."
For years, Netanyahu has enjoyed the aura of a political magician among his supporters, winning election after election and seeing off a steady stream of rivals, both from within his own party and from the outside. But his magic appeared to have finally run out when he failed to secure a clear governing majority in three consecutive elections over an eleven-month period.
So this may go down as his greatest trick yet, turning his main political rival -- who swore not to serve under an indicted Prime Minister -- into exactly the support he needed to remain Israel's leader. Netanyahu now looks set to get his fifth term as Prime Minister.
Gantz, who had campaigned on a slogan of "Israel before everything," said his decision was driven by the national interests in a time of emergency. "Every crisis includes an element of opportunity. And even in the throes of this crisis, as we fight the pandemic, we will use the opportunity to bolster our democracy and reinforce it," he said.
A frequent critic of Netanyahu's attacks on the judiciary, the media, and the Arab citizens of Israel, Gantz suggested his participation in government could bring the Prime Minister to heel.
"We will get [Israel's] system of checks-and-balances back on track, we will put an end to the unrestrained attacks on our democracy on the part of irresponsible government ministers, we will dispose of schemes to harm the judicial branch, and we will heal the rifts tearing at our social fabric."
There have been many unprecedented firsts over the course of the last year in Israeli politics: the first failure to form a government after an election, the first sitting Prime Minister indicted, the first "repeat" election, and more. But this may be the most extraordinary. A political leader who has won enough support to get first shot at forming a new government instead gets himself installed as Speaker of the Knesset, paving the way for his main rival to remain Prime Minister.
"These are unusual times and they call for unusual decision," Gantz said.
Earlier on Thursday, the expectation was that Blue and White would secure the election of one of their backbenchers as Speaker, giving them control of the legislature and allowing them to form committees and pass legislation.
But at the last moment, Gantz nixed the original candidate, putting himself forward for the Speaker's chair. It was an attempt to keep alive negotiations for a unity government between himself and Netanyahu, who had threatened to call off the talks if the party stuck with its original choice. The reversal infuriated members of Gantz's own party, some of whom then boycotted the vote for Speaker, which Gantz won with the support of Netanyahu and the right-wing.
One of his erstwhile closest allies in Blue and White, Yair Lapid, ripped Gantz's decision as a betrayal of the party's voters, saying, "Their votes were stolen and given as a gift to Netanyahu."
"Benny Gantz decided today to break apart Blue and White and crawl into Netanyahu's government. It's a disappointing decision," Lapid said, speaking in Tel Aviv Thursday night. "What's being formed today isn't a unity government and not an emergency government. It's another Netanyahu government."
Those more sympathetic to Gantz believe he had few other options. While he did have the support of 61 members of Knesset after the elections earlier this month, which is a majority in Israel's 120-member parliament and enough to form committees and pass legislation, it was not enough to form a government. The political distance between the parties inside his bloc was just too great.
Gantz's 61 seats included 15 from the Joint List of Arab parties, which said it would support a Gantz-led government from the outside. That could have led to a minority government, but it was never an easy option -- not least because two members of Gantz's own party were vehemently opposed to a government that relied on the Arab vote, making an already difficult option virtually impossible.
In the past, Blue and White had also hoped that indictments against Netanyahu would either fracture Likud or break up the bloc of right-wing and religious parties. But it never happened, and their loyalty to Netanyahu was perhaps never in serious doubt.
So Gantz likely calculated he could either fight a fourth election in the midst of an international pandemic, or join Netanyahu in government. In choosing the latter, Gantz fractured his own party.
His decision was welcomed by Israel's right-wing. Defense Minister Naftali Bennett tweeted his support, writing, "I congratulate Benny Gantz on the courageous step of entering a unity government led by Netanyahu. This is the right thing for Israel in an emergency."
The statements from the right-wing were an about-face from the heaps of criticism poured on the then-opposition leader during the election campaign. Now the criticism was coming from the center-left, which had thrown their full support behind Gantz until Thursday afternoon.
Tamar Zandberg, a member of the left-wing Meretz party, said on Twitter, "Benny - you could have chosen between a government led by you or a disgrace. You chose a government led by Netanyahu and you will be disgraced."

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2020-03-27 11:07:00Z
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UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson tests positive for coronavirus, is experiencing 'mild symptoms' - CNBC

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson revealed Friday that he had tested positive for the coronavirus, making him the first major world leader known to have contracted the disease.

Johnson, 55, said in a video posted to Twitter that he had developed "a temperature and a persistent cough," and that he would self-isolate at home.

"But be in no doubt that I can continue, thanks to the wizardry of modern technology, to communicate with all my top team, to lead the national fight back against coronavirus," Johnson said.

Johnson was tested for COVID-19 on Thursday on the advice of England's chief medical officer after experiencing "mild symptoms" of the virus, a spokesman for No. 10 Downing Street confirmed in a statement.

"The test was carried out in No 10 by [National Health Service] staff and the result of the test was positive," the spokesman said. "In keeping with the guidance, the Prime Minister is self-isolating in Downing Street."

"He is continuing to lead the government's response to coronavirus," the spokesman said.

Johnson's diagnosis offers one of the most potent examples yet of how the deadly and highly transmissible coronavirus has permeated life around the world and at every level of society.

Two days earlier, it was revealed that Prince Charles, the heir to the British throne, had tested positive for the disease. The 71-year-old prince of Wales began displaying mild symptoms over the weekend.

The virus, which is believed to have originated in the Chinese city of Wuhan, has quickly spread to more than 150 countries.

More than 533,000 cases have been confirmed worldwide, including at least 24,082 deaths, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

This is breaking news. Please check back for updates.

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2020-03-27 12:02:05Z
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Coronavirus live updates: Donald Trump has 'very good conversation' with China's Xi; US deaths near 1,300; House set to vote on stimulus - USA TODAY

Hours after the U.S. surpassed China as the global leader in coronavirus cases, President Donald Trump said he had a "very good conversation" with Chinese President Xi.

In a tweet after 1 a.m. ET, Trump said he and Xi had "discussed in great detail" the virus that is "ravaging large parts of our Planet." "China has been through much & has developed a strong understanding of the Virus," Trump said. "We are working closely together. Much respect!"

While China has a population four times the size, the U.S. on Thursday surpassed it for the most confirmed cases of the virus.

The U.S. counted nearly 86,000 cases as of early Friday, with 1,296 deaths, according to the Johns Hopkins University data dashboard. More confirmations are expected as the U.S. ramps up testing. More 537,000 people are known to have been infected globally, and more than 24,000 have died. 

There were hints of a silver lining: The House is set to vote Friday on a $2 trillion emergency aid bill that would provide $1,200 to most Americans, along with funds for small businesses and unemployment insurance. Trump is expected to sign it.

Our live blog is being updated throughout the day. Refresh for the latest news. More headlines:

  • Congress was divided. How Republicans and Democrats united behind a $2 trillion emergency aid package.
  • Stimulus calculator: Find out how much you could get by answering four simple questions.
  • Donald Trump says the handshake may not survive coronavirus. Doctors hope he's right.
  • These 10 essentials are selling out: Here's where you can still get them.
  • The next coronavirus epicenter? Florida doesn't have enough tests — and results take 'seven to 10 days.'
  • Coronavirus can live on surfaces for hours — even days. Here's what you need to know.

Daily coronavirus updates: Get USA TODAY's Daily Briefing in your inbox.

Asian stocks surge after stimulus boosts US markets for 3rd day

Shares advanced on Friday in Asia after Wall Street logged a third straight day of gains with the approaching congressional approval of a massive coronavirus relief bill.

Tokyo and Seoul jumped 1.2% and Shanghai added 0.6%, while stocks fell in Australia.

Wall Street appeared to shrug off miserable news on unemployment as the S&P 500 rose 6.2%, bringing its three-day rally to 17.6%. The Dow industrials have risen an even steeper 21.3% since Monday.

The gains earlier this week came as Capitol Hill and the Federal Reserve promised an astonishing amount of aid for the economy and markets, hoping to support them as the outbreak causes more businesses to shut down by the day.

American Airlines flight attendant dies of coronavirus, elevating industry fears

Paul Frishkorn, a Philadelphia-based American Airlines flight attendant and union representative, has died from coronavirus, the flight attendants union confirmed Thursday.

Frishkorn, 65, was described as a tireless advocate for the flight attendant corps who was spending time in the Philadelphia crew room "answering questions and assisting our members through this difficult time" before he fell ill, according to the statement.

Speaking by phone to USA TODAY, Lori Bassani, president of the Association of Professional Flight Attendants, said that Frishkorn's death has increased the already deep concern for flight attendants working amid the highly contagious virus.

– Bryan Alexander

Death rate soars in New Orleans; city could become next epicenter  

The number of known coronavirus cases in Louisiana jumped to 2,305 on Thursday, an increase of 510 cases from Wednesday, and a total of 83 deaths, according to the Louisiana Department of Health. Nearly half of Louisiana's cases — 997 — came from New Orleans.  

Throngs of revelers may have brought the coronavirus to New Orleans during Mardi Gras celebrations.

But the city’s poverty rate, lack of healthcare and affordable housing, coupled with high rates of residents with preexisting medical conditions, may be driving its explosive growth and could make it the next U.S. epicenter of the outbreak.

The city reported Thursday that a 17-year-old teen died after contracting the virus, bringing the city's coronavirus death tally to 46 -- more than half of the state's total death count. 

New Orleans Homeland Security Director Collin Arnold said hospital capacity in the New Orleans region is dwindling and the city will need additional hospital beds within weeks.

-- Rick Jervis, Maria Clark and Lorenzo Reyes

Record 3.3M Americans apply for unemployment benefits amid coronavirus

The number of Americans filing initial applications for unemployment benefits jumped nearly twelvefold to a record 3.3 million last week, the Labor Department said, offering the most vivid evidence yet of the coronavirus’s widespread damage to the economy. The total was well above the 1.5 million claims economists had forecast, according to the median estimate of those surveyed by Bloomberg.

The pandemic has set off the most abrupt near-shutdown of the economy in history. Many restaurants, shops, movie theaters, sports arenas and other gathering spots were compelled to close their doors or scale back service – and lay off staff.

– Paul Davidson

Three migrant children in US custody in New York test positive for COVID-19

Three unaccompanied minor children in U.S. custody in New York have tested positive for the coronavirus, officials said Thursday.

The children, whose ages and nationalities weren't released, are in the custody of the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR), an agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The office is responsible for housing migrant minors.

The agency said it is doing an evaluation of the children and will not release them from New York care provider facilities. It has stopped placements of unaccompanied minor children in the states of California, New York, and Washington, which have been the hardest hit by the coronavirus. With more than 30,000 cases in New York, the state has become the epicenter of the coronavirus epidemic in the United States.

– Monsy Alvarado, Bergen Record

Will Florida be the next New York?

Florida has come under fire after its beaches remained jammed with spring breakers last week, and Gov. Ron DeSantis has ignored calls to issue a statewide shelter-in-place order.

That may contribute to the state becoming the next hot spot for COVID-19, a chilling possibility considering the elderly are the most likely to die from the disease and Florida is home to nearly four million people 65 and over, the second-highest number in the U.S. behind California.

Hospitals and doctors around the state say they still don't have nearly enough testing kits and can't get the ones they have analyzed fast enough, echoing complaints from state health officials across the country. Health officials have completed 27,000 tests so far in Florida, while New York is doing more than 18,000 tests a day. 

-- Alan Gomez

Dr. Anthony Fauci goes live on Instagram with NBA star Steph Curry 

Nearly 50,000 viewers — including former President Barack Obama and pop star Justin Bieber -- tuned into Instagram on Thursday when Steph Curry of the Golden State Warriors hosted Dr. Anthony Fauci in a live Q&A.

For nearly 28 minutes, Curry asked Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, questions about COVID-19, testing and social distancing. Fauci gave precise answers to all of them.

Fauci explained the difference between the flu and the coronavirus, which he considered "much more serious." Although young people are not as vulnerable to COVID-19, Fauci argued they should still follow social distancing rules because of the rare chance they could become ill and the likely chance they could pass the virus to someone older. Fauci predicted that large events, including the NBA season, will not take place until "the country as a whole is turning that corner."

Fauci has been a popular TV guest this week: earlier Thursday, he spoke to CNN's Anderson Cooper during the network's coronavirus town hall, explaining that Trump's desire to open the country by Easter was an "aspiration projection." Fauci added that Trump is listening to medical experts, including Fauci, and understands they have to evaluate the virus's impact "in real time."

– Mark Medina

China closes borders, attempting to prevent return of coronavirus

China temporarily barred most foreigners from entering the country as it seeks to curb the number of imported coronavirus cases.

The foreign ministry said even foreign citizens with residence permits will be prevented from entering starting Saturday. Diplomatic workers will be exempt, and foreign citizens coming to China for “necessary economic, trade, scientific or technological activities or out of emergency humanitarian needs” can still apply for visas. Most countries have halted or severely curbed international travelers in a bid to curb the pandemic.

More coronavirus news, tips and information from USA TODAY:

  • Tracking coronavirus: The U.S. outbreak, by state.
  • The all-or-nothing symptoms of COVID-19: 'This virus just has the whole kit and caboodle.'
  • Quarantine TV: Our list of 100 shows to watch.
  • 'Stay Home, Stay Healthy': How states are responding to the coronavirus pandemic.
  • Fact check: A Bill Gates-backed pandemic simulation in October did not predict COVID-19.
  • The $2 trillion coronavirus stimulus package: A visual guide.
  • 'We're bringing home bacteria': Doctors fear for their own families as they fight coronavirus.

Contributing: The Associated Press.

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2020-03-27 09:28:56Z
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As coronavirus cases spike worldwide, China is closing itself off - CNN

In a statement late Thursday, the government said that "in view of the rapid spread of Covid-19 across the world, China has decided to temporarily suspend the entry into China by foreign nationals holding visas or residence permits" as of March 28.
Anyone wishing to enter the country will have to apply for a new visa at their local Chinese embassy or consulate. The announcement did not say how long this would take.
The decision to effectively seal off the country to foreigners is the latest in a series of moves intended to safeguard against infection from international travel, after more than 500 imported cases of the coronavirus were confirmed.
On Monday, Beijing city authorities announced that all international arrivals would be quarantined and tested for the virus at designated government facilities. Other cities have implemented stringent home quarantine requirements on international arrivals. Last week, a Chinese Australian woman was deported after neighbors recorded her breaching isolation controls to go jogging.
The number of new domestic infections has slowed to a trickle in recent weeks. While Wuhan, the city previously at the epicenter of the outbreak, remains on lockdown, much of the rest of the country is returning to normal.
There are fears imported cases could lead to a renewed outbreak.
Hong Kong, a semi-autonomous Chinese city, already had to backtrack on relaxing restrictions after a spike in new infections, many of which were imported by international travelers.
Staff wear protective masks and visors as they walk in the arrivals area at Beijing Capital International Airport on March 24.

No 'foreign friends'

Across China, reports have appeared in recent days of businesses banning foreign nationals from entering their premises. Accounts have even emerged of housing estates and office complexes barring non-Chinese from the premises.
All of that is despite the fact 90% of imported cases are linked to Chinese citizens returning from overseas, particularly the hundreds of thousands of students forced home by university closures.
While the backlash against foreigners in China has not reached anything near the level of violence and open racism experienced by many Asians living in parts of Europe and the US, it appears to be part of a broader rise in xenophobia, seen in a number of Asian countries battling the outbreak.
Elizabeth Rodewald, an American working in Beijing, said she was stopped by her security guard from entering her own home this week. She said the guard asked if she was Russian and refused to let her pass even after she showed her residential ID card, even though Chinese residents continued to enter freely. She said she had to wait for the manager to arrive before she could go in.
At a Beijing gym popular with expats, managers posted a sign saying "foreign friends" would no longer be allowed to enter, "because of (the) overseas epidemic threshold." CNN also saw doormen at a bar in Sanlitun, a popular Beijing nightlife area, refusing entry to non-Chinese-looking patrons.
These restrictions are not government backed and enforcement of them appears to not be rigorous.
At the bar in Sanlitun, for example, security staff did not check IDs, so ethnically Chinese foreign residents could enter. Jim Boyce, a Beijing resident who posted on Twitter about restrictions on foreigners, said that one barber shop which put up a sign barring non-Chinese still allowed at least one expat to get his hair cut there.
Some 900,000 foreigners live in China, according to state media, with the largest non-Chinese population in Shanghai. While the government has gradually made it easier for foreigners to apply for permanent residency, as it attempts to attract more overseas talent and investment, the number of foreigners who gain this status is still exceptionally small.
In 2010, when the last census was carried out, there were just 1,448 naturalized citizens in China, a nation of over 1.3 billion people.

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2020-03-27 10:14:58Z
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Coronavirus: South Africa begins three-week lockdown - BBC News

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South Africa has announced its first deaths from Coronavirus infection, and said cases there have passed the 1,000 mark.

"This morning, we South Africans wake up with sad news that we now have our first deaths resulting from COVID-19," the health ministry said on Friday.

Both deaths took place in hospitals in the southern province of Western Cape.

Security forces have begun enforcing a three-week nationwide lockdown in an effort to stem the spread of the virus.

All but essential movement is forbidden and both the army and the police are enforcing the measures.

Ahead of the midnight deadline there were long queues outside supermarkets as people stocked up on essentials.  

How is South Africa fighting the virus?

Late on Thursday, President Cyril Ramaphosa visited soldiers before they were deployed from a base in the Soweto township of Johannesburg.

"I send you out to go and defend our people against coronavirus," he said, wearing a camouflage uniform.

"This is unprecedented, not only in our democracy but also in the history of our country, that we will have a lockdown for 21 days to go out and wage war against an invisible enemy, coronavirus."

Under the terms, food shops are allowed to stay open, but alcohol sales are banned - and Police Minister Bheki Cele urged South Africans to stay sober during the lockdown. Jogging and dog walking are also prohibited.

On Friday morning, however, local media showed pictures of busy streets and queues outside supermarkets in the townships - where poverty and the volume of people make social distancing difficult.

A day earlier, heavy traffic was reported on the main roads out of Johannesburg, despite a government appeal not to go on long journeys.  

Thousands of people thronged bus stations aiming to escape the capital and stay with family in rural areas, raising fears that they could take the virus to older relatives who are retired in farms and villages.

The authorities have warned that anyone violating the rules faces six months' imprisonment or a heavy fine.

"If people are not complying, they (the military) may be forced to take extraordinary measures," Defence Minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula warned.

South Africa has already closed schools and banned gatherings of more than 100 people.

Although Africa as a whole has not been hit as hard as other parts of the world by the virus, experts fear underfunded health services on the continent could be quickly overwhelmed by a sudden rise in cases.

In South Africa there are additional fears for people living with HIV - particularly the estimated 2.5 million in South Africa who are not taking anti-retroviral drugs.

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiLmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jb20vbmV3cy93b3JsZC1hZnJpY2EtNTIwNTg3MTfSATJodHRwczovL3d3dy5iYmMuY29tL25ld3MvYW1wL3dvcmxkLWFmcmljYS01MjA1ODcxNw?oc=5

2020-03-27 07:52:30Z
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