Kamis, 09 April 2020

Spain reports 683 coronavirus deaths in one day: Live updates - Al Jazeera English

Spain reported 683 daily coronavirus deaths in the past 24 hours, a lower number of fatalities compared to the previous two days.

For the second straight day, the US recorded nearly 2,000 fatalities, while in Britain the daily death toll hit a record 938 in one day.

More:

There are now some 1.5 million confirmed cases of coronavirus around the world. More than 88,500 people have died and nearly 330,000 have recovered.

Here are the latest updates.

Thursday, April 9 

15:20 GMT - Iran's Supreme Leader says create sense of Ramadan at home

Iran's Supreme Leader called on Iranians to create the sense of Ramadan - due to begin later this month - in their homes, since public gatherings are banned as the country tries to contain the outbreak.

Schools and universities remain closed in the Islamic Republic and a ban on cultural, religious and sports gatherings has been imposed.

"Because of being deprived of public prayings, speeches and so on during Ramadan,  we should create the same senses in our homes," Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in a televised speech.

15:00 GMT - Hungary prolongs lockdown indefinitely 

Hungary has prolonged a nationwide lockdown indefinitely to slow the spread of the coronavirus, Prime Minister Viktor Orban said on his Facebook page, asking citizens to observe the order despite the Easter holiday.

Hungary has officially recorded 980 confirmed cases and 66 deaths in the pandemic.

14:47 GMT - US gig workers confused by financial relief aid

Amid record-high unemployment numbers, many gig workers in the United States wonder which benefits apply to them. 

Read more here.

MTA new york

An MTA worker wears personal protective equipment at the Grand Army Plaza station in the Brooklyn borough of New York [Frank Franklin II/AP Photo]

14:11 GMT - Global number of cases surpass 1.5 million

The total number of positive cases around the world now stands at 1,502,618, according to data collected by John Hopkins University in the United States.

The total number of deaths is 89,915, while 339,775 people have recovered. 

14:05 - Botswana's entire parliament quarantined 

All Botswana's parliamentarians including President Mokgweetsi Masisi will be quarantined for 14 days and tested for the coronavirus, after a health worker screening lawmakers for the virus herself tested positive overnight.

The health worker had checked the temperatures of some of the lawmakers a day earlier during a special sitting of parliament, which was called to debate a proposal by Masisi to extend a state of emergency to six months.

13:57 GMT - England's hospital death toll rises 

The coronavirus death toll in English hospitals rose 765 to 7,248, the health service said.

Of the 765 patients, 43 (aged between 33 and 99) had no known underlying health condition.

13:55 GMT - Lebanon extends lockdown

Lebanon's government has extended its almost month-long coronavirus shutdown by another two weeks until April 26 to combat the spread of the disease, the information minister said.

Since Lebanon declared a state of medical emergency last month, people are allowed to leave their homes only to buy food or medicine, and most businesses have closed. The only airport is also shut, except for a few flights returning expatriots stranded abroad.

An overnight curfew largely bans people from going outside between 7pm and 5am, with security forces enforcing curbs.

Lebanon coronavirus

Gloves and face masks are hanged to dry during a countrywide lockdown to combat the spread of the coronavirus in Sidon, Lebanon [Ali Hashisho/Reuters]

13:45 GMT - Canada says death toll could hit 22,000

The death toll from the coronavirus outbreak could hit 22,000 by the end of the pandemic, health officials in Canada said.

Officials outlined the two most likely scenarios, showing that between 11,000 and 22,000 people would die. 

The officials told a briefing that they expected between 500 and 700 people to die by April 16. The death toll so far is 436, with 19,290 positive diagnoses.

Hello, this is Farah Najjar taking over from my colleague Usaid Siddiqui.

13:05 GMT - China tackles coronavirus cluster brought from Russia

The Chinese city of Suifenhe entered a lockdown fuelled by an influx of infected travellers crossing the border from Russia in recent days. 

The northeast region's health commission reported 40 new cases on Wednesday, all returning Chinese nationals who crossed the border, according to local media reports. 

Read more here.

Coronavirus in China

The government also announced the building of a 600-bed isolation hospital to treat those infected [Getty Images]

12:59 GMT - Some gov'ts eye easing coronavirus restrictions despite warnings

While the coronavirus pandemic continues to ravage regions in Europe and the United States, some governments have started to contemplate a calibrated easing of the restrictions put in place in recent weeks.

Deaths, hospitalisations, and new infections are levelling off in places such as Italy and Spain. The state of New York, the current epicentre in the US, has seen encouraging signs that the infection rate there, which has been on the rise, could soon do the same. 

Read more here.

More:

12:50 GMT - Canada loses 1million jobs in March

Canada lost a record-breaking one million jobs in March while the unemployment rate soared to 7.8%, official data showed, as the coronavirus outbreak forced the closure of non-essential businesses.

Statistics Canada said the data did not fully capture the extent of the job losses since the agency polled respondents before the crisis began to take its full toll. Analysts in a Reuters poll had forecast a loss of 350,000 jobs and an unemployment rate of 7.2%, up from the 5.6% seen in February.

12:40 GMT - 6.6 million more Americans file unemployment claims

US weekly data shows 6.6 million new jobless claims were filed in the first week of April, nearly as high as the previous week's record-breaking figure, as the fallout from the coronavirus pandemic continues to weigh on the economy

How will the global economy ever recover from the coronavirus? | Start Here

12:13 GMT - Dutch coronavirus cases rise by 1,213 to 21,762 -authorities

The Netherlands reported 1,213 coronavirus cases, taking the total to 21,762, health authorities said, with 148 new deaths.

The country's death toll stands at 2,396, the Netherlands' Institute for Public Health (RIVM) said in its daily update.

The RIVM repeated that the real numbers are higher, as not all cases or deaths in the country are confirmed by testing.

12:12 GMT - Vietnam says 15,000 people linked to COVID-19 hotspot tested negative

More than 1,000 healthcare workers and 14,400 others linked to a coronavirus outbreak at a hospital in Hanoi have tested negative for the coronavirus, the Vietnamese capital's ruling body said.

Bach Mai hospital, one of the country's biggest medical centres, has been under lockdown since March 28 after authorities became concerned that cases there would spiral out of control.

"All 15,461 people tested negative for the virus. The outbreak in Bach Mai has been well controlled after the lockdown," Hanoi People's Committee chairman Nguyen Duc Chung said at a meeting, according to a statement on the ruling body's website.

11:56 GMT - Pakistani taxi drivers give free rides to Spanish health workers

Pakistani taxi drivers in Barcelona has started an intitiative providing free rides for medical workers amid the coronavirus outbreak.

The initiative started at the beginning of Spain's lockdown, in mid-March, as six Pakistani taxi drivers led by Shahbaz Ahmed discussed how medical workers would be able to return at night to their homes.

Since then, their effort has expanded to about 200 volunteers, including some drivers from other nationalities.

Read more here.

pakistani taxi

About 43,000 Pakistanis live in Barcelona, and almost 89,000 in Spain overall, according to the Spanish Statistical Office [Sheraz Syed/Al Jazeera] 

11:45 GMT - 107-year old Dutch woman recovers from coronavirus

A 107-year old Dutch woman has recovered from the coronavirus, probably becoming the oldest survivor of the pandemic in the world.

Cornelia Ras fell ill on March 17, the day after her 107th birthday, Dutch newspaper AD reported, after attending a church service with other residents of her nursing home on Goeree-Overflakkee, an island in the southwest of the country.

She and 40 others at the service were subsequently diagnosed as carrying the virus.

11:43 GMT - 'EU is in danger' - Spanish PM 

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has issued an urgent warning that the European Union is in danger of disintegrating in the face of the coronavirus crisis.

"The EU is in danger if there is no solidarity," Sanchez told parliament 

Spain is among the countries calling for common debt insurance, widely referred to as coronabonds, to tackle the economic fall-out from the coronavirus pandemic. Germany and other countries have so
far rejected the proposal.

11:31 GMT - Coronavirus reaches Amazon's isolated Yanomami tribe

Brazil has announced the first coronavirus case among the Yanomami people, an Amazon indigenous group known for its remoteness and vulnerability to foreign diseases.

The patient, a 15-year-old boy, was being treated in an intensive care unit at a hospital in Boa Vista, the capital of the northern state of Roraima, officials said.

Read more here.

11:20 GMT - Russia cases surge past 10,000 after record daily rise

Russia reported a record one-day rise in cases of novel coronavirus, pushing the official tally to more than 10,000, a day after President Vladimir Putin said the coming weeks would prove decisive in the fight against the virus.

The number of cases jumped by 1,459 and 13 more people died, the national coronavirus crisis response centre said on its website. That brings the overall death toll to 76.

A view shows a mannequin inside a shop window in Moscow

Moscow and many other regions are in their second week of a partial lockdown [Sergei Vedyashkin/Moscow News Agency/Reuters]

11:12 GMT - Nicaragua excludes political prisoners from mass release

Political prisoners were excluded from almost 2,000 inmates released early by Nicaragua because of the coronavirus pandemic, activists said.

The Interior Ministry said 1,700 people held in prisons across the country were let out and placed under house arrest supervised by the International Committee of the Red Cross.

"In this way we fulfill our Christian commitment to promote family union, especially to also promote the social reintegration of people who have made mistakes in society," Vice President Rosario Murillo told reporters on Wednesday.

Nicaragua's leaders promote gatherings amid COVID-19 pandemic

11:00 GMT  - Four infected newborns among new cases in China - study 

New evidence from China suggests it is possible for expectant mothers to pass coronavirus on to their unborn babies in the womb, according to a new report.

Research published by scientists from the University of Wuhan in the European Respiratory Journal suggests that four infected new borns were among the 81,000 coronavirus cases confirmed in China by mid
March.

In all four cases the mothers were also infected with coronavirus and in three cases showed symptoms immediately before giving birth. The babies only showed mild symptoms and were not in need of ventilation
or treatment in intensive care.

More:

09:45 GMT - Spain's death toll surpasses 15,000

Spain's number of daily coronavirus deaths slowed after two days of increase as 683 people succumbed in 24 hours, taking the country's total to 15,238, the health ministry said.

Overall detected cases rose to 152,446 from 146,690 on Wednesday, it added.

09:21 GMT - Malaysia reports 109 new cases, 2 deaths

Malaysia reported 109 new coronavirus infections, raising its cumulative total to 4,228 cases as Southeast Asia's third-largest economy grapples with the highest number of infections in the region.

The health ministry also reported two new deaths, raising the total number of fatalities to 67.

Malaysia troops

The death toll in Malaysia rose to 67 [File: Fazry/EPA]

09:10 GMT - Lockdown drives jump in vodka and whisky sales in Russia

Russian retailers have seen a sharp spike in alcohol sales in recent weeks with consumers rushing to buy vodka, whisky and beer at a time when Moscow and other regions have imposed partial lockdowns.

In the last week of March, vodka sales across Russia's largest retail chains jumped 31 percent in year-on-year terms, while whisky and beer purchases increased 47 percent and 25 percent respectively, Nielsen, a market research firm, found.

Sultan Khamzaev, head of Sober Russia which campaigns to reduce alcohol consumption, said the spike in sales was driven by long holidays, stress, fears that alcohol would run out, and a belief among many Russians that alcohol offers some protection against the new coronavirus.

08:53 GMT - China tackles coronavirus cluster brought from Russia 

The Chinese city of Suifenhe in northeastern Heilongjiang province, which has seen an influx of imported coronavirus cases from Russia in recent days, is building a temporary hospital to treat those who have been infected.

The hospital will provide more than 600 beds and is expected to be completed by April 11. The city, on the Russian border, has already placed residents under lockdown and closed the land border.

COVID-19 in Russia: Doctors warn number of cases much higher

08:45 GMT - South Africa's Ramaphosa defends WHO

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has thrown his support behind the WHO after it came under stinging attack from US leader Donald Trump over its handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

A statement from Ramaphosa's office late Wednesday said he "reaffirms his appreciation for the exceptional leadership" of World Health Organization (WHO) chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, "from the very earliest stages of this unprecedented global health crisis".

Ramaphosa was speaking in his capacity as the current leader of the African Union (AU).

08:20 GMT - UN delivers 90 tons of COVID-19 aid to Venezuela

A plane carrying 90 tons of UN health, water and sanitation aid arrived in Venezuela on Wednesday to help the cash-strapped country fight the coronavirus pandemic.

The shipment includes 28,000 Personal Protective Equipment kits for health workers, oxygen concentrators, pediatric beds, water quality control products and hygiene kits, the UN said.

"This is the first United Nations humanitarian shipment in support of the Venezuela COVID-19 outbreak," said Peter Grohmann, the UN's humanitarian coordinator for Venezuela.

Venezuela, suffering from a crippling economic crisis that has led to shortages of basic food and medicine and forced some five million people to flee the country, has 167 confirmed cases of coronavirus and nine deaths.

07:40 GMT - Vietnam approves $7.6bn tax holiday to help virus-hit businesses

Vietnam has approved a plan to delay the collection of 180 trillion dong ($7.6bn) in taxes and land rent to help businesses hit by the new coronavirus, which has infected 251 people in the country, the government said.

The government will delay the collection of value-added tax, corporate income tax, personal income tax and land rent for five months for various businesses and households, it said in a statement.

Indonesia pandemic: fears about COVID-19 ahead of lockdown

07:15 GMT - Taiwan protests against accusations from WHO

Taiwan's foreign ministry on strongly protested accusations from the head of the World Health Organization (WHO) that it condoned racist personal attacks on him that he alleged were coming from the self-governing island democracy.

On Wednesday, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus accused Taiwan's foreign ministry of being linked to a months-long campaign against him during the COVID-19 pandemic.

At a press briefing, he said he has been personally attacked, including receiving death threats and racist abuse.

06:45 GMT - UK's Johnson remains stable - minister

The UK Culture Minister said Prime Minister Boris Johnson was stable, and his condition was improving as he engaged with the medical staff tending to him.

Read more here.

06:36 GMT - 103-year-old Italian says 'courage, faith' helped beat virus

To recover from the coronavirus, as she did, Ada Zanusso recommends courage and faith, the same qualities that have served her well in her nearly 104 years.

Italy, along with neighbouring France, has Europe's largest population of what has been dubbed the “super old" - people who are at least 100. As the nation with the world's highest number of COVID-19 deaths, Italy is looking to its super-old survivors for inspiration.

“I'm well, I'm well,” Zanusso said Tuesday during a video call with The Associated Press from the Maria Grazia Residence for the elderly in Lessona, a town in the northern region of Piedmont. “I watch TV, read the newspapers.”

Ada Zanusso

Ada Zanusso, right, poses with a nurse at the Maria Grazia care home in Lessona, northern Italy, after recovering [Maria Grazia Lessona/AP]

06:20 GMT - India identifies, seals coronavirus hot spots

Indian authorities have identified and sealed dozens of hot spots in the Indian capital and the neighbouring Uttar Pradesh state comprising residential districts to check the rising trajectory of new coronavirus infections.

Government statements late Wednesday said people will be supplied food, medicines and other supplies at their doorsteps and they will not be allowed to leave these areas.


Hello, this is Usaid Siddiqui in Doha taking over from my colleague Kate Mayberry.


05:45 GMT -

I will be handing over the blog to my colleagues in Doha shortly.

A brief summary of this morning's developments:

The US and UK both suffered their highest number of deaths from COVID-19 in a single day as global confirmed cases rose to 1.5 million. Flags were being flown at half-mast in New York, the worst-affected US state.

There are glimmers of hope in countries including South Korea and New Zealand where confirmed infections appear to be slowing.

In a deepening spat with the World Health Organization, Taiwan has rejected claims by WHO chief Tedros Adhanon Ghebreysus that it used racial slurs against him.

The first case of coronavirus has also been found among Amazon's isolated Yanomami people. Brazil says a 15-year-old boy was diagnosed with the disease and is in hospital.

05:40 GMT - Fujifilm starts phase II clinical trial for Avigan in US COVID-19 patients

Japan's Fujifilm is moving to the second phase of its clinical trial in the United States for its Avigan anti-flu drug.

The trial will involve about 50 patients at three hospitals in Massachusetts.

Fujifilm announced the third phase of the clinical trials in Japan on March 31. Favipiravir, the active pharmaceutical ingredient in Avigan, has a “mechanism of action that prevents the propagation of viruses", the company says.

05:30 GMT - Pakistan starts giving cash grants to low-income families

Pakistan will start distributing cash grants worth Rs12,000 ($70) to low-income families on Thursday, reports Al Jazeera correspondent Asad Hashim.

About 35 million people registered for the payment, according to Sania Nishtar, a senior government official. After verification, about 12 million people (one person for each household) were found to be eligible for the one-time grant.

Pakistan currently has 3,713 confirmed cases of coronavirus. At least 62 people have died. 

05:10 GMT - UN calls on Southeast Asian nations to protect health of migrants

The UN Human Rights Office for South-East Asia is calling on countries around the region to do "everything they can" to protect the health of migrants during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Migrants in detention facilities should be released, forced returns suspended and "firewalls" erected between healthcare and immigration, the Bangkok-based office said.

"Migrants are an integral part of our communities, and only by including them fully will we be successful in overcoming COVID-19," Regional Representative Cynthia Veliko said in a statement.

Migrant construction workers exit a truck after concluding day's work in Bangkok, Thailand, Thursday, March 26, 2020. A month-long state of emergency has been enforced in Thailand to allow its governm

Migrant construction workers in Bangkok before a month-long state of emergency was imposed. [Gemunu Amarasinghe/AP Photo]

04:40 GMT - Keep out: Remote Indigenous communities sealed off in Australia

Australia's Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders are more likely than other Australians to suffer from chronic diseases, which puts them at greater risk from COVID-19.

As part of the country's shutdown, remote communities in Australia's vast interior have also been shut down to protect those who live there. Nick Rodway wrote this story for Al Jazeera. 

04:30 GMT - First case found among Yanomami people in Brazil

Brazil's health minister Luiz Henrique Mendetta says the first case of coronavirus has been diagnosed among the Yanomami people in the Amazon.

The patient, a 15-year-old boy, is in intensive care in hospital.

Mendetta said the discovery was "very worrying". 

04:10 GMT - Positive signs in New Zealand after two weeks of lockdown

New Zealand has recorded its lowest number of new coronavirus cases in nearly three weeks, reporting just 29 new cases in the past day, the fourth successive daily drop. 

The country is halfway through a month-long national lockdown.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern also announced stricter border measures requiring all returning nationals to go into a managed quarantine facility for two weeks. Previously, returning nationals with no symptoms of COVID-19 were allowed to isolate themselves at home.

04:00 GMT - South Korea sees continued slowdown in coronavirus

South Korea's latest coronavirus update shows the outbreak there continues to slow.

The Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in a statement on Thursday there were 39 more cases, bringing the total to 10,423. The number of deaths rose by four to 204.

Testing, combined with isolation and monitoring, have helped South Korea get control of the virus. The government has also deployed technology to help in the fight including alerts to people's smartphones to advise them of cases nearby and potential hotspots.

Al Jazeera's Kelly Kasulis has written about the potential privacy issues - not to mention fatigue - created by the alerts.  You can read more here.

03:20 GMT - China tackling coronavirus cluster in northeastern province

Cases of coronavirus brought into China from overseas have reached their highest level in two weeks, with the northeastern province of Heilongjiang rushing to build a new hospital as more cases are brought in from Russia.

The National Health Commission reported 63 new cases on Wednesday, with 61 of those coming from overseas. That is the highest since March 25.

The country has imposed strict quarantine rules on anyone arriving in China from overseas.

02:30 GMT - ICRC steps up support in the Philippines crowded prisons

The International Committee for the Red Cross is stepping up efforts to help inmates in the Philippines' overcrowded prison system, establishing four isolation centres for those confirmed with mild to moderate coronavirus or suspected of having the disease. 

A four tent, 48-bed isolation facility in the new Quezon City Jail site started operations with 17 detainees on Wednesday and will serve the entire Metro Manila region. The facility has  electricity, water and sanitation.

Philippines ICRC

The Bureau of Jail Management and Penology with the support of the ICRC built a temporary isolation unit at the new Quezon City Jail site in less than three days. It opened on Wednesday to serve COVID-19-positive detainees and those with mild-to-moderate systems of the disease. [Supplied/ICRC]

Three other sites are under development.

“Physical distancing is a privilege simply not available to people behind bars," Boris Michel, ICRC head of delegation in the Philippines, said in a statement. "Overcrowding and limited health services mean infectious diseases like  COVID-19 can spread fast and wide inside detention facilities.” 

Philippines ICRC

The staff of the isolation facility prepare for the first arrivals on Wednesday. [Supplied/ICRC]

01:30 GMT - Taiwan condemns 'groundless' accusations it attacked WHO chief

Taiwan's Foreign Ministry on Thursday condemned accusations from the head of the World Health Organization (WHO) that it had used racist slurs against him, as "groundless".

On Wednesday, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said "racist slurs" had been made against him, which he said had originated in Taiwan.

The island's Foreign Ministry labelled the accusations "imaginary".

"We are a mature and highly-accomplished advanced democratic country, and have absolutely not instigated our people to personally attack the WHO's director-general, and have absolutely not made any racist comments," it said.

Tedros's comments were irresponsible and he should clarify them and apologise to Taiwan, it said.

Taiwan is not a member of the WHO. You can read more about why here.

00:10 GMT - Australian police take 'black box' from Ruby Princess

Australian police have interviewed the captain of a cruise ship that became the country's biggest single source of coronavirus infections after hundreds of passengers - some with the virus - got off the ship in Sydney.

About 400 passengers from the Ruby Princess later tested positive for the virus and 15 have died.

The police are conducting a homicide investigation into the incident. The ship remains at a port south of Sydney with about 1,000 crew on board.

00:00 GMT - New York flags at half-mast to honour coronavirus dead

New York, the hardest-hit state in the US, on Wednesday flew flags at half-mast as the number of coronavirus-related deaths in a single day reached a record.

"Every number is a face," said New York Governor Andrew Cuomo. "This virus attacked the vulnerable and attacked the weak and it's our job as a society to protect the vulnerable."

The number of confirmed cases in New York state is now approaching 150,000.

23:55 GMT - US CDC advises precautions for essential workers 

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in the US has released new guidance for people working in essentials areas such as healthcare and food suppliers who have been within 1.8 metres (six feet) of someone with a confirmed or suspected case of the coronavirus.

CDC Director Robert Redfield says the employee can return to work as long as they take their temperature before they go to work, wear a face mask at all times and practise social distancing.

Redfield said the employees should continue to stay home if they are sick. He also said employers should take the worker's temperature before allowing them to come back to work.

23:40 GMT - Brazil president says country to buy materials for hydroxychloroquine

Brazil's president Jair Bolsonaro says hydroxychloroquine, which is usually used for malaria, is saving the lives of people with COVID-19 and that Brazil will import raw materials from India to manufacture the drug.

Scientists say there is no conclusive evidence on the drug's efficacy in treating COVID-19.

Twitter has previously deleted posts by Bolsonaro touting hydroxychloroquine.

----

I'm Kate Mayberry in Kuala Lumpur with Al Jazeera's continuing coverage of the coronavirus pandemic. 

Read all the updates from yesterday (April 8) here

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2020-04-09 14:47:20Z
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Thousands of People in Dorms Pose New Challenge to Singapore Virus Fight - Bloomberg

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  1. Thousands of People in Dorms Pose New Challenge to Singapore Virus Fight  Bloomberg
  2. Singapore's second wave of cases is a glimpse at what the US may be in for - Business Insider  Business Insider
  3. Singapore reports 287 new coronavirus cases in biggest daily jump  Reuters
  4. Singapore Reports Record Increase in New Coronavirus Cases  Bloomberg
  5. Singapore confirms 142 new coronavirus infections in biggest daily jump  Reuters
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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2020-04-09 14:19:06Z
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Australian police seize 'black box' from Ruby Princess cruise ship amid coronavirus homicide investigation - Fox News

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Police in Australia have seized the “black box” of the Ruby Princess cruise ship, which is currently at the center of a homicide investigation following a deadly outbreak of coronavirus linked to the ship.

COSTA CRUISE PASSENGER FILES LAWSUIT, CLAIMS OPERATOR KNEW SHIP WAS 'TICKING CORONAVIRUS TIME BOMB'

On Thursday, New South Wales Police Commissioner Mick Fuller said investigators spoke with the ship’s captain, who was “extremely helpful,” and also gathered the liner’s electronic logs.

“Ships have a black box very similar to that of international planes, and that and other evidence has been seized for further investigation,” Fuller said during a televised press briefing on Thursday, per Reuters.

The Ruby Princess cruise ship, seen here docked at Port Kembia in New South Wales on April 6, is at the center of a criminal investigation by New South Wales police.

The Ruby Princess cruise ship, seen here docked at Port Kembia in New South Wales on April 6, is at the center of a criminal investigation by New South Wales police. (Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

On April 4, Fuller confirmed a criminal probe into the disembarkation of the Ruby Princess, which is operated by Princess Cruises, itself a subsidiary of the Carnival Corporation. At the time, the ship was linked to at least 662 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and 11 deaths. By Thursday, the death toll had risen to 15, Reuters reports.

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In the weeks that followed the ship’s docking, controversy had ignited over the disembarkation of nearly 2,700 passengers on March 19. New South Wales Health officials said at the time that about a dozen passengers had felt unwell and been tested for COVID-19 — though other passengers were not alerted of this update, ultimately departing the ship without screening, and then traveling home.

“The key question that remains unanswered… was Carnival, or crew, transparent in contextualizing the true patient/crew health conditions relevant to COVID-19?” he stated during the April 4 press briefing.

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“There is clear evidence that [COVID-19] has been brought off that ship,” Fuller said during the briefing, while also confirming that the investigation would seek to find out if Carnival had downplayed the symptoms of passengers and crew prior to docking.

“The only way I can get to the bottom of whether our national bio-security laws and our state laws have been broken is through a criminal investigation,” he later added.

A representative for Carnival has said it would “vigorously respond” to the probe in a statement shared with Fox News earlier this week.

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Around 1,000 crew members remained on the ship as of Thursday, Reuters reported.

Fox News' Janine Puhak contributed to this report.

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2020-04-09 14:03:09Z
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Saudi Arabia Declares Cease-Fire in Yemen, Citing Fears of Coronavirus - The New York Times

BEIRUT, Lebanon — Saudi Arabia on Wednesday announced that the kingdom and its allies would observe a unilateral cease-fire in the war in Yemen starting at noon on Thursday, a move that could pave the way for ending the brutal five-year-old conflict.

Saudi officials said the cease-fire sought to jump-start peace talks brokered by the United Nations and had been motivated by fears of the coronavirus spreading in Yemen, the poorest country in the Arab world, where the health care system has been ravaged by years of blockade and conflict.

The gesture is the first by any government entangled in an international armed conflict to halt hostilities at least in part because of the coronavirus pandemic, which has traumatized the world. The leader of the United Nations, Secretary General António Guterres, pleaded for a worldwide humanitarian cease-fire two weeks ago because of the pandemic.

While Yemen is one of the few countries in the world yet to have a confirmed case of Covid-19, the disease caused by the virus, aid workers fear that an outbreak there would be devastating for the war-torn country. Saudi Arabia itself has struggled to stop the virus from spreading, including inside its own sprawling royal family.

The cease-fire, the Saudi officials said, would last for two weeks and include Saudi Arabia’s Arab allies and the internationally recognized Yemeni government, which was effectively toppled in 2014 when a rebel group aligned with Iran and known as the Houthis took over much of the country’s northwest and its capital, Sana.

Saudi Arabia and its allies have been fighting since March 2015 to push the Houthis back and restore the Yemeni government — with little success.

The Houthis were not consulted before the cease-fire was announced, Saudi officials said, speaking on condition that they not be identified by name, and the kingdom reserved the right to respond if the Houthis fired missiles into Saudi territory.

But shortly before the Saudi announcement, a senior Houthi official, Mohammed Ali al-Houthi, posted a detailed, eight-page plan to end the war on his Twitter account, raising questions about whether the warring parties were competing to appear more interested in peace than their enemies.

When asked why the Saudis would suddenly, after five years of war, propose a nationwide cease-fire, Elana DeLozier, a research fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy who studies Yemen, attributed it to the pandemic.

“Coronavirus is the answer,” she said. “Coronavirus has freaked out everyone in Yemen.”

She called the Saudi announcement “the biggest concession and the biggest confidence-building measure that the Saudis have given since the beginning of the war.”

And the Saudis appeared to be using it as a way to gauge the Houthis’ willingness to negotiate.

“It really is a test case,” she said.

That meant that the cease-fire’s immediate success will largely depend on compliance by the Houthis, whose leaders did not immediately respond to the Saudi announcement.

Their forces have been making gains against Saudi-backed Yemeni forces in recent months, which may make them hesitant to give concessions. But they could see benefits to engaging in a peace process, if they feel that it recognizes the power they have gained during the war.

Saudi officials said the Yemeni government, most of whose officials live in Riyadh at the kingdom’s expense, had agreed to the cease-fire as well, but no Yemeni officials were on a telephone conference call with journalists to announce the cease-fire.

After the cease-fire was announced, Khalid bin Salman, Saudi Arabia’s deputy defense minister, wrote on Twitter that the kingdom would give the United Nations $500 million for humanitarian work in Yemen and $25 million to fight the coronavirus.

Despite the cease-fire’s tenuousness, Martin Griffiths, the United Nations special envoy to Yemen, hailed the announcement in a statement, saying it should create a fertile environment for peace talks.

“The parties must now utilize this opportunity and cease immediately all hostilities with the utmost urgency, and make progress towards comprehensive and sustainable peace,” Mr. Griffiths said.

Even before the coronavirus pandemic, the United Nations described Yemen as the world’s worst man-made humanitarian disaster. A large majority of the country’s 28 million people face hunger, disease and other deprivations.

Ben Hubbard reported from Beirut, and Saeed Al-Batati from Al Mukalla, Yemen.

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2020-04-09 13:23:55Z
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Boris Johnson's condition is 'improving' after third night in intensive care - CNN

Johnson was continuing to receive "standard oxygen treatment" and thanked health staff for their brilliant care, the spokesman said.
"(Johnson) had a good night and continues to improve," the spokesman added. "He's in good spirits."
BBC host slams UK politicians for suggesting 'fighters' can survive Covid-19
Rishi Sunak, the UK's top finance minister, said at the daily Downing Street press briefing Wednesday that Johnson was "sitting up in bed and engaging positively with the clinical team."
Sunak added: "The news about the Prime Minister reminds us how indiscriminate this virus is."
The 55-year-old was taken to London's St. Thomas' Hospital on Sunday because he was displaying "persistent" symptoms ten days after testing positive for the virus.
On Monday, Johnson's condition worsened and he was taken to the ICU, but on Tuesday, Downing Street said he was in a stable condition.
He did not require mechanical or invasive ventilation and did not have pneumonia, said Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab, who is deputizing for the Prime Minister.
The UK government's emergency committee -- Cobra -- was meeting Thursday to discuss options to review the coronavirus restrictions, but officials have played down the possibility of the lockdown being lifted any time soon.

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2020-04-09 12:54:58Z
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UK leader Boris Johnson 'continues to improve' after a third night in intensive care - CNBC

Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson leaves Downing Street on his way to Buckingham Palace after the general election in London, Britain, December 13, 2019.

Thomas Mukoya | Reuters

U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson "continues to improve," his spokesman said Thursday, after spending a third night in intensive care with coronavirus.

Speaking to journalists, the spokesman also said Johnson had a good night and is "in good spirits." The prime minister, who is currently at at St. Thomas' Hospital in London, has been receiving "standard oxygen treatment," indicating that he is not on a ventilator. 

Culture Minister Oliver Dowden earlier Thursday commented on Johnson's condition, telling the BBC that Johnson is "stable, improving, sat up and engaged with medical staff," adding: "I think things are getting better for him."

Johnson's battle in hospital comes as the U.K. reported on Wednesday its largest daily rise in deaths so far — 938 fatalities — raising the overall death toll to 7,097 people.

The government's emergency committee are convening Thursday to discuss lockdown measures and to review scientific data around the spread of the coronavirus in the U.K. since restrictions on public life were introduced in late March.

Dominic Raab, the foreign secretary, is currently deputizing for Johnson and will chair the meeting.

Almost all businesses remain closed, except for those deemed essential, and the public have been told to stay at home unless they need to buy food, fetch medicine or exercise once a day.

Johnson, 55, was moved to the intensive care unit at St. Thomas' Hospital on Monday evening after his coronavirus symptoms worsened.

He announced on March 27 that he had tested positive for COVID-19, but wasn't admitted to hospital until Sunday for "tests" due to persistent symptoms of the virus, including a cough and a fever.

Sunak said Wednesday that Johnson's infection showed COVID-19 was an "indiscriminate" disease that is impacting people across the U.K. He offered support for the prime minister, who he called his "friend," and said "my thoughts are with him and his family."

Johnson was the first world leader to contract the coronavirus and his admission to intensive care has shocked many. On Tuesday, he was sent best wishes from leaders in Europe, and President Donald Trump, who called him a "very good friend."

— CNBC's Ryan Browne contributed reporting to this story.

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2020-04-09 12:12:40Z
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Australian police raid cruise ship linked to 600 coronavirus cases, 15 deaths - Fox News

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SYDNEY-- Police wearing protective gear boarded a cruise ship to seize evidence and question crew members of the vessel linked to hundreds of coronavirus infections and 15 deaths across Australia.

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About 2,700 passengers disembarked from the ship on March 19 in Sydney and it has since become the largest source of coronavirus infections in Australia. More than 600 cases of COVID-19 and 15 deaths are linked the to the ship, the Ruby Princess.

New South Wales police, which boarded the ship Wednesday night at Port Kembla south of Sydney, said it’s expected to remain in port for 10 days with its 1,040 crew undergoing medical assessments. About 200 crew have shown symptoms of COVID-19, while 18 have tested positive for the virus that causes it. The workers remaining on the ship are from 50 countries.

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New South Wales police Commissioner Mick Fuller said Thursday that officers seized a black box “very similar to that of international planes” and other evidence. He said the captain had been extremely helpful.

“I can confirm there’s still over 1,000 crew members on the ship,” he said, adding that three-quarters of them want to remain on the ship. “They feel safe on the ship and I think that’s a good outcome.”

On Thursday, Australia recorded its lowest increase in coronavirus cases in more than three weeks.

Health Minister Greg Hunt said there were 96 new cases, the first time there have been fewer than 100 a day since March 17. The peak was on March 28, when 457 cases were recorded. There have been a total of just over 6,000 and 51 deaths in Australia from the virus.

Seeking to limit the impact on the economy, lawmakers passed a wage subsidy program late Wednesday worth $81 billion.

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2020-04-09 10:16:43Z
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