Kamis, 16 April 2020

Israel president Rivlin sends government mandate to Knesset - The - The Washington Post

Ammar Awad Reuters A banner depicts Benny Gantz, left, leader of Blue and White party, and Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, as part of the Blue and White party's campaign, in Tel Aviv on Feb. 17, 2020.

JERUSALEM — Israel ran into another wall — actually, the same wall — in its quest to break a year-long political impasse early Thursday when another deadline passed without the country’s main rival factions able to strike a deal and form a government.

The two sides, led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former army chief Benny Gantz, were still talking when midnight came and went, marking the end of Gantz’s official window to assemble a ruling coalition. The rivals, spurred by the coronavirus crisis, have been struggling for weeks to agree on a power-sharing arrangement in which they would take turns in the prime minister’s office.

Hours later, Israeli President Reuvin Rivlin snubbed both politicians by refusing to give Gantz more time or passing the charge to Netanyahu. Instead, Rivlin tossed the mandate to the parliament, giving any member of the 120-seat Knesset 21 days to find the 61 votes needed to take power.

[Coronavirus offers possible political thaw in Israel]

The move does not preclude the possibility of Gantz and Netanyahu reaching an agreement in the next three weeks, and the sides planned to continue talking Thursday. Rivlin also returned the mandate to parliament in the fall, after both leaders earlier failed to form a government. But Rivlin’s move this time does move the exhausted country closer to yet a fourth election.

As he has done previously over the course of three inconclusive elections, Rivlin beseeched the parties to find a way — any way — of reaching a compromise and stopping an increasingly surreal political carousel.

“I hope that the Knesset Members will be able to form a majority in such a way that a government can be formed as soon as possible, and to prevent a fourth round of elections,” Rivlin said in his letter to the parliament.

While the result was the same as previous missed deadlines, the issues in dispute have been very different in the weeks since Gantz stunned the country by dropping his year-long quest to oust Netanyahu and agreed, in principle, to serve with him in an emergency unity government to fight the pandemic.

The move split Gantz’s Blue and White party, a coalition of factions assembled at the start of this endless political season with the express goal of ending Netanyahu’s decade-long grip on Israel’s top job.

“It’s another Netanyahu government,” Yair Lapid, one of Gantz’s Blue and White co-founders, lamented when Gantz made his switch. “Benny Gantz surrendered without a fight and crawled into Netanyahu’s government.”

Critics say Gantz, a former army chief of staff and political newcomer, has been hoodwinked by Netanyahu, a seasoned political survivor who is determined to hang on to power. The prime minister, who is set to go on trial on corruption charges next month, is widely expected to use the office to delay the prosecution or seek official immunity.

Israeli media has reported that Gantz agreed to let Netanyahu serve the first rotation as prime minister for a fixed term of 18 months. But even Gantz’s turnabout — he spent much of the year declaring that Netanyahu is unfit to lead — has not been enough to break the logjam.

Apparent leaks from inside the negotiations portray the two sides struggling to divvy up dozens of ministerial portfolios, factions battling to save their plum jobs and disagreements over policy.

Among the thornier issues have been how fast the government would move to annex Jewish settlements in the West Bank under the terms of the Trump administration’s peace deal (Gantz reportedly acceded to Netanyahu’s desire to fast-track the plan) and control of the process of appointing judges.

In addition to serving as Netanyahu’s deputy prime minister, according to media reports, Gantz has variously considered taking on the jobs of foreign minister, defense minister or remaining as Knesset speaker, a post he was elected to two weeks ago.

The latest talks are said to be hung up partly on protections built into the deal for Netanyahu, who fears that Israel’s Supreme Court could rule that his criminal charges make him ineligible to form a government or to serve as Gantz’s deputy prime minister when they rotate jobs.

Gantz has reportedly resisted some of the guarantees Netanyahu seeks. In one of many acts of brinkmanship, Gantz has suggested that he would allow legislation in the parliament that would make it illegal for an indicted prime minister to serve.

Israel’s ever more humbled political forecasters say that a deal between the two is still possible. But so are other scenarios.

Netanyahu, who has enjoyed a bump in approval for leading a pandemic response that has so far prevented a widespread outbreak, may decide that a fourth election would be the charm in his quest for an outright majority for his right-wing coalition.

Gantz could try to reassemble the coalition he jilted of center-left parties with tenuous support from Arab Israeli parties that was agonizingly close to giving him the votes he needs to take power.

“We may have a unity government this afternoon, or we may have new elections,” said Gideon Rahat, a political science professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. “Any scenario is possible.”

Read more

Efforts to revive Israel’s parliament stumble amid virus outbreak

Israel’s president gives Benny Gantz first chance at forming a government

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2020-04-17 00:09:58Z
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Brazilian President Fires Health Minister After Clashes Over Coronavirus Distancing - NPR

Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro speaks to reporters in Brasilia on Thursday. Sergio Lima/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

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Sergio Lima/AFP via Getty Images

Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro has fired his health minister as the country grapples with the biggest outbreak of the coronavirus in Latin America.

Bolsonaro said Luiz Henrique Mandetta was leaving by mutual consent, but his departure follows weeks of acrimony between the two men over how to respond to the crisis.

The sacking has heightened political friction in Brazil at a time when international experts warn the virus will surge in the region in coming weeks, and are appealing for governments dramatically to intensify measures to combat it. COVID-19 has so far claimed more than 1,900 lives in Brazil.

Mandetta, a charismatic doctor and politician, won widespread public support by advocating broad-based social isolation in line with recommendations from the World Health Organization and many other medical and scientific experts.

Bolsonaro has opposed across-the-board isolation measures imposed by Brazil's state governors, arguing that they devastate the economy and endanger public health by destroying millions of jobs and businesses.

"Life is priceless, but the economy and employment need to return to normality," said Bolsonaro, at a press conference on Thursday, after Mandetta announced his dismissal on Twitter. However, that does not mean acting too hastily, the president said.

According to the Brazilian media, Bolsonaro — a far right populist and avid admirer of Donald Trump – was increasingly irked by Mandetta's popularity, which appears to have been reinforced by the minister's performances at the many televised press conferences he has held in recent weeks.

A recent Datafolha poll gave Mandetta an approval rating of 76% — well above the president's 33%.

Bolsonaro has for weeks publicly undermined his health ministry and state governors, by dismissing the coronavirus as a "little flu" and going onto the streets to shake hands and pose for selfies with his supporters.

The retired 65-year-old army captain recently said he is unconcerned about the risk of infection because he is "an athlete," and would only suffer mild symptoms. Unlike Mandetta, the president is a keen advocate of the anti-malarial drug hydroxyhloroquine for treating COVID-19 patients.

Mandetta's dismissal comes as health systems in parts of Brazil, particularly the north and northeast, are becoming overwhelmed by the outbreak and lack of intensive care beds, testing kits and ventilators.

Medical and scientific organizations in Brazil and abroad have accused Bolsonaro of being dangerously irresponsible in his response to the coronavirus crisis. These accusations will likely intensify with Mandetta's firing.

Brazilians in some urban areas greeted the news by angrily banging pots and pans at their windows and calling for Bolsonaro to go instead.

Mandetta is replaced by Nelson Teich, a leading Brazilian cancer specialist who advised Bolsonaro on health issues during his election campaign, but reportedly also supports social isolation measures.

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2020-04-16 23:50:40Z
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Ireland to quadruple WHO contributions after US halts funding - New York Post

Ireland plans to quadruple its contributions to the World Health Organization after President Trump’s suspension of US funding amid the global coronavirus pandemic, officials said Thursday.

The country will raise funding to more than $10 million next year, pending a review, according to Simon Coveney, Ireland’s Tanaiste and Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade.

“#Ireland strongly supports @WHO in efforts to coordinate a global response to combat #COVID19. So many countries rely on @UN expertise and capacity to save lives. Ireland is quadrupling our normal annual financial contribution to @WHO for 2020 to €9.5 million,” Coveney said on Twitter.

The announcement came after Trump said he will instruct his administration to halt funding while reviewing WHO’s handling of the COVID-19 crisis, saying the group failed to report accurate information from China during the outbreak’s early days.

Coveney later criticized Trump’s decision to halt funding as “indefensible” in the “midst of global pandemic.”

Ireland’s Health Minister Simon Harris also tweeted, “Any effort to undermine its [WHO’s] work is dangerous, illogical & harmful.”

Overall, the US is the largest contributor to the WHO, contributing about $553 million of the group’s $6 billion budget last year.

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2020-04-16 22:52:26Z
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Brazil President Bolsonaro fires his health minister - CNN

"I just heard from President Jair Bolsonaro the notification of my discharge as Health Minister," the outgoing minister Luiz Henrique Mandetta tweeted Thursday, thanking his colleagues and wishing success for his replacement.
Bolsonaro announced that he will replace Mandetta with Nelson Teich, an oncologist who supported his presidential campaign.
Coronavirus fears grow for Brazil's indigenous groups
Mandetta was one of Brazil's biggest proponents of social distancing, supporting governors' decisions to shut down schools and businesses.
But his approach put him at odds with Bolsonaro, who has previously downplayed Covid-19 as nothing more than a "little flu" and warned that the economic fallout from isolation could be worse than the virus itself.
Mandetta also challenged the president's insistence that malaria drugs are the solution to the Covid-19 crisis. While Brazil has launched trials involving the drugs, Mandetta has warned there is no evidence that they are effective in treating the symptoms.
Luiz Henrique Mandetta pictured here during a press conference on April 3, 2020.
National and local governments in Brazil have issued mixed messaging on how to behave during the pandemic. While Bolsonaro has been pushing against strict restrictions, state and local governments in some of the country's hardest-hit areas have promoted social distancing, with firefighters and police in the streets urging people to stay indoors.
In Rio de Janeiro, governor Wilson Witzel extended quarantine measures in most of the state's major cities through the end of April and urged people to stay home.
Two governors and more than ten members of Bolsonaro's inner circle have tested positive for coronavirus. But Bolsonaro has been seen flouting the guidelines issued by his own health experts, wandering into bakeries and greeting supporters with handshakes and hugs.
The Brazilian favela resident who saw coronavirus coming
The decision to remove Mandetta comes as coronavirus continues to spread through the vast Latin American country: beds in intensive care units are filling up in Brazil's biggest cities and in the northern Amazon region, authorities warn the health system is already collapsing.
Brazil has reported more than 30,000 confirmed cases of coronavirus infection. More than 1,900 people have died.
At the same time, fears are growing that the virus could ravage Brazil's indigenous communities. A 15-year-old Yanomami boy from the village of Rehebe in northern Brazil died on Friday from complications related to Covid-19, according to the Health Ministry. The Association of the Indigenous People of Brazil (APIB) said the boy was the third indigenous person to die of the disease in Brazil.

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2020-04-16 21:03:42Z
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Brazil’s Bolsonaro fires Health Minister Mandetta after differences over coronavirus response - The Washington Post

Andre Borges AP Brazilian Health Minister Luiz Henrique Mandetta gives anti-bacterial gel to President Jair Bolsonaro at a news conference on the coronavirus last month in Brasilia. Mandetta has openly contradicted Bolsonaro’s claims about covid-19.

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro has fired Luiz Henrique Mandetta as minister of health, Mandetta said on Twitter Thursday afternoon. The two officials had sparred publicly in recent weeks over the need for social distancing to fight Latin America’s largest coronavirus outbreak.

“I just received notice from President Jair Bolsonaro of my resignation from the Ministry of Health,” Mandetta tweeted. “I want to thank you for the opportunity I was given, to lead our [public health system], to launch a plan to better the health of Brazilians and to plan the combat of the coronavirus pandemic, this great challenge that our health system faces. … I wish my replacement success in his role as minister of health.”

Brazil has reported more than 29,000 cases and more than 1,760 deaths from covid-19, the disease caused by the virus, numbers second only to the United States in the Western Hemisphere. Given Brazil’s sharply limited testing, actual cases and deaths are believed to be significant undercounts.

But much of the country’s focus in recent days was on the widespread speculation that Bolsonaro was about to fire Mandetta, after the minister criticized the president on a popular news show for refusing to abide by the ministry’s social distancing guidelines.

A replacement was not immediately named.

[Brazil’s Bolsonaro, channeling Trump, dismisses coronavirus measures — it’s just ‘a little cold’]

The move comes as packed hospitals and clinics teeter on the brink of collapse. Emergency rooms in Amazonas state are running at capacity, with 95 percent of intensive care beds and ventilators occupied. Rio de Janeiro’s famed Maracana soccer stadium has been converted to a makeshift hospital to accommodate coronavirus patients. Gravediggers in the country’s largest cemeteries are working overtime to bury the dead.

In the Western Hemisphere, Brazil trails only the United States in confirmed cases of the virus. But Bolsonaro has repeatedly downplayed the severity of the outbreak — dismissing the virus as a “little flu,” shrugging off social distancing recommendations from the World Health Organization and sharing videos calling for an end to the country’s lockdown.

His push to restart the economy set up a direct confrontation with Mandetta, who became a voice of resistance within the administration. A physician who has served in Brazil’s congress since 2010, Mandetta insisted that businesses shut down and people stay home to reduce the spread of the virus.

Bolsonaro largely ignored those calls. On a visit with Mandetta last weekend to a pop-up hospital outside Brasilia, he walked into a crowd, took off his mask, extended his hand for a supporter to kiss and autographed jerseys.

It was too much for the minister.

“Brazilians don’t know whether they should listen to their health minister or to their president,” Mandetta told the Globo news program Fantástico on Sunday.

Rahel Patrasso

Reuters

Supporters of Bolsonaro protest the social distancing recommendations of São Paulo state governor João Doria. The banner reads, “We demand the opening of the market.”

Those who think relations between President Trump and infectious-diseases chief Anthony S. Fauci are awkward might wanted to consider Bolsonaro and Mandetta.

Mandetta clearly and consistently walked back Bolsonaro’s erroneous claims on covid-19 with science and data. When deaths began to soar, Bolsonaro said the virus appeared to be going away; Mandetta warned of “tough days” ahead. When Bolsonaro touted an unproven cure for the virus — “This medicine here, hydroxychloroquine, is working everywhere,” he claimed in a video on Facebook and Twitter — Mandetta said he would not endorse widespread use of the drug without a peer-reviewed study. (Facebook and Twitter removed the videos.)

[Brazil’s densely packed favelas brace for coronavirus: ‘It will kill a lot of people’]

The health minister’s insistence on facts and figures clashed with Bolsonaro’s freewheeling approach, which often involves impromptu social media provocations with misinformation and conspiracy theories.

“Bolsonaro’s style has never been tied to facts,” said Anya Prusa, a senior associate at the Wilson Center’s Brazil Institute. “He prefers a more informal, off-the-cuff engagement. It is a style that served him well during the election, but it has not served him well as a leader.”

Bolsonaro’s approval ratings have fallen to a record low of 28 percent during the outbreak, according to an XP Investments poll published last week. Sixty-eight percent of those surveyed, in contrast, said Mandetta and his Health Ministry were doing a good or excellent job.

Those numbers weren’t lost on Bolsonaro, who said he wouldn’t hesitate to fire any members of his cabinet who “became stars.”

Ueslei Marcelino

Reuters

Mandetta reacts during a news conference in Brasilia on Wednesday.

When speculation surfaced last week that Bolsonaro was ready to fire Mandetta, Brazilians protested from quarantine, banging pots and pans from their windows. Mandetta called a news conference Monday to announce that he was still on the job. But on Tuesday, he reportedly told his team that he expected to be dismissed by the end of the week.

Bolsonaro’s political rivals, meanwhile, have urged the people to ignore him.

“Don’t follow the guidelines of the president of the republic,” said João Doria, governor of São Paulo state. “He does not lead the population correctly and unfortunately does not lead Brazil in the fight against the coronavirus and in the preservation of life.”

Doria, a former Bolsonaro ally, called for a strict lockdown in his state, Brazil’s most populous, this month.

[Public health experts: Coronavirus could overwhelm the developing world]

Some critics said Bolsonaro’s opposition to Mandetta was strategic. By positioning himself as the health minister’s rival and a champion for the economy, he was shielding himself from the blame for the inevitable recession that will follow the country’s lockdown.

“For Bolsonaro, the facts don’t matter. What matters is the narrative he constructs,” said Guilherme Casarões, a political scientist at the Getúlio Vargas Foundation, a university in São Paulo.

“The political narrative here is convenient because it transfers responsibility for the crisis and the economic collapse to other operatives,” Casarões said. “He can shrug off responsibility while he casts himself as the person who tried, against the will of the system, the governors and the media, to keep the economy going.”

Read more

Coronavirus collides with Latin America’s maid culture — with sometimes deadly results

U.S. allies, encouraged by Washington, said goodbye to their Cuban doctors. As coronavirus surges, some are arguing for their return.

Coronavirus lockdowns across Latin America send Venezuelan migrants back to their broken homeland

Today’s coverage from Post correspondents around the world

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2020-04-16 20:11:32Z
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The US economy can't reopen without widespread coronavirus testing: Getting there will take a lot of work and money - CNBC

Cars form lines at a federally-supported drive-thru testing site for coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at PNC Bank Arts Center in Holmdel, New Jersey, April 4, 2020.

K. C. Wilsey | FEMA | via Reuters

As the United States reels from the massive economic fallout of the coronavirus outbreak, there are growing calls by President Donald Trump and others to start to reopen businesses, schools and other public spaces so that the nation can begin to recover financially.

On Thursday, Trump tweeted he would be holding a "Major News Conference" that evening to "explain Guidelines for OPENING UP AMERICA AGAIN!"

But health experts and several top business leaders warn that the country — which might not see a coronavirus vaccine for 18 months or more — should not reopen on a broad scale unless there is a huge increase in the relatively small number of tests currently being done for Covid-19 infection.

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, in a note to shareholders early Thursday, wrote: "Regular testing on a global scale, across all industries, would both help keep people safe and help get the economy back up and running."

"For this to work, we as a society would need vastly more testing capacity than is currently available," Bezos noted.

NBC News later reported that Democratic lawmakers in calls Thursday with Trump insisted that he wait until there is widespread testing available before he pushes to reopen the nation.

But Trump indicated to them that such an economic reopening would have to occur before an expansion of testing levels, Sen. Mike Braun, R-Ind., told NBC News.

Health experts also say the country needs a related and equally robust program to trace the people who have had contact with infected people, to avoid seeing those contacts themselves spread the coronavirus to others.

There are only about 120,000 samples or so being tested each day for the coronavirus in the United States, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Experts say that millions of people will have to be tested each day, even as many as 20 million to 30 million people, before the nation can return to a semblance of economic normality.

That is much more than the number of tests even projected to be produced by some major manufacturers by June.

"The reason is to avoid a second wave of viral spread you have to do what South Korea and other countries, including Germany, have done. You have to have testing in place, and aggressive testing," said Dr. Tom Moore, an infectious disease specialist in Wichita, Kansas.

"We don't have to test everybody, but we definitely need to test a significant portion of the community," said Moore, a former board member of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

"This is a Herculean task," he said. "I don't know how it's going to be solved in the immediate future, but it needs to be."

Moore and other experts say that a second or third wave of Covid-19 infections could end up killing more people than the first wave, lead to another series of shutdowns of businesses, and ultimately end up doing greater economic damage than has been seen to date from the pandemic.

As of Thursday, there were more than 639,000 cases of coronavirus reported in the U.S., with nearly 31,000 people dead from the disease.

Millions of tests a day

Officials at the Rockefeller Foundation told CNBC they expect to release in coming days a paper outlining the scope of the work that needs to be done to get the U.S. on track to safely returning to work, school and leisure time activities. The philanthropic group is a major donor for efforts related to health, science and other areas.

The foundation said that it has been in contact with the Trump administration, national groups of governors and mayors, and leading American corporations as it prepares its recommendations.

"It's going to [initially] cost at least $100 billion and upward of $500 billion over the long haul," said Eileen O'Connor, senior vice president for communications, policy and advocacy at the Rockefeller Foundation.

The foundation's plan, which will propose that the cost be financed directly and subsidized by the federal government, estimates that 20 million to 30 million tests each day would need to be performed to get many Americans back to a more normal life.

But the foundation also estimates that there will ultimately need to be 200 million to 300 million tests each week to have the economy functioning as it was before the outbreak began. That level of testing assumes multiple rescreenings of individual Americans in the absence of a Covid-19 vaccine.

The Rockefeller Foundation's plan calls for changes in logistics to optimize the current capacity of testing in the U.S., which by June or July could allow for 2 million to 3 million tests per week, O'Connor said.

At the same time, O'Connor said, "We need to invest in the different kinds of tests that can be ramped up even more quickly and as efficiently" as possible.

She said a medium-term goal is to ramp up the testing capacity with a "huge investment" that could lead to "up to 10 million tests per week, before we can get certain sectors back to work." Even that number of polymerase chain reaction, or PCR, tests would be a tiny fraction of the U.S. population of 330 million or so.

The first sector to target with a testing capacity of 10 million or so tests per week would be health-care workers, many of whom have contact with coronavirus patients, police and emergency workers, O'Connor said. Then food production workers, including farm workers, and then trucking workers. That target could be reached by this fall, the foundation believes.

After that, the goal would be to have tens of millions of tests done every day to have the country fully return to work.

More tracking

The Rockefeller Foundation's plan also will call for "data aggregation" platforms that will track where tests and testing-related supplies such as swabs and chemical reagents are located and where they should be allocated.

"We then have to also marry that with testing results and contact tracing ... so that we can know where the disease is going next," O'Connor said.

The contact tracing could be aided by digital apps and geolocators to identify where infected people have been, she said.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Wednesday said the state, which is currently ground zero for the Covid-19 pandemic in the U.S., will need an "army" of contact tracers to identify people who have been with infected individuals. He called on the federal government to fund that effort.

"There is no doubt we need to get the economy back and running, and if we don't the damage will be long lasting," O'Connor said.

"Everybody is focused on the safest return to work possible, but the only way you do that is testing," she added.

A long road ahead

The Rockefeller Foundation's plan does not estimate that the U.S. workforce will be back to normal anytime soon.

And while the foundation's projections for the number of needed tests might seem high to some people, it comes on the heels of projections published by the Edmond Jr. Safra Center for Ethics last week.

"These [projections] suggest that, depending on what tracing technology is used in conjunction with testing, at least millions and possibly hundreds of millions of tests per day will be needed," that analysis said.

"While we estimate that such capacity is possible by late spring or early summer," the authors wrote, "we must invest much more aggressively if we are to allow a return to work."

Dr. Scott Gottlieb, the former head of the Food and Drug Administration, and a CNBC contributor, has called for a plan that would test anyone who visits a doctor, which would be nearly 4 million people per week.

But Gottlieb also said in a Vox interview this week that getting to the point where the United States has the capacity to perform 2 million to 3 million tests each week "is going to be very hard."

He said it would be possible to reach that level by September but added that Congress would need to support that effort.

Former Vice President Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee for president, said Thursday, "I say we should not send you back to work till it's safe to send you back." Choosing between the economy and health "is a false choice," he said.

"The way you revive the economy is you defeat the disease," said Biden, who argued that widespread testing will be needed to determine who can return to work and which workplaces and public spaces can be opened again.

BlackRock CEO and co-founder Larry Fink said during an interview on CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Thursday: "We're going to still see elements of the disease increasing in other parts of the world and until we have adequate testing, rapid testing, it's very hard to see how we're going to reboot in the next 30 days."

Fink said he expects that treatments for Covid-19 could be improved to speed up that economic rebooting, "But it may not be in June or July. It may be in August."

He noted that a number of business leaders told Trump during conference calls on Wednesday that "we need to have adequate" testing "to make sure we have a secured environment."

Trump himself this week said, "Our country has to get open, and it will get open, and it will get open safely and hopefully quickly. Some areas quicker than other areas."

The president, who is running for reelection this fall, also claimed "there's tremendous testing, and the governors will use whatever testing is necessary, and if they're not satisfied with their testing, they shouldn't open."

But Trump's own leading infectious disease advisor, Dr. Anthony Fauci, told the Associated Press in an interview Tuesday that the U.S. is "not there yet" in having enough testing capability or contact tracing systems in place to rely on for reopening the economy.

Equipment shortage

Complicating the effort to increase the number of tests performed in the U.S. is a shortage in equipment needed to conduct those screenings.

This week, the American Academy of Medical Colleges wrote Dr. Deborah Birx, coordinator of the White House's Coronavirus Task Force, and said the group appreciated the fact that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration had taken steps "to reduce regulatory barriers to developing, validating, and deploying" coronavirus tests.

But the group added that while those tests hold the promise for increased numbers of Covid-19 screenings, "we have come to learn over the past several weeks, despite the best efforts of all parties, not one of these components [needed to run those tests] is readily available in sufficient quantities to each and every lab that needs them."

"Widespread but uneven shortages in one or more of the essential components for testing have resulted in a situation where few labs are able to maximize the testing capacity of any one machine, platform, or test," the letter said.

Qiagen, a major manufacturer of the RNA extraction kits used to detect the coronavirus for tests, told CNBC on Thursday that it "produced enough kits in March to purify RNA for coronavirus testing of about 3.3 million patient samples, up from about 1 million in February and an average of 400,000 a month during 2019."

The company added that it "aims to double production to about 7 million in April and ramp up to about 20 million a month by October 2020 — well ahead of our original plan that we announced on March 17."

That level of production would still, for Qiagen at least, be far short of the levels of testing the Rockefeller Foundation plans to call for.

'The test has to be affordable'

Moore, the infectious disease expert who practices medicine in Kansas, said that one potential major hurdle to ensuring widespread testing is the out-of-pocket cost of a screening to individuals.

"The test has to be affordable," Moore said. "Otherwise, you will have people who won't come in to do it."

Another complicating factor for tests that Moore and other experts noted is the reliability of current tests.

Some infected people will test negative for antibodies to the disease at first, even though subsequent tests will show they had it.

There is also a risk, he said, of false negatives, in which rapid tests show someone does not have the virus when they actually are infected.

That, in turn, increases the chances they will go back to their normal routine and infect other people.

And experts do not currently know whether people who had Covid-19 can become reinfected with the virus.

Moore cited a new report from South Korea that said 141 people "that reportedly recovered from the virus then acquired it again."

"Which raises the question," Moore said, "is there more than one strain of coronavirus disease?"

— CNBC's Meg Tirrell contributed to this report.

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2020-04-16 19:33:48Z
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UK extends lockdown measures for at least three more weeks - Reuters

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain extended its nationwide lockdown on Thursday as stand-in leader Dominic Raab ordered Britons to stay at home for at least another three weeks to prevent the spread of a coronavirus outbreak which has already claimed over 138,000 lives globally.

An ambulance passes a banner thanking the NHS in Kensington, as the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, London, Britain, April 16, 2020. REUTERS/Hannah McKay

“We have just come too far, we’ve lost too many loved ones, we’ve already sacrificed far too much to ease up now, especially when we are beginning to see the evidence that our efforts are starting to pay off,” he told reporters.

Raab is deputising while Prime Minister Boris Johnson recuperates from COVID-19 complications that nearly cost him his life. Raab chaired an emergency meeting on Thursday to review scientific evidence on the impact of the existing lockdown

“Based on this advice... the government has decided that the current measures must remain in place for at least the next three weeks,” he said.

“Relaxing any of the measures currently in place would risk damage to both public health and the economy.”

The United Kingdom has the fifth-highest official death toll from COVID-19 in the world, after the United States, Italy, Spain and France, though British figures only cover hospital fatalities and the real number is probably much higher.

The announcement, which had been widely expected, means Britons must stay at home unless they are shopping for basic necessities, or meeting medical needs. Citizens are allowed to exercise in public once a day, and can travel to work if they are unable to work from home.

The measures were announced on March 23 for an initial three-week period. Medical advisers speaking alongside Raab said they had reduced the overall rate of transmission of the virus to below 1, meaning it was now shrinking in the community.

Earlier, Health minister Matt Hancock warned the virus would “run rampant” if restrictions were lifted too soon.

Raab set out five loose conditions which must be met for the lockdown to be lifted.

But he refused to discuss any possible timeline - despite a growing political clamour for an ‘exit strategy’ to the most severe restrictions on daily life in British peacetime history.

Opposition Labour Party leader Kier Starmer said he supported the extended restrictions, but added: “We also need clarity about what plans are being put in place to lift the lockdown when the time is right.”

A YouGov poll conducted before Thursday’s announcement showed 91% of Britons supported a three-week extension to the lockdown.

SUN WILL SHINE AGAIN

The United Kingdom’s death toll from COVID-19 in hospitals rose 861 to 13,729, as of 1600 GMT on April 15.

Amid all the gloom, however, there was some good news.

Tom Moore, a 99-year-old British war veteran, on Thursday completed 100 walking laps of his garden, raising more than 12 million pounds ($15 million) for the health service.

“For all those people who are finding it difficult at the moment: the sun will shine on you again and the clouds will go away,” he said.

Restrictions across the globe have effectively closed down much of the world economy, and the United Kingdom is heading towards its deepest depression in three centuries.

As leaders around the world begin to contemplate ways to exit the shutdown, epidemiologists have cautioned that a second wave of the outbreak could endanger the weak and elderly.

Slideshow (7 Images)

Neil Ferguson, a professor of mathematical biology at Imperial College London who advises the government, said Britain would probably have to maintain some level of social distancing until a vaccine for the novel coronavirus is available.

“If we relax measures too much then we will see a resurgence in transmission,” he told BBC radio. “If we want to reopen schools, let people get back to work, then we need to keep the transmission down in another manner.”

GlaxoSmithKline Chief Executive Emma Walmsley said on Wednesday that a vaccine was unlikely to be ready before the second half of next year.

Additional reporting by Kate Holton, Paul Sandle and William Schomberg; writing by Guy Faulconbridge and William James; Editing by Stephen Addison, Gareth Jones, Andrew Heavens and Jan Harvey

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2020-04-16 19:01:32Z
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