Jumat, 17 April 2020

Coronavirus updates: Global COVID-19 deaths soar as China hikes Wuhan toll - CBS News

Spain's coronavirus death toll soared past 19,000 on Thursday after another 551 people died of COVID-19, with the numbers reflecting a slowdown after nearly five weeks on lockdown.

One of the worst-hit countries in the world, Spain has seen the increase in the number of deaths and infections come down over the past fortnight, with the overnight fatalities taking the toll to 19,130.

But there are growing concerns that the toll may be far higher, with regional authorities in Madrid and Catalonia insisting they each had thousands more victims than the official count.

Madrid, which by Thursday counted 6,877 deaths, has mooted a figure well above 10,000, while Catalonia, where some 3,855 have died, believes its toll to be nearly double that after changing counting method.

Spain also recorded 5,183 new cases of COVID-19, taking the overall figure to 182,816 -- officially second highest in the world behind the United States. 

SPAIN-HEALTH-VIRUS-ELDERLY
A woman is wheeled into an ambulance outside the Vitalia care home for the elderly in Las Rozas near Madrid on April 16, 2020 amid a national lockdown to stop the spread of the coronavirus. Getty

Health authorities say the virus has peaked in Spain since the number of daily deaths reached 950 people on April 2, but they have insisted on maintaining the March 14 lockdown that is likely to be extended into mid-May.

One of the tightest lockdowns in Europe, the restrictions allow just essential workers out, otherwise the rest of the population can only leave home to buy food and medicine, to attend a medical emergency or to briefly walk the dog. 

AFP

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2020-04-17 10:15:35Z
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Coronavirus updates: Global COVID-19 deaths soar as China hikes Wuhan toll - CBS News

A new phrase is trending in Japan: "corona-divorce." With couples suddenly forced to share quarters nonstop, many in cramped Japanese apartments, the shelter-in-place decrees are taking a toll on matrimonial harmony. 

It's led Japanese hotel chain Kasoku to market "temporary evacuation space" for fed-up spouses. The term has traditionally been applied to shelters used during natural disasters, but now, for $40 a day, fleeing spouses can find sanctuary in one of the company's 500 fully-furnished, WiFi-equipped rooms. 

Of the 28 customers who've taken refuge so far, about two-thirds are disgruntled wives, Kasoku spokesman Kosuke Amano told CBS News, adding that interest in the marital escape scheme has "exceeded expectations."

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An image from Tokyo-based hotel chain Kasoku shows advertising for the firm's "corona-divorce" refuge rooms, offered for about $40 per night to spouses who need a break from round-the-clock exposure to their partners. Kasoku

For those who "want to avoid corona-divorce at all costs," the firm's website lightheartedly advises, "take advantage of temporary evacuation! Before resorting to a corona-divorce, giving yourself some space is important."

The service was prompted by reports of surges in divorce and domestic violence in other countries, as residents endure weeks of lockdown to halt the spread of COVID-19. 

The strain of prolonged life at home turned deadly for a Tokyo couple earlier this month. Kazuo Makino, 59, was arrested on suspicion of murdering his 57-year-old wife, apparently after she complained he wasn't earning as much because of the epidemic. 

With Japan's official state of emergency now extended to cover the entire country, corona-divorce hotels might, sadly, be a growth industry here.

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2020-04-17 09:49:00Z
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Factbox: Trump's coronavirus reopening guidelines - Reuters

(Reuters) - President Donald Trump rolled out his guidelines for how the United States can reopen businesses and schools shut down by the coronavirus Thursday evening.

Reuters viewed an early version of the guidelines. Here are the main takeaways:

1. States should have a “downward trajectory” of COVID-19 cases for a 14-day period before reopening, or a downward trajectory of positive tests for the same time period, given flat or increasing testing levels.

Track infections and deaths by state here here

2. U.S. states have core responsibility for testing and tracing citizens. A list of “core state preparedness responsibilities” includes the “ability to quickly set up safe and efficient screening and testing sites” and ensure “surveillance sites are screening for asymptomatic cases” and COVID-19 positive people are traced.

U.S. testing to date has been delayed here and chaotic, thanks to federal government roadblocks and failures. Alphabet's (GOOGL.O) Google and Apple Inc (AAPL.O) are working together on software to make contact tracing easier, but that will not be available here until mid-May.

3. Phase 1 of the reopening recommends that schools and daycare facilities remain closed and that people maintain social distancing in public. Businesses should continue to encourage teleworking, and meetings of more than 10 people should be discouraged.

Event spaces like movie theaters can reopen, with “strict” social distancing measures in place. Elective surgeries can resume, on an outpatient basis.

Non-essential travel and visits to senior living facilities should remain suspended. Gyms can reopen, with proper sanitation and distances, but bars should not.

4. Phase 2 of the plan, which states should progress to after another 14-day decline in positive cases, includes lifting the ban on non-essential travel. It recommends businesses continue to encourage teleworking and close common areas where people congregate.

Employers should consider special accommodation for personnel who are members of a “vulnerable population,” which is defined as the elderly or people with underlying conditions like obesity, asthma and chronic lung conditions.

U.S. President Donald Trump stands in front of a slide on a video monitor debuting "Phase One" of his administration's plans for "Opening Up America Again" during the daily coronavirus task force briefing at the White House in Washington, U.S., April 16, 2020. REUTERS/Leah Millis

Schools and youth activities can resume, and bars can reopen with minimized standing room areas. Large venues, like sporting arenas and houses of worship, can operate under “moderate” physical distancing. Elective surgeries on an in-patient business can resume.

5. Phase 3 of the plan, which states can enter after another 14-day period of declining cases, allows businesses to resume “unrestricted staffing” of worksites, and visits to senior homes to resume.

Large venues can operate with limited physical distancing guidelines and bars can increase standing-room-only areas.

Reporting by Jeff Mason; Writing by Heather Timmons; Editing by Leslie Adler

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2020-04-17 07:42:55Z
CAIiELGd5raTLPABzsXDY_TRF50qFggEKg0IACoGCAowt6AMMLAmMKT5lwM

Kamis, 16 April 2020

Live updates: China’s economy shrinks for first time in decades; U.S. plots course toward reopening business - The Washington Post

The email advertisements from Skinny Beach Med Spa in San Diego started flooding inboxes late last month. Only instead of hawking beauty-related services, the promotions allegedly proffered a false “miracle cure” for the novel coronavirus, federal prosecutors said Thursday.

In the latest case of alleged coronavirus-related fraud, Jennings Ryan Staley, a licensed physician and the spa’s operator, was charged Thursday with mail fraud after authorities say he attempted to sell “covid-19 treatment packs,” claiming that the “concierge medicine experience” could both cure those with the virus and ensure immunity from infection for at least six weeks.

Customers willing to shell out $3,995 would receive enough medication for a family of four, according to a news release from the U.S. attorney’s office in the Southern District of California. Authorities said the packs included hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin, a combination of medicine that has been touted by President Trump as a potential treatment, among other drugs. So far there is no scientifically proven treatment for coronavirus.

“We will not tolerate covid-19 fraudsters who try to profit and take advantage of the pandemic fear to cheat, steal and harm others,” U.S. Attorney Robert S. Brewer Jr. said in the release. “Rest assured: those who engage in this despicable conduct will find themselves in the crosshairs of federal prosecutors.”

The FBI began investigating Staley, 44, after receiving a tip about the treatment packs, installing an undercover agent to pose as a potential buyer, the release said.

In a recorded phone call with the agent, Staley touted the medicine as a “magic bullet,” insisting that it would cure covid-19 “100 percent,” according to prosecutors.

“It’s preventative and curative. It’s hard to believe, it’s almost too good to be true,” Staley allegedly told the agent. “But it’s a remarkable clinical phenomenon.”

Staley, who later allegedly denied making such statements, is also accused of smuggling hydroxychloroquine from China.

The charge against Staley comes just days after the FBI issued a warning to the public about health care fraud schemes emerging amid the ongoing pandemic.

An attorney representing Staley did not respond to a request for comment. The physician faces up to 20 years in prison and is scheduled to be arraigned Friday afternoon.

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2020-04-17 06:23:11Z
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Protests erupt after deaths at U.S. factories in Mexican border town - Reuters

CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (Reuters) - Protests have erupted outside factories in the Mexican border city of Ciudad Juarez in recent days after the deaths of several workers, including some employed by U.S. companies, from what the protesters said was the coronavirus.

Employees of Honeywell International Inc hold a protest to demand the respect of the quarantine to avoid contagious of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico April 16, 2020. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez

So far, 82 people have tested positive for the new coronavirus in the city that lies across the border from El Paso, Texas, local authorities said on Thursday. A total of 19 have died, the city health department said.

Several workers for Lear Corporation, a Michigan-based car seat maker, have died from respiratory illnesses, the company said in a statement to Reuters.

Honeywell International Inc on Thursday told Reuters a worker at one of its plants in the city had died after being sent home to self-quarantine and receive medical attention.

The deaths and the protests about ongoing production at border factories follow outbreaks of the virus at meat-packing plants in the United States that have raised concerns over working conditions during the epidemic.

Lockdowns that aim to stop the spread of the coronavirus are disrupting supply chains in the $1.2 trillion North America Free Trade Agreement region, with growing friction between governments and companies about which industries should continue to operate.

On Thursday, dozens protested outside the Honeywell site where the employee who died had worked, demanding its temporary closure, following similar rallies outside other U.S. and Mexican plants in the city.

“We want them to respect the quarantine,” said Mario Cesar Gonzalez, who said the Honeywell Ademco factory made smoke alarms.

“The manager said that we are essential workers. I don’t think an alarm is essential.”

Honeywell said the factory makes controls for heating, ventilation and air conditioning for critical infrastructures such as hospitals and laboratories.

In a statement to Reuters the company said it was “deeply saddened” to learn that one of its workers had died.

Honeywelll said authorities had not confirmed if the employee died from COVID-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus, but that it had closed the site, which the employee had worked at, for 48 hours to sanitize the area.

The company did not say when the death happened but said the worker had not been on site since April 2.

Lear said it had ceased all employee-related activities by April 1 in Ciudad Juarez.

“We are saddened that several employees at our Juarez City operations, who were receiving medical treatment at the same local government social security hospital in Juarez, have passed away, due to complications of respiratory illness,” the company said in the statement.

The Lear shutdown appeared to be in line with the Mexican government’s declaration of a health emergency on March 30, requiring companies to cease operations if their activities are deemed non-essential.

On Wednesday, dozens of other workers protested outside an assembly factory run by Regal Beloir, a Wisconsin-based manufacturer that produces electric motors for household appliances. They demanded the closure of that plant after the alleged death of one of their coworkers.

“A colleague already died last night. He had been working here. There are infected workers and we are not being told,” said one person who identified himself as a Regal employee at the protest but declined to give his name for fear of retribution.

Slideshow (8 Images)

Reuters was not able to confirm a death of a Regal worker. The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Mexican government is investigating whether some “non-essential” companies continue to operate. Refusing to follow the rules could constitute the crime of damage to health and could cost lives, Deputy Health Minister Hugo Lopez-Gatell said on Wednesday.

From April 3 until Tuesday, 15% of companies with non-essential activities had refused to stop work, Lopez-Gatell said.

Reporting by Jose Luis Gonzalez in Ciudad Juarez; Additional reporting by Daina Beth Solomon in Mexico City; Editing by Frank Jack Daniel and Aurora Ellis

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2020-04-17 04:42:14Z
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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

Today’s coverage from Post correspondents around the world

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2020-04-17 00:59:46Z
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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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2020-04-17 00:26:42Z
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