Virus clusters in China growing
China's capital was facing an "extremely severe" coronavirus threat yesterday, as New Zealand reported its first new infections in almost a month and fears mounted that the deadly pandemic is still far from under control.
More than eight million people have now been infected with the virus worldwide since it first emerged in China late last year -- with more than 437,000 deaths -- and the tolls are still surging in Latin America and South Asia.
Even without an effective treatment, caseloads and death rates have declined across Europe.
The UK, however, is still struggling with the world's third largest outbreak and New Zealand said the two new cases reported there were recent arrivals from Britain.
The South Pacific nation had declared last week that it had ended community transmission of the virus.
European countries are eager to drop coronavirus restrictions to save the imminent summer tourist season, but Spain warned that it may quarantine British visitors should the UK persist with its plan to quarantine all overseas arrivals.
And the latest reminder of the threat came from China, which had largely brought its outbreak under control, as 27 new infections were reported in Beijing, where a new cluster linked to a wholesale food market has sparked mass testing and neighbourhood lockdowns.
"The epidemic situation in the capital is extremely severe," Beijing city spokesman Xu Hejian warned, as the number of confirmed infections soared to 106.
While these cases have caused concern about a resurgence in countries that had suppressed their outbreaks, the disease is gaining momentum in other regions with massive populations.
Known infections in India have crossed 330,000, and already stretched authorities are bracing for the monsoon season, which causes outbreaks of illnesses such as dengue fever and malaria every year.
Vastly experienced doctor Vidya Thakur, medical superintendent at Mumbai's Rajawadi Hospital, is used to managing "heavy burdens", she says.
But Covid-19 "has left us helpless... and the monsoon will make things even more difficult", she says.
OSCARS POSTPONED
In Latin America, countries are struggling to contain the disease while trying to ease the crushing economic blow dealt by widespread lockdowns and social distancing measures.
Peru reported its economy shrank by more than 40 percent year-on-year in April, while Chile extended its state of emergency by three months as it struggles with a controversy over how it is counting Covid-19 deaths.
Ecuador, which has the region's fourth highest official virus death toll after Brazil, Mexico and Peru, has extended its state of emergency for 60 more days.
This allowed the government to keep in place restrictions including a curfew, the mobilisation of the armed forces and suspension of rights such as freedom of assembly.
In the United States, the world's worst-hit nation, there have been flare-ups in some states.
But President Donald Trump's administration insists there will be no new economic shutdown even if a second wave hits, reports AFP.
A return to normal still looks distant, however, with the Oscars postponed by two months, the latest casualty of an already interrupted sports and entertainment calendar.
TRIALS OF POTENTIAL VACCINE
Scientists at Imperial College London will start the first clinical trials of a potential Covid-19 vaccine this week with more than 45 million pounds ($56.50 million) in backing from the British government and philanthropic donors.
The trials are the first human tests of a new technology which the researchers say could transform vaccine development by enabling rapid responses to emerging diseases such as the Covid-19 infection caused by the new coronavirus.
Robin Shattock, a professor at Imperial's department of infectious disease, said that rather than using a part of the virus, as many vaccines do, this potential vaccine uses synthetic strands of the virus' genetic material - RNA - which are packaged inside tiny fat droplets.
When injected, it instructs muscle cells to produce virus proteins to protect against future infection. In animal tests, the vaccine was shown to be safe and showed "encouraging signs of an effective immune response", Shattock's team said in a statement.
About 300 healthy volunteers will receive two doses of the vaccine in the initial human trials to test whether it is safe in people and whether it produces an effective immune response against Covid-19. If it shows promise, larger trials with about 6,000 people would be set up later this year, reports Reuters.
BORDERS REOPEN IN EUROPE
After a gradual drop in new cases, European nations including Belgium, France, Germany and Greece lifted border restrictions hoping to boost tourism and travel over the summer months.
But disruptions to normal social and economic life will continue. In Britain, the Premier League football season resumes today, but in empty stadiums.
There are fears some supporters will ignore social-distancing rules by congregating outside the grounds where their teams are playing, risking new clusters of infections.
In Singapore, the transport minister said construction of a major new airport terminal will be halted for at least two years as the global travel sector struggles to recover.
Hungary, however, did take a step towards the post-virus world, when MPs voted to revoke the emergency powers given to Prime Minister Viktor Orban to help tackle the crisis.
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