Europe grapples with second wave of Covid
Europe surged past five million cases of the new coronavirus yesterday as France and Spain prepared tighter restrictions in an attempt to curb rising levels of infections in their capital cities.
Worldwide nearly 32 million people have been infected and more than 971,000 have died since the virus emerged in the central Chinese city of Wuhan in late 2019 and spread across the globe.
After appearing to bring cases mostly under control with economically devastating lockdowns, Europe now faces a resurgence, forcing governments to consider reintroducing tough measures.
More than half of Europe's infections have been recorded in Russia, followed by Spain, France and the United Kingdom.
The 380,000 cases reported in the past week represent the highest number in the region since the start of the pandemic.
The French government was preparing yesterday to announce stricter anti-virus measures for Paris, sources told AFP, as national infections have rocketed since lockdown was lifted -- sometimes surging past 10,000 a day.
President Emmanuel Macron had said new curbs would be announced soon and sources said they could include a ban on alcohol sales after 8:00 pm and restrictions on social gatherings, as well as speeded up testing.
"We are calling on people to be vigilant, we will have to live with this virus for a while," said Anne Souyris, deputy Paris mayor. "The object is to protect yourself while shaping a social life."
The Madrid region, the heart of an explosion of infections in Spain, has already locked down roughly 850,000 people and plans to extend the measures on Friday.
Britain has already announced fresh steps to try to allay the rising toll.
"To help contain the virus, office workers who can work effectively from home should do so," the government said on Tuesday, despite fears of a devastating economic impact.
New rules come into force for pubs and other hospitality venues today, forcing them to close early, and plans to allow fans back into sporting events have been ditched.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned the new restrictions could last up to six months and called for a collective effort to "get through this winter together".
His scientific advisors had said the United Kingdom could see a devastating 50,000 coronavirus cases a day by mid-October if no action is taken.
The World Health Organization reported late on Monday that almost two million infections were recorded around the globe in the week to September 20.
The United States has passed 200,000 deaths, the world's highest toll, with Brazil, India and Mexico the next most severely affected countries.
Meanwhile, India's coronavirus infections surged again yesterday, a day after falling to their lowest figure in almost a month.
In the last 24 hours, there were 83,347 new cases, with 1,085 deaths, federal health data showed.
India, with a population of about 1.4 billion, has been consistently reporting the world's highest daily tallies of infections, as it grapples with overstretched health services in the effort to control the pandemic.
Its 5.6 million cases rank second only to the United States, and more than 90,000 people have died.
The pandemic is taking a heavier toll on employment than previously feared, the United Nations said yesterday, with hundreds of millions of jobs lost and workers suffering a "massive" drop in earnings.
The International Labour Organization (ILO) found that by mid-year, global working hours had declined 17.3 percent compared with last December -- equivalent to nearly 500 million full-time jobs.
"The impact has been catastrophic," ILO chief Guy Ryder told reporters in a virtual briefing.
In a rare glimmer of hope, Saudi Arabia announced that it would gradually resume the year-round umrah pilgrimage for Muslims from October 4.
The kingdom had suspended the umrah in March and later scaled back the annual hajj in a blow to millions of Muslim pilgrims around the world.
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