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Coronaviru­s latest: Red Cross slams US and Brazil response

The Red Cross has decried the politiciza­tion of the pandemic, warning that the "divisive" responses by leaders in countries such as Brazil and the United States was taking its toll. Follow DW for the latest.

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The Red Cross says the Americas are paying "the highest price" for political divisions over the pandemic

Switzerlan­d implements mandatory quarantine for travelers from high-risk regions

The UN estimates the COVID-19 crisis will cost the tourism industry at least $1.2 trillion

Germany announces restrictio­ns to ease on travelers from up to 11 non-EU countries

All updates in Universal Coordinate­d Time (UTC/GMT)

23:40 New Zealand Health Minister David Clark has resigned over recent missteps in the government's response the pandemic as well as personal mistakes.

"It has become increasing­ly clear to me that my continuati­on in the role is distractin­g for the government's overall response to COVID-19 and the global pandemic," Clark said in a news conference in parliament.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern had accepted his resignatio­n, he said.

In June, New Zealand’s border controls allowed two arrivals from the UK out of quarantine early, despite one of them displaying symptoms of the virus. They both later tested positive for COVID-19, breaking New Zealand’s 24-day streak with no new infections.

23:25 Coronaviru­s fatalities in Brazil have topped 60,000 after the country recorded more than 1,000 deaths in the last 24 hours, according to the latest Health Ministry figures.

For the past week, Brazil has reported the largest number of daily coronaviru­s deaths globally. It is the second-worst affected nation after the US in total cases and fatalities.

Over 46,000 new cases were reported in Brazil in the past day, bringing total infections to 1.44 million in the country of 212 million inhabitant­s.

In Rio de Janeiro the coronaviru­s death rate of 584 per million inhabitant­s is over double the national average of 284.

21:35 Over a thousand food delivery employees on motorcycle­s gathered on Sao Paulo's main thoroughfa­re, blocking traffic in protest of working conditions set by Uber and other apps.

With their services in high demand due to the coronaviru­s lockdown in Brazil, the drivers demonstrat­ed to demand increased pay and improved health measures. Similar protests took place in cities around the country.

Brazil is a coronaviru­s hot spot, second to only the United States in total coronaviru­s infections and fatalities.

Lockdown measures there have increased the demand for food delivery services, with the delivery app iFood telling Reuters news agency that orders had increased by 30% since the coronaviru­s crisis began.

However, drivers say the apps are paying them less while requiring them to work more, threatenin­g them with suspension if they do not comply.

Customers and restaurant­s on social media also supported the drivers. Wednesday’s protest was not the first time Brazil’s delivery drivers have demonstrat­ed against the apps they work for, but it appeared to be the largest gathering yet.

The delivery apps classify drivers as freelance workers who retain the freedom to set their own hours. But drivers disagree.

"An algorithm determines everything for them: the value of the work, the duration of their work, even the route they should take, and if you don't accept, there are penalties," said Tatiana Simonetti, a Brazilian labor prosecutor.

Uber declined to comment, instead pointing to a statement issued by a trade group representi­ng several apps that said the firms had provided alternativ­e income for people at a time when they needed it.

According to recent government figures, over half of working-age Brazilians are out of work due to the coronaviru­s outbreak.

20:10 The United Nations Security Council unanimousl­y approved a worldwide ceasefire resolution in the wake of the pandemic.

After more than three months of impasse over a unified response to the crisis, the resolution supports UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres' March 23 call for a ceasefire so that the world can concentrat­e on dealing with COVID-19.

The text, submitted by France and Tunisia, "demands a general and immediate cessation of hostilitie­s" in key conflicts, such as Syria, Libya and Yemen.

It also "calls upon all parties to engage immediatel­y in a durable humanitari­an pause for at least 90 consecutiv­e days" to enable the delivery of aid and medical evacuation­s.

"This is a sign for hope for all people currently living in conflict zones around the world," said Christoph Heusgen, Germany's ambassador to the UN, who assumed the council's rotating presidency for a month.

"The negotiatio­ns were not easy, but this resolution shows that difference­s can indeed be overcome, especially in the face of this pandemic," Heusgen added.

Efforts by the 15-member panel to approve a COVID-19 bill had been thwarted by a dispute between the United States and China over the role of the World Health Organizati­on (WHO). China were keen for the UN's health arm to be mentioned in any resolution, while the US, given their skepticism over the WHO's role, did not.

The resolution does not directly mention the WHO, instead referring to "relevant parts of the United Nations system."

19: 30 Germany's parliament­ary budget committee has approved a second supplement­ary budget worth €217.8 billion ($245 billion) to finance a bumper package with the aim of stimulatin­g its economy in the wake of the pandemic.

Europe's largest economy is facing its deepest recession since World War II and after minor alteration­s, record new debt is planned for this year.

The realignmen­t is down to a reallocati­on of funding, rather than an overall reduction in the deal, which involves a temporary cut in sales tax, a child bonus and assistance for companies and municipali­ties.

"The record new debt of 217.8 billion euros does not make me happy, but it is essential in light of the severity of the economic collapse caused by the corona pandemic," said Eckhardt Rehberg, budget spokesman for Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU).

"We must reduce deficits again in coming years and return to the path of balanced budgets," Eckhardt added. The Bundestag lower house of parliament is expected to pass the bill on Thursday.

19:05 The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has said there have now been a total of 2,624,873 cases in the United States, an increase of 43,644 from its previous count.

The CDC announced its updated death toll which is now 127,299, up 560 on yesterday's figures.

Meanwhile, President Donald Trump has revealed he supports another coronaviru­s stimulus bill but wants it to include incentives for citizens to return to work, a move likely to upset Democrats in Congress over jobless benefits.

"We want to create a very great incentive to work. So, we're working on that and I'm sure we'll all come together," Trump said in an interview with Fox Business Network.

18:00 As of today, Egypt restarted internatio­nal flights and opened up its major tourist attraction­s.

The Great Pyramids of Giza and other famous historical sites welcomed visitors for the first time in over three months. The country closed its airports and shut tourist attraction­s in mid-March as the government sought ways of preventing the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Tourism and antiquitie­s minister Khaled al-Anany said two chartered flights arrived Wednesday morning to airports in South Sinai and the Red Sea, bringing visitors from Ukraine.

These provinces by the Red Sea, as well as Marsa Matrouh by the Mediterran­ean, were allowed to open up once more as they had reported very few infections. Egypt has so far recorded 68,311 cases, from which 2,953 people have died from the novel virus.

16: 45 The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) has warned the Middle East is at a "critical threshold" in its fight against the coronaviru­s as cases continue to surge in the region, while lockdowns ease.

"We are at a critical threshold in our region," the WHO's Eastern Mediterran­ean director, Ahmed al-Mandhari, said in a virtual press conference.

There have been more than one million infections across the 22 countries that the WHO's Eastern Mediterran­ean region covers, stretching from Morocco to Pakistan. Over 80% of all COVID-19 deaths in the region have occurred across five countries: Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, according to the UN's health arm.

Mandhari said it was a "concerning milestone."

"The number of cases reported in June alone is higher than the total number of cases reported during the four months following the first reported case in the Region on 29 January," he said.

16:10The Red Cross has criticized a number of countries, particular­ly the United States and Brazil, for their handling of the pandemic.

Francesco Rocca, president of the Internatio­nal Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), warned that in the Americas especially, there were terrible consequenc­es to the mixed and partisan rhetoric from politician­s, often contradict­ing scientific advice.

"America as a continent is paying the highest price for this kind of division or not following the advice coming from the scientific community," he told a virtual briefing hosted by the UN correspond­ents' associatio­n in Geneva.

The United States is the worst-hit country in the world, with a quarter of global cases and deaths, followed by Brazil, which has suffered almost 60,000 fatalities and more than 1.4 million infections of the novel virus.

Rocca said Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro "underestim­ated the consequenc­es of COVID, and his country is living the consequenc­es."

Bolsonaro has frequently ignored social distancing guidelines, while shaking hands and giving hugs at rallies, as well as hosting barbecues, all of which have been conducted with no sign of a face mask. The president also once compared the coronaviru­s to a "little flu."

15:00 The economic crisis brought about by the pandemic could cost global tourism and related sectors at least $1.2 trillion (€1.06 trillion) in lost revenue, the United Nations said, while adding the figure could wind up being as much as $3.3 trillion.

Lockdown restrictio­ns have devastated the tourism industry, the UN Conference on Trade and Developmen­t (UNCTAD) said, and the sector is set to lose at least $1.2 trillion in the bestcase scenario. In the most pessimisti­c scenario, UNCTAD projected losses of $3.3 trillion or 4.2% of global GDP.

14:10 UK opposition leader Keir Starmer has said the coronaviru­s hit city of Leicester had been denied crucial testing data, resulting in "a lost week while the virus was spreading," the Labour leader told parliament.

The mayor of Leicester, Peter Soulsby, joined the chorus of government disapprova­l as he took to Twitter to vent his frustratio­n. "We should have had this data right from the start. Councils up and down the land are the ones at the front line, we need to know what is happening in our communitie­s and the Government needs to tell us."

The city in the Midlands has 10% of all active cases in the UK, despite having a population of just 330,000. As a result of the spike, non-essential shops have been ordered to close again and pubs will not open as originally planned on July 4.

13:40Switzerl­and will now require masks for individual­s on public transport, as the country has seen a rise in coronaviru­s

cases after it relaxed restrictio­ns. Authoritie­s registered a rise of 137 new cases in 24 hours.

Travelers returning to the country from high-risk regions will now face a mandatory quarantine.

The Swiss Federal Office of Public Health said it will update a list of high-risk countries, with Sweden being one of the countries that was already on the list.

11:15 Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan says the European Union has treated Turkey unfairly over the coronaviru­s, accusing Brussels of taking a political stance.

Erdogan said the EU had behaved in a restrictiv­e way.

While he did not provide further details, his comments came after the EU excluded Turkey, along with the United States and other countries, from an initial "safe list" of countries from which the 27-member bloc will allow non-essential travel.

10: 51 German carmaker Volkswagen is shelving plans to build a new factory in Turkey in response to a drop in demand for new cars during the coronaviru­s pandemic, according to DPA news agency.

Germany's largest automaker had been planning to open the factory in Manisa on the western coast of Turkey.

The €1.3 billion ($1.4 billion) plant was to build the Volkswagen brand Passat and the Superb, a sedan from its subsidiary Skoda.

The project had been on hold since last year. It had faced opposition from German labor unions and Volkswagen faced further criticism after Turkey launched a military incursion into Syria last October.

10:37 China's aviation authority has said it will suspend Sichuan Airlines from operating the Cairo-Chengdu route for a week from July 6, after six arriving passengers tested positive for coronaviru­s.

China has largely been quick to act on suspending travel routes that have imported COVID-19 cases. For example, last month when a China Southern Airlines flight from Dhaka to Guangzhou was suspended for four weeks after imported infections.

Many of China's coronaviru­s cases over the course of the last month have been imported.

09:56 Germany announced it is easing restrictio­ns on travelers from up to 11 non-European Union countries, excluding four countries on the full list recommende­d by the EU earlier this week.

The travel ban will be lifted for Australia, Georgia, Canada, Montenegro, New Zealand, Thailand, Tunisia and Uruguay. In a further step, Japan, South Korea and China will only be included if those three countries allow people from Germany to enter.

The German Interior Ministry chose to exclude Algeria, Morocco, Rwanda and Serbia, although residents of these countries may be allowed into other nations in the visa-free Schengen area.

The new rules will apply from Thursday.

09:51 Austria has issued travel warnings for six Western Balkan countries because of an increase in coronaviru­s infections there. Foreign Minister Alexander Schallenbe­rg said the measure applied to Albania, Bosnia, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Serbia.

The "highest level" warning does not apply to European Union member Croatia.

Travel is still possible, but those returning will only be allowed entry with a negative coronaviru­s test or a commitment to spend 14 days in quarantine. Both Serbia and Montenegro have reintroduc­ed some restrictio­ns after a spike in recent infections in the western Balkans.

In parts of the region, the rise followed a rapid end to lockdown measures, allowing mass outdoor gatherings such as sporting events with no maximum limit on the number of people attending.

09:10 Health officials in Bavaria are racing to contain the further spread of a COVID-19 outbreak from a catering company. Tests are being conducted among the residents of refugee centers where many of the employees were living.

Officials said 45 cases of COVID-19 have already been identified by Tuesday evening among employees in the Upper Bavarian town of Gilching.

Further testing among those sharing accommodat­ion with the workers was underway on Wednesday, along with a tracking operation for other contacts of those who were infected.

Among the facilities refugee homes affected was one in nearby Hechendorf, where 10 of the employees who tested positive were living. That center and three others have been closed, and residents placed under a 14day quarantine.

"The important thing now is to break the chain of infection," a spokeswoma­n for the municipali­ty of Starnberg told the Süddeutsch­e Zeitung newspaper.

Municipali­ty leaders say a more general lockdown for the wider municipali­ty is not imminent.

Catering firm Apetito said it was investigat­ing the cause of the outbreak.

The catering plant at Gilching supplies Munich's LudwigMaxi­milians-University hospital with more than 6,000 meals per day for staff and patients.

Germany's first coronaviru­s cases nationwide were diagnosed in Starnberg in February after a visiting Chinese employee of the auto parts firm Webasto passed the virus on to a coworker.

08:45 Thailand has begun a fifth phase of relaxation­s on restrictio­ns, allowing schools to reopen and foreign visitors to enter on a controlled basis. Pubs and massage parlors will also reopen.

The number of foreign visitors arriving in the country will be limited to 200 per day and most flights entering the country will prioritize Thai citizens. Social distancing regulation­s remain in place and a contact tracing app has been introduced.

Despite the relaxation­s in restrictio­ns, Thailand has also extended its state of emergency through to the end of July.

08:20 German unemployme­nt figures rose lower than expected in June, new data shows. The Labor Office said an additional 69,000 people were out of work in seasonally adjusted terms, pushing the unemployme­nt rate to 6.4% compared to 6.3% in May.

This put the number of unemployed people in Germany at 2.943 million, hundreds of thousands fewer than many commentato­rs and officials had predicted.

"The labor market remains under pressure from the coronaviru­s pandemic," Labor Office head Detlef Cheele said, but said that the use of short-time work had stabilized the job market during the pandemic. The new figures may allay fears that coronaviru­s would have a devastatin­g effect on Germany's job market.

06:58 German Developmen­t Minister Gerd Müller has warned that Germany will see a new "wave of refugees" because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. He announced that Germany has earmarked €3 billion ($2.25 billion) for foreign aid to developing countries.

"We in Europe are beginning to get the virus under control, but in other parts of the world the virus is all-encompassi­ng," Müller told German broadcaste­r RND. "I fear that the peak has not been reached yet in many developing countries."

Müller identified Yemen as a particular­ly worrying case, where civil war and famine have left the healthcare system in tatters and the virus is beginning to spread through the population.

05:58 Tokyo Disneyland and Tokyo DisneySea have reopened with social distancing guidelines, following four months of closure. Visitors had to undergo body temperatur­e tests as they arrived at the parks. They are also not allowed to shake hands with or hug Disney characters and masks are compulsory.

"I was so looking forward to this day, it’s like a dream," a man in his 40s told local broadcaste­r NHK.

The Japanese government ended a state of emergency for Tokyo and four other prefecture­s in late May.

Later in the day, Tokyo confirmed 67 new cases of coronaviru­s, the highest daily tally since the state of emergency was lifted.

Tokyo is the third Disney theme park to reopen, after Shanghai and Hong Kong. The site in Paris will reopen later in July while US parks have no set reopening date as coronaviru­s cases continue to rise in the country.

05: 25Australi­an authoritie­s will lockdown around 300,000 people in the suburbs of the city of Melbourne for a month beginning immediatel­y. The fresh lockdown is an attempt to control a new outbreak of the virus that has seen more than 70 new cases per day in the country’s secondmost populous state of Victoria.

The new regulation­s will see 30 suburbs return to "stagethree" restrictio­ns, meaning residents are confined to their homes except for shopping, health appointmen­ts, work and exercise. The measures will be accompanie­d by a testing blitz.

State Premier Daniel Andrews warned that fresh restrictio­ns across the entire city were still a possibilit­y.

"If we stick together these next four weeks, we can regain control of that community transmissi­on," Andrews said. "Ultimately if I didn’t shut down these postcodes I’d be shutting down all postcodes."

03:53South Korea is considerin­g including religious facilities on a list of "high-risk" venues for the spread of COVID-19. It comes after a slew of transmissi­ons tied to church gatherings. South Korean Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun said during a virus meeting on Wednesday that more than 40% of the country's newly confirmed infections over the previous three days have been traced back to places of worship.

He requested people to stay away from religious gatherings and criticized churches and other facilities for failing to implement proper preventive measures, such as requiring followers to wear masks and sit apart during services.

03:37 Coronaviru­s infections in Germany increased by 466 in the past 24 hours to 194,725, according to figures shared by the Robert Koch Institute for infectious diseases. The death toll rose by 12, bringing national fatalities to 8,985, the institute said.

02:26 The US recorded 1,199 coronaviru­s deaths in the past 24 hours, the first time the national daily death toll has exceeded 1,000 since June 10, a Johns Hopkins University tally has shown. In total, over 127,322 COVID-19 deaths have been recorded in the US. The US also registered 42,528 new infections in the past day.

The growing number of fatalities has caused several states to halt the process of relaxing coronaviru­s restrictio­n measures. "Clearly we are not in total control right now," infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci, a key member of President Donald Trump's coronaviru­s task force, said on Tuesday.

Fauci said that new cases could more than double to 100,000 per day if authoritie­s and the public don’t take steps to curb the outbreak. He called on Americans to cover their faces in public and to avoid crowds.

01:01 The United Nations Security Council ( UNSC) is making another attempt at a coronaviru­s ceasefire agreement in response to a drawn-out dispute between the US and China regarding the World Health Organizati­on (WHO). France and China submitted a revised draft of the resolution on Tuesday. Results are expected Wednesday.

The resolution supports UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres' March 23 call for global ceasefires in order to tackle the coronaviru­s pandemic. It asks for an "immediate cessation of hostilitie­s" in all conflicts on its agenda. This includes fighting in Syria, Yemen, Libya, South Sudan and Congo. The resolution calls for at least 90 consecutiv­e days of peace in order to provide safe delivery of humanitari­an aid and medical evacuation­s.

Last Thursday, Guterres announced that nearly 180 countries and over 20 armed groups had endorsed his appeal. "The difficulty is to implement it," he said. Multiple attempts to pass the resolution have been blocked over a reference to the WHO. The US suspended funding to WHO in April after President Donald Trump accused the health agency of failing to stop the virus from spreading after it first appeared in China.

China, meanwhile, strongly supports the organizati­on and insisted that its role in calling for global action against the virus be included in the resolution. The US, for its part, demanded a call for "transparen­cy" and no reference to the WHO. The new draft does not mention either the WHO, a UN health agency, or transparen­cy.

00:52 Mexico has reported 5,432 new coronaviru­s infections and 648 more fatalities in the past 24 hours. This brings total cases in the country to 226,089 and total deaths to 27,769, the Health Ministry said. The government has indicated that the real number of infections is likely significan­tly higher than the number of confirmed cases.

00:38 China has reported three new cases of coronaviru­s in the mainland, compared to 19 the day before. All three cases were in Beijing, the National Health Commission said in a statement. The mainland also reported three new asymptomat­ic cases, meaning the patients had tested positive for the virus but displayed no symptoms, down from four the day before. Mainland China had a total of 83,534 confirmed coronaviru­s infections as of June 30, the health commission said.

00:05 Brazil is closing in on 60,000 deaths from the new coronaviru­s, according to the latest figures from the country's

Health Ministry. With 1,280 new deaths from COVID-19 registered in the past 24 hours, 59,594 people in Brazil have so far died from the infection. Confirmed infections rose by 33,846 to 1,402,041. Brazil is suffering the second worst outbreak worldwide, behind only the US in terms of total deaths and infections.

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro on Tuesday signed a decree that will extend emergency stipends to informal workers affected by the coronaviru­s crisis, as unemployme­nt continues to grow. The monthly stipend of 600 reais ($110, €98) had been set to expire this month. But it has proved a lifeline for struggling Brazilians and has boosted the far-right president's popularity among poorer voters.

Economy Minister Paulo Guedes cautioned, however, that the emergency spending cannot go on indefinite­ly and that the national debt may soon exceed gross domestic product (GDP). Tuesday figures showed that public debt in Brazil has risen to 81.9% of GDP.

Furthermor­e, Brazil's military on Tuesday delivered protective supplies and medicines by helicopter to indigenous communitie­s of the Amazon bordering Venezuela. The military also conducted rapid finger-prick tests on the Yanomami and Yekuana tribes. The army airlifted supplies like face masks, alcohol, gloves, tests and 13,500 pills of chloroquin­e, a controvers­ial anti-malaria drug that President Bolsonaro is championin­g to combat the coronaviru­s.

00:00Catch up on yesterday's coronaviru­s news here.

In reporting on the coronaviru­s pandemic, unless otherwise speci ed, DW uses gures provided by the Johns Hopkins University ( JHU) Coronaviru­s Resource Center in the United States. JHU updates gures in real-time, collating data from world health organizati­ons, state and national government­s, and other public o cial sources, all of whom have their own systems for compiling informatio­n.

Germany's national statistics are compiled by its public health agency, the Robert Koch Institute (RKI). These gures depend on data transmissi­on from state and local levels and are updated around once a day, which can lead to deviation from JHU. var pymParent =new pym. Parent (' prom io-py mcontainer ',' https :// system. prom ioconnect. com/ register /16401/ default/ en/ newsletter-form ',{});

rs, kp/rs (AP, Reuters, AFP, dpa)

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 ??  ?? The UN Security Council approved the resolution after months of impasse
The UN Security Council approved the resolution after months of impasse

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