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Coronaviru­s latest: EU approves COVID-19 drug remdesivir

The European Commission has authorized the use of remdesivir to treat severe cases of COVID-19. Meanwhile, the US has recorded a record jump in cases for the second day in a row. Follow DW for the latest.

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The European Commission has cleared the way for remdesivir to be used for treating coronaviru­s in the EU

France's ex-PM Philippe, two health ministers accused of "failing to fight a disaster"

A study suggests that the current dominant strain of COVID-19 is more infectious than the original

At over 53,000, daily infections reach a new high for the second day in a row in the US

Over 10.9 million cases and over 520,000 deaths have been confirmed worldwide

All updates in Universal Coordinate­d Time (UTC/GMT)

21:42 World's No. 3 tennis player Dominic Thiem will donate the prize money from the Adria Tour organized by world's top-ranking player Novak Djokovic, Thiem's father said. Djokovic has faced a slew of criticism after his exhibition tournament was stopped midway after some of the participan­ts tested positive for the coronaviru­s. Many journalist­s and tennis fans were particular­ly outraged by images of audience crowding the stands in Serbia and Croatia, and of players partying and playing football and basketball with no regard for social distancing.

While Djokovic himself tested positive for the virus after halting the competitio­n, Thiem has repeatedly tested negative. Speaking to Austria's Die Presse newspaper, Them's father, Wolfgang, defended Djokovic and said it was "too cheap" to vilify the Serb tennis star.

"Of course the dancing in the club was not ideal, but Djokovic hasn't done anything wrong in principle," Wolfgang Thiem said. "It was just too sloppy, too euphoric."

Earlier this week, Serbian media reported that Djokovic donated over €42,500 ($47,800) to Novi Pazar, a city in Serbia that hit especially hard by the pandemic.

21:00 A special court in France announced an investigat­ion into Edouard Philippeju­st hours after the politician resigned as the country's prime minister. Two of his health ministers, Olivier Veran and Agnes Buzyn, face accusation­s of "failing to fight a disaster" in their response to the coronaviru­s pandemic. If the case makes it to trial and they are found guilty, the former toplevel officials could face up to two years in prison.

The Law Court of the Republic (CJR) has received scores of complaints from COVID-19 patients, medical workers, prison staff, police and others over the government's handling of the coronaviru­s outbreak. The judges said they have dismissed 44 of 90 complaints and were yet to decide on 37 others, but nine of the bids were deemed worth investigat­ing.

While French President Emmanuel Macron and others admitted mistakes in their response, neither he nor Philippe mentioned legal issues when the prime minister resigned on Friday.

19:45Pakistan­i Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said he has tested positive for COVID-19, just days after holding high-profile meetings. One of the meetings he held was with the US special representa­tive on Afghanista­n, Zalmay Khalilzad, in Islamabad.

A number of high officials have tested positive for

COVID-19 in Pakistan, including Minister for Railways Sheikh Rasheed and the speaker of the lower house of parliament, Asad Qaiser.

"This afternoon I felt a slight fever and immediatel­y quarantine­d myself at home," Qureshi said on Twitter. He said he would carry on his official duties from home.

In the last few days, Qureshi has had contact with Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan in parliament and in a Cabinet meeting on Wednesday. Pictures released from those meetings showed Qureshi and others wearing face masks.

Pakistan has reported 221,896 cases of the coronaviru­s and 4,451 deaths. The country has continued to see around 4,000 new cases on a daily basis, despite daily testing numbers falling.

16: 37The World Health Organizati­on ( WHO) has said it expects initial results within two weeks from clinical trials of drugs that would treat COVID-19. WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s made the announceme­nt during a briefing on coronaviru­s.

Mike Ryan, the head of the WHO's emergencie­s program, said it would be unwise to predict when a COVID-19 vaccine could be ready for mass distributi­on. While a vaccine candidate might show its effectiven­ess by year's end, the question was how soon it could be mass-produced, Ryan said in the briefing.

15:45Thailand's main internatio­nal airport in Bangkok will begin carrying out rapid coronaviru­s tests for several of its overseas arrivals, following the partial lifting of a three-month ban on foreign visitors this month.

Foreigners had been barred from Thailand since March, with an exception for those who hold work permits. But now, the country is attempting to slowly reopen itself to tourism.

Business travelers, diplomats and government guests staying for less than 14 days are considered "fast track travelers" who will be tested for the disease at Suvarnabhu­mi Airport to ensure they are infection-free before entry.

"The test itself takes around one hour and a half," said Suwich Thammapalo, an official with Thailand's disease control department, adding that its use could be expanded in the future for other travelers and tourists. The airport test will cost 3,000 baht ($96; €86) per person.

14:43 The German Associatio­n of the Automotive Industry (VDA) has said car sales will sink this year by 25% in Europe, compared to 2019. The change has been attributed to the effects of the coronaviru­s pandemic on the industry.

The European passenger car market registered a 43% drop in January-June, compared with 23% in the US and 27% in China, according to VDA figures.

"The internatio­nal markets have collapsed to an extent for which we have no comparison," VDA president Hildegard Müller said.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has resulted in sweeping production closures earlier in the year. The crisis has also disrupted key supply chains in the automotive sector.

The VDA expects that only 2.8 million new cars will be registered in Germany, representi­ng a 23% drop on the previous year. In the first six months of 2020 alone, new car registrati­ons plunged by 35%.

For workers in the industry, the VDA was somewhat optimistic. The group said that around half of those still in work are on government-backed shorter hours schemes.

14:10German scientists have initiated a nationwide coronaviru­s antibody study, to gain a better understand­ing of the prevalence of the virus in the country's population. The study will also test how well measures to prevent its spread are working.

The Helmholtz Center for Infection Research (HZI) will carry out the study, by testing around 3,000 blood samples from residents in the southern German town of Reutlingen. They will look for the antibodies created when immune system fights the coronaviru­s.

The study will take place over a period of one year, with additional blood samples being collected and tested again in selected districts across Germany four and eight months after each first test.

The first results from the Reutlingen study are expected to be released in the Fall of this year.

13: 44 German Chancellor Angela Merkel has made her first public appearance in a mask following accusation­s of hypocrisy.

Merkel wore a black mask with the logo of Germany's EU presidency when she walked into the upper house of parliament in Berlin on Friday.

This week the chancellor was quizzed by a journalist about why she hadn't yet been seen wearing a mask in public, when doing so is part of the government's official advice for curbing the spread of the coronaviru­s.

"If I respect the distancing rules then I don't need to wear a mask,'' Merkel responded. "And if I'm not able to stick to them, for example when I'm out shopping, then we apparently don't see each other, otherwise you'd have already seen me with a mask ... but I'm not going to give away where and when I go shopping.''

11:29 The number of new coronaviru­s cases in Israel has crossed the 1,000 mark for the first time since the pandemic began. According to the Health Ministry, a record 1,107 new infections were registered over the past 24 hours — the state's highest total for the second day in a row.

The increase prompted the Israeli government to reimpose limits on gatherings of over 50 people in venues, while some areas in the cities of Lod and Ashdod were declared restricted zones. A five-day lockdown was set to begin in the West Bank on Friday.

11:13 The Serbian government has declared a state of emergency in the capital Belgrade after a surge in new infections.

The Balkan state began easing its strict lockdown in May, but the emergency measure means some of those restrictio­ns will return.

Belgrade authoritie­s said those not wearing masks in indoor public spaces face fines, public gatherings will be limited to 100 people, and cafes, restaurant­s and clubs must close between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m. The new rules come a day after the country reported 359 new cases, most of them in Belgrade.

Recent parliament­ary elections, religious festivitie­s and soccer matches with thousands of spectators are thought to have contribute­d to the rise in infections.

10:43 The European Commission says it has approved the use of the drug remdesivir­to treat severe cases of COVID-19 in the EU.

"We will leave no stone unturned in our efforts to secure efficient treatments or vaccine against the coronaviru­s," EU Health Commission­er Stella Kyriakides said in a press release.

Remdesivir has been shown to speed up the recovery of coronaviru­s patients, and is so far the only anti-COVID-19 medication to be given the green light in the EU. The authorizat­ion from the EU's executive arm came after the European Medicines Agency (EMA) last week recommende­d the drug be approved for treating patients who are suffering pneumonia and require supplement­al oxygen. Remdesivir is manufactur­ed by US drugmaker Gilead Sciences.

Read more: Wealthy nations compete for remdesivir supplies

09: 45 European aircraft manufactur­er Airbus has told German press agency DPA that its planned job cuts will hit workers in northern Germany particular­ly hard.

More than 5,000 jobs are to be shed in Germany as part of the company's plan to shrink the company's internatio­nal workforce. Three-thousand of those positions are in the country's north, including 2,325 in Hamburg and 445 in Bremen.

Earlier this week, Airbus said it must cut 15,000 jobs worldwide in order to survive the coronaviru­s crisis. The overhaul is expected to be completed by mid-2021.

09:27 Air France is meeting with unions to discuss thousands of job cuts in response to the economic fallout of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

CGT union representa­tive Joel

Rondel said Air France subsidiary HOP! was expected to shed some 1,022 jobs, while French media has reported the airline is planning to cull around 7,500 positions.

Union members protested outside Air France's headquarte­rs at Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris as the talks got underway on Friday. They argue protecting jobs should have been made a key condition of the €7-billion ($8-billion) bailout deal struck with the French government in May. The pandemic has led to huge losses in the airline industry, with travel halted and flights grounded worldwide.

09:09Sex workers are holding a protest outside the Bundesrat in Berlin, demanding brothels be allowed to reopen. The industry was effectivel­y shut down due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, with prostitute­s banned from working since mid-March.

The protesters say they have developed hygiene regulation­s with health authoritie­s, and that it makes no sense their industry remains shut down when massage parlors, tattoo shops and saunas are open for business.

They called for more financial support, and also pointed to countries like neighborin­g Austria and the Netherland­s, which are allowing sex work again.

06:35 The UK government said Friday it is scrapping a 14day quarantine rule forarrival­s to England from countries it deems "lower risk," including France, Spain, Germany and Italy. A full list of countries exempt from the rule would be published later on Friday, Downing Street said.

The change takes effect on July 10. It will only apply to arrivals to England. The Scottish and Welsh government­s as well as the Northern Irish executive have not yet relaxed restrictio­ns.

04:55 Here's the latest coronaviru­s news from Asia:

India is reporting another single-day record increase in new coronaviru­s infections, with 20,903 cases added to the tally in the last 24 hours. The country now has a total of 625,544 cases and 18,213 deaths, according to the Health Ministry.

The steady rise in numbers puts India on track to overtake Russia to become the third most-affected country behind the US and Brazil. India is gradually easing restrictio­ns, although high-risk areas remain under lockdown. As of next week, all monuments, including the Taj Mahal, will be allowed to reopen to tourists.

Meanwhile, Indian regulators have given the green light to drugmaker Zydus to move ahead with human trials for its potential coronaviru­s vaccine. The company said its experiment­al vaccine showed a "strong immune response" in animal studies and that the antibodies produced in tests so far were able to completely neutralize the virus.

More than a dozen vaccine candidates are currently being tested on humans around the world. Zydus is the second firm to get approval to start clinical trials for a COVID-19 vaccine in India.

Read more: India's HIV and TB patients suffer consequenc­es of coronaviru­s pandemic

In South Korea, for the first time in weeks, more new coronaviru­s cases are being recorded in cities other than the capital, Seoul. The country reported 63 new infections in the past 24 hours, bringing the total to 12,967. Less than half of them were in the Seoul area. The rest came from other centers such as Gwangju in the country's southwest, and Daegu, which emerged as a major virus hot spot in February and March.

The spike of cases in Gwangju, where there are concerns about hospital capacities, prompted the tightening of social distancing restrictio­ns and closure of public facilities such as libraries and museums.

In North Korea, leader Kim Jong Un is warning officials not to get complacent about the coronaviru­s, saying it could lead to "unimaginab­le and irretrieva­ble crisis," state media reports. The isolated state maintains that it has not had a single case of COVID-19 since the pandemic began, a claim that has been widely questioned by observers.

According to the state-run Korean Central News Agency, Kim told a ruling party meeting that North Korea had "thoroughly prevented the inroad of the malignant virus," but he also criticized violations of anti-virus rules and stressed the need to "maintain maximum alert." The country's strict lockdown, imposed earlier this year, has taken a toll on its already struggling economy.

China has reported five new cases of the coronaviru­s, including three brought from outside the country, the National Health Commission reports. More than 100 people who are suspected cases, or who tested positive without showing symptoms, have been quarantine­d. More than 83,500 people have been infected and 4,634 have died in China since the virus was first identified in Wuhan last year, but strict lockdown measures and social distancing rules have helped to dramatical­ly curb the spread. No new deaths were reported Friday.

04:17Mexico has registered 6,741 new coronaviru­s infections, a daily all-time high for the country. The new cases lodged on Thursday brought total infections there to 238,511, the health ministry said. The increase means Mexico has now passed Iran, moving into 10th place among countries with the most cases.

Mexico also experience­d 679 new fatalities linked to COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, bringing the total death toll to 29,189.

03:30 Coronaviru­s cases in Germany went up by 446 in the

last 24 hours, according to the latest data from the Robert Koch Institute for infectious diseases, bringing the number of overall infections to 195,674.

Fatalities increased by 9 for a total death toll of 9,003.

01:20 The United States recorded more than 53,000 new COVID-19 cases in 24 hours, a tally by Johns Hopkins University showed. The number marked a new one-day record as infections increase across the country, the hardest-hit in the world.

There were 53,069 more cases, bringing the total number of cases since the pandemic reached the US to 2,735,339.

A further 649 people died of the disease, bringing the US total death toll to 128,677.

Thursday was the second consecutiv­e day of a record-high case count in the United States.

00:05 The genetic variation of COVID-19 currently dominant around the globe is infecting human cells more readily than the original variation that emerged in China, according to a new study.

Results of lab-based research published in the journal Cell have suggested that the current mutation is more transmissi­ble between people than the previous iteration of the virus, though it remains to be proven.

"I think the data is showing that there is a single mutation that actually makes the virus be able to replicate better, and maybe have high viral loads," said US top infectious disease specialist Anthony Fauci in response to the study, in which he was not involved, speaking with Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n.

Read more: How lab animals have fared in the coronaviru­s crisis

Researcher­s from a team of universiti­es found that the current variant of the virus, D614G, makes a small but significan­t change in the protein that protrudes from the surface of the virus, which it uses to invade and infect human cells.

Initial results shared in April were criticized for not proving the mutation itself was responsibl­e for its domination. Other factors or chance could have played a role, critics said.

The team then carried out additional experiment­s, analyzing data of 999 British patients hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19. They observed that those with the variant had more viral particles in them, but it had no effect on the severity of their disease.

Laboratory experiment­s have meanwhile shown that the variant is three to six times more capable of infecting human cells.

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.

nm,kp/ng (AFP, AP, Reuters, dpa)

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 ??  ?? Merkel was wearing a mask when she walked into the Bundesrat on Friday
Merkel was wearing a mask when she walked into the Bundesrat on Friday

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