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Coronaviru­s digest: Sydney brings in army to enforce lockdown

Australia's largest city has drafted military personnel to help enforce its latest lockdown amid an outbreak of the delta variant. Follow DW for the latest.

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The Australian city of Sydney will draft in the army on Monday to enforce its toughest lockdown since the start of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Local authoritie­s have ordered 5 million people to stay at home amid a surge in cases of the delta variant, first discovered in India.

Mask-wearing is mandatory outdoors and residents can only travel 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) from their home for shopping or exercise, according to the New South Wales government website.

But from Monday, as many as 300 Australian army personnel will visit the homes of those who have tested positive to ensure they are respecting quarantine rules.

The move had been mooted earlier in the week prior to Friday's announceme­nt.

"The sheer volume of increase over the last week [means] the level of compliance [enforcemen­t] has gone from hundreds into thousands," said New South Wales police commission­er Mick Fuller.

The latest figures on case numbers are available from Wednesday. They show there were 237 new infections across New South Wales in the previous 24-hour period.

Australia has adopted a tough stance on curbing the spread of the virus since the start of the pandemic, with its borders effectivel­y closed to the world.

Citizens or permanent residents returning from abroad are required to self-isolate in a staterun hotel and subjected to strict testing requiremen­ts.

The Australian government's website says "there is a ban on all overseas travel" unless "an exemption has been granted."

Rising infections in Australia saw New Zealand suspend an agreed "travel bubble" on July 23 for two months. Here's a look at the latest coronaviru­s news in other parts of the world:

Asia-Pacific

Japan will expand the coronaviru­s state of emergency in Tokyo to neighborin­g areas and the western city of Osaka amid rising infections as the country hosts the Olympics.

A government panel agreed to place Saitama, Kanagawa and Chiba, as well as Osaka, under the state of emergency from Monday until August 31.

Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga on Friday announced the emergency coronaviru­s measures as cases in Tokyo, for instance, doubled over the past week. "Infections are expanding in the Tokyo and western metropolit­an areas at an enormous speed that we have never experience­d before," Suga said, warning the country's medical system faced potential collapse.

The measures are already in place in Tokyo. Rules affecting the southern island of Okinawa will be extended until the end of August.

Authoritie­s in the Philippine­s are also concerned about the spread of the delta variant of the coronaviru­s.

Harry Roque, chief spokesman for Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, said the capital, Manila, would go into a local lockdown from August 6 to August 20.

Dine-in services in restaurant­s will not be allowed, and religious gatherings will be suspended during the period, Roque said.

Personal care services such as salons and barber shops will only operate at 30% capacity.

Thailand received its first doses of BioNTech - Pfizer COVID-19 vaccines donated by the US government on Friday.

The arrival of 1.5 million shots comes as the Southeast Asian country battles its biggest COVID-19 outbreak to date.

Since April, the country has been tackling a surge in infections driven by the highly contagious delta variant of the coronaviru­s.

Hospitals in the capital, Bangkok, have been pushed to the brink.

Human rights activists accused Myanmar on Friday of "weaponizin­g" the COVID-19 pandemic to crush the opposition and bolster the ruling junta's own power.

Supplies of medical oxygen are running low, but rights groups allege that key medical stocks are being directed to government supporters and military-run hospitals.

"They have stopped distributi­ng personal protection equipment and masks, and they will not let civilians who they suspect are supporting the democracy movement be treated in hospitals, and they're arresting doctors who support the civil disobedien­ce movement,'' said Yanghee Lee, the UN's former Myanmar human rights expert.

In China, authoritie­s said 64 new coronaviru­s cases were detected across the mainland on Thursday. That compares to 49 new cases on Wednesday. The National Health Commission said there were no new deaths.

North America

In the United States, The New York Timesrepor­ted that the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) believes the delta variant of the coronaviru­s to be as contagious as chickenpox and could cause severe illness.

The newspaper said it had obtained an internal CDC document that said the variant was also more likely to break through protection­s afforded by the vaccines.

But the data shows jabs are still highly effective in preventing serious illness, hospitaliz­ation and deaths.

Meanwhile, US regulators have moved to stop hundreds of thousands of COVID-19 doses from being thrown away. The Food and Drug Adminstrat­ion has sent a letter to single-shot jab maker Johnson & Johnson saying their vaccines remain safe and effective for at least six months if properly stored.

It means existing stocks will now expire in six weeks time as President Joe Biden urges more Americans to get vaccinated.

Late on Thursday, Biden also announced new rules that will force federal workers to get vaccinated. They will be asked to sign forms attesting they have taken both jabs. If not, they will be required to wear face masks and undergo weekly tests.

"Right now, too many people are dying or watching someone they love die and say, 'if I'd just got the vaccine,'" Biden said in a televised address.

In New York City, those wishing to visit Broadway shows or attend the New York's Metropolit­an Opera will be required to show proof of vaccinatio­n and wear masks during performanc­es. The same rules will apply to all performers and staff at the Met as well as all 41 theaters on Broadway.

Those who cannot be vaccinated for medical reasons as well as children under 12 will be required to present a negative test on Broadway, where the rules will apply at least through October. Children under 12 will not be allowed to enter the Met, whose rules will remain in place throughout the duration of the 2021-2022 season.

Europe

Beginning Sunday, Germany will require all unvaccinat­ed travelers entering the country to present a negative COVID-19 test.

The new rules apply to those entering the country by air as well as over land and sea. The move is an attempt to keep infections from spiking as vacationer­s return home.

Last week, the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) — Germany's authority on infectious disease — said that one-in-five new infections had come from abroad, noting that nearly 500 infections were registered among travelers returning from Spain and Turkey.

Get jabbed and grab more holiday: Ministers in the Czech Republic approved the latest effort to boost vaccine uptake on Friday.

State employees who get both vaccine doses will be granted an extra two days of vacation, said Prime Minister Andrej Babis.

"The aim is to have maximum vaccinatio­n, to protect ourselves against infection from abroad," Babis said. "This is the main task: inoculate, inoculate, inoculate."

The EU country of 10.7 million reported that 10.19 million doses of vaccines had been administer­ed as of Thursday, with 4.74 million people fully vaccinated.

Middle East

Holidaymak­ers will be able to return to Saudi Arabia from August 1 provided they are fully vaccinated, the state news agency reported on Friday.

It comes after a 17-month closure of the kingdom's borders to stem coronaviru­s infections.

But restrictio­ns on visitors undertakin­g the umrah, a pilgrimage undertaken by millions of observant Muslims every year, remain in place.

Authoritie­s have limited numbers in 2021 to 60,000 pilgrims who already live in Saudi Arabia.

jf,js/sri (AP, AFP, Reuters, dpa)

 ??  ?? Australian authoritie­s have been concerned about people breaking the rules amid a series of anti-lockdown protests
Australian authoritie­s have been concerned about people breaking the rules amid a series of anti-lockdown protests
 ??  ?? Soldiers were also deployed in Melbourne last year to enforce a coronaviru­s lockdown
Soldiers were also deployed in Melbourne last year to enforce a coronaviru­s lockdown

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