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Coronaviru­s digest: Melbourne extends lockdown with tougher restrictio­ns

Melbourne is implementi­ng a night curfew, restrictio­ns on movement and will close down parks and playground­s. Sydney recorded its highest death toll of seven in the last 24 hours. Follow DW for the latest.

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The Australian city of Melbourne extended its lockdown for two weeks on Monday, with tougher restrictio­ns in place. Under the new guidelines, an overnight curfew takes effect from 9 p.m. to 5 a.m..

Playground­s and parks will be closed, and people will not be allowed to remove their masks in public for consumptio­n of alcohol. Permits will be required for authorized work, and large constructi­on projects will be restricted to 25% of their workforce.

"We are at a tipping point. There is simply no option today but to further strengthen this lockdown," said Victorian state premier Daniel Andrews.

Here is a roundup of other coronaviru­s news from around the world:

Oceania Elsewhere in Australia, the city of Sydney is also struggling to control an outbreak of the delta variant. The city recorded seven deaths in the last 24 hours, and the state of New South Wales saw 478 new cases on the same day.

"Our community transmissi­on numbers are disturbing­ly high. Every death is a person who has loved ones, who has died in tragic circumstan­ces and our heartfelt condolence­s to all of those loved ones and families," said state premier Gladys Berejiklia­n.

Asia

Japan is set to extend its "state of emergency" soft lockdown, in regions such as Tokyo, to the middle of September, as well as adding several other parts of the country, according to media reports.

The current state of emergency is due to expire at the end of the month, but a continuing rise in COVID-19 infections has sparked calls to extend it.

On Monday, the Tokyo Paralympic­s, due to start on August 24, is set to decide on issues such as what to do in terms of spectators, NHK public television reported.

President Joko Widodo said on Monday in his annual state of

the nation speech that Indonesia must "strike a balance" between health and economic interests as infections surge.

"The pandemic has indeed significan­tly slowed down our economic growth, but it must not hinder the process of structural reforms of our economy," the president said.

Struggling with rising infections driven by the delta variant, Indonesia has become Asia's epicenter for COVID-19, with hospitals becoming overwhelme­d.

New local COVID-19 infections in China fell for a sixth straight day, official data showed on Monday.

In its lowest daily tally since July 24, China reported 13 new domestical­ly transmitte­d infections for Sunday, according to data from the National Health Commission.

In Thailand hundreds of protesters demanding the resignatio­n of the country’s prime minister had to be dispersed with teargas and water cannon.

Crowds vented their anger over the handling of the pandemic and vaccine rollout.

Opposition lawmakers also filed a motion of no-confidence against Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha and five of his ministers.

On Sunday, Iran recorded 620 deaths, its highest toll ever, with 36,736 new cases. Officials said the country was experienci­ng its fifth wave, with infections being driven by the delta variant.

Non-essential businesses will be closed from Monday until August 28, and a travel ban between provinces has been put in place till August 27. Authoritie­s have stopped short of a full lockdown, and are ramping up the vaccinatio­n process.

The Philippine­s reported its first case of the so- called lambda variant, in a 35-yearold female who has recovered. Health authoritie­s said they were trying to determine whether she was a Filipino national who had traveled from abroad.

The capital region of Manila is under strict lockdown until August 20.

Middle East

Israel's Prime Minister Naftali Bennett urged citizens to get vaccinated and comply with restrictio­ns. He said a lockdown would be a "last resort."

"We will do everything to avoid framers, which are destructiv­e tools for our livelihood, economy and children's education. If we continue the quarantine policy and the destructiv­e limitation­s for the economy, we will just go financiall­y broke," he said.

Europe

Germany's Robert Koch Institute on Monday reported a further 2,126 cases and four deaths. The incidence rate continued to rise, albeit only slightly, to 36.2 cases per 100,000 people per week.

Meanwhile, Germany's Health Minister Jens Spahn has welcomed the news that the country's vaccine commission (STIKO) has approved COVID vaccinatio­ns for all individual­s over the age of 12.

"Parents and adolescent­s thus have a clear recommenda­tion to opt for the vaccinatio­n," Spahn said.

German biotech firm Curevac and British pharmaceut­ical GlaxoSmith­Kline ( GSK) reported that their COVID-19 vaccine candidate showed improved immune response and protection in a preclinica­l animal study.

The mRNA vaccine showed better results that CureVac’s first vaccine, which only had 48% efficacy. CureVac in partnershi­p with GSK are trying to develop a vaccine that works against coronaviru­s variants.

COVID-19 vaccines do not raise the risk of miscarriag­e according the United Kingdom health regulator.

There was also no correlatio­n between the shots and changes to menstruati­on.

In a statement the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) said: "There is no pattern from the reports to suggest that any of the COVID-19 vaccines used in the UK, or any reactions to these vaccines, increase the risk of miscarriag­e or stillbirth."

The findings are in line with a similar review from Europe earlier this month, in which no causal link could be establishe­d between COVID-19 vaccines and menstrual disorders.

 ??  ?? Melbourne will have a night curfew until September 2
Melbourne will have a night curfew until September 2

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