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Coronaviru­s digest: City in China restricts movement amid outbreak

Bus and train services have been suspended to contain a COVID-19 outbreak. Meanwhile, Australia and New Zealand have purchased more vaccines as the countries struggle with new cases. DW has the latest.

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Authoritie­s in the Chinese city of Putian on Sunday suspended bus and train services and closed bars, cinemas and other facilities, as authoritie­s try to curb a coronaviru­s outbreak.

Putian, a city of 2.9 million people, reported 19 new cases of COVID-19 infections on Sunday. All cases are believed to be locally acquired.

Residents of the city in Fujian province have been advised not to leave. Those who need to make essential trips away should provide proof of a negative coronaviru­s test within the past 48 hours.

Experts were sent to Putian to manage disease-control work, China's National Health Commission announced on Saturday.

In 2020, China declared the virus was under control , but the country has recently seen outbreaks of the contagious delta variant.

Oceania

New Zealand has bought 500,000 vials of the BioNTechPf­izer coronaviru­s vaccine from Denmark, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said on Sunday.

The move comes as the country witnesses a cluster of COVID-19 cases in its largest city, Auckland.

"There is now more than enough vaccine in the country to vaccinate at the world leading rates we were hitting earlier in the month, and I strongly encourage every New Zealander not yet vaccinated to do so as

soon as possible," Ardern said in a statement.

The jabs are scheduled to arrive within days.

On Sunday, New Zealand reported 20 new locally acquired infections, all in the COVID-19 hotspot of Auckland.

Australia too has purchased an additional million doses of Moderna's coronaviru­s vaccine from the European Union as the country boosts its vaccine rollout amid record infections.

"Some good news today. A family-sized dose of hope for our vaccinatio­n program," Prime Minister Scott Morrison told the media in Sydney.

The purchase is a shot in the arm for the country's economy, which is at risk of sliding into its second recession in as many years due to strict virus lockdowns in the two most populous cities of Sydney and Melbourne.

These restrictio­ns are slated to remain until 70% of the country's nearly 26 million population are fully inoculated, something that is not expected until the end of October.

On Sunday, the country's

most populous states of New South Wales and Victoria saw a slight dip in the daily case tally, with 1,262 and 392 COVID-19 cases respective­ly.

The state of Queensland, meanwhile, managed to evade a lockdown after it detected zero COVID-19 cases over the past day.

Africa

South Africa will shorten nightly curfews and allow citizens to buy alcohol for longer as the spread of the third wave of the pandemic slowed around the country.

President Ramaphosa announced on Sunday that the

country was going to level 2 of a five tier system of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns as the threat receded.

Europe

United Kingdom Health Secretary Sajid Javid on Sunday canceled plans to bring in a vaccine passport for entry to nightclubs and other crowded events across England.

"We've looked at it properly and whilst we should keep it in reserve as a potential option, I'm pleased to say that we will not be going ahead with plans for vaccine passports," Javid told the BBC.

The U- turn comes after

Conservati­ve Party members objected to the measure on the grounds that it gives more work to businesses and is against people's human rights.

More than 120,000 people protested across France on Saturday, as per official data, against the COVID-19 health passes that they say discrimina­tes against the unvaccinat­ed.

Health passes are required in France to enter cafes, restaurant­s and other public places.

The interior ministry said 121,000 people had taken part in the demonstrat­ions, 19,000 of them in Paris where police detained 85 people after clashes broke out.

In North Macedonia, hundreds of people marched on Saturday to commemorat­e the 14 people killed in a blaze at a COVID-19 field hospital earlier this week.

People took part in a silent march through central Tetovo and kneeled in front of the destroyed hospital.

The fire that broke out on Wednesday is believed to have started by accident, but a probe is still underway.

As COVID-19 cases continued to climb in Germany, Chancellor Angela Merkel started an action week to encourage citizens to get vaccinated

Americas

A number of westland lowland gorillas tested positive for COVID-19 at Zoo Atlanta in Georgia, United States, vets at the zoo said.

After the gorillas started coughing and showed other coronaviru­s symptoms, preliminar­y tests on the animals came up positive, forcing vets to test and vaccinate all 20 gorillas at the zoo.

Zoo Atlanta revealed that an asymptomat­ic worker was to blame but said "there is no data to suggest that zoo animals can transmit the virus to humans."

 ??  ?? In 2020, China declared the virus was under control but has recently seen outbreaks of the contagious delta variant
In 2020, China declared the virus was under control but has recently seen outbreaks of the contagious delta variant
 ??  ?? Protesters put their views against the vaccine passport and forced vaccinatio­ns in Monaco
Protesters put their views against the vaccine passport and forced vaccinatio­ns in Monaco

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