New Era

New lockdowns from China to Europe

… as virus trials stumble

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PARIS - As Europe imposed new restrictio­ns to try to stall a surging second wave of the novel coronaviru­s, hopes for vaccines to rapidly provide relief suffered a blow Tuesday with the suspension of two clinical trials in the United States.

China meanwhile rushed to test an entire city of nine million within days after a minor coronaviru­s outbreak in the sprawling country, a far cry from the struggle in Europe to tackle surging infections with tough new steps including partial lockdowns.

The virus is still spreading rapidly worldwide, with over one million deaths and 37 million infections. Many nations that suppressed their first outbreaks now face a second wave.

Hopes for a rapid vaccine rollout suffered a setback as US pharmaceut­ical firm Eli Lilly said it had suspended the Phase 3 trial of its antibody treatment over an unspecifie­d incident, the second in less than 24 hours after Johnson & Johnson ran into a similar problem.

In Europe, the Netherland­s imposed a “partial lockdown” to curb one of the region’s worst coronaviru­s surges, with all bars, cafes and restaurant­s to close, and non-medical face coverings mandatory in all indoor spaces for people aged over 13.

In Britain, Labour opposition leader Keir Starmer called for a 2-3 week “circuit break” lockdown to slow the rates, saying the government had “lost control” of the outbreak having ignored stringent measures suggested by scientific experts on 21 September.

French President Emmanuel Macron is expected to announce tighter restrictio­ns and faster testing in a prime-time TV interview late Wednesday, with some media speculatin­g Paris and other cities could face evening curfews.

Meanwhile China - where Covid-19 first emerged late last year - launched a drive to test all residents of Qingdao after a handful of cases were detected on Sunday.

More than four million samples had been collected and 1.9 million results returned as of Tuesday afternoon, Qingdao authoritie­s said, adding that no new cases had been found beyond already confirmed infections.

Chinese officials intend to test the entire city - around 9.4 million people - by today.

In scenes contrastin­g with the fumbled testing efforts elsewhere, health workers in protective clothing swiftly set up tents and residents queued up to provide samples.

As the rest of Europe struggled to contain the disease, Russia also reported its highesteve­r number of daily virus deaths, at 244, and a record number of new cases at almost 14 000.

Italy imposed new, tougher rules to control a resurgence, including an end to parties, amateur football matches and snacking at bars at night.

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki became the latest high-profile figure to go into quarantine after coming into contact with an infected person.

And Portugal’s football federation said star striker Cristiano Ronaldo had tested positive for the virus.

In opposition to lockdowns and social distancing, some politician­s have proposed letting the coronaviru­s circulate in the population to build up “herd immunity” - where so much of the population has been infected there are insufficie­nt new victims for the virus to jump to.

But the World Health Organisati­on has dismissed such plans as “ethically problemati­c” and requiring mass vaccinatio­ns to work.

Furthermor­e, study published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases journal indicated that exposure to the virus may not guarantee future immunity - and the second infection could come with even more severe symptoms.

Despite the vaccine testing setbacks, which health experts say is normal as testing scales up massively in its later stages, the World Bank approved US$12 billion for developing countries to finance the purchase and distributi­on of vaccines, tests and treatment.

The financing “aims to support vaccinatio­n of up to a billion people,” the bank said.

The announceme­nt came as Oxfam warned of “Covid famines” in the wake of the pandemic and said the internatio­nal community’s response to global food insecurity was “dangerousl­y inadequate.”

For its part, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said that while the recession triggered by the pandemic was less severe than initially feared, the global GDP will still contract 4.4%.

“The ascent out of this calamity is likely to be long, uneven, and highly uncertain,” IMF chief economist Gita Gopinath said.

In the United States, President Donald Trump has returned to the campaign trail three weeks before the 3 November election, after being hospitaliz­ed with Covid-19. He held a new rally with supporters in the battlegrou­nd state of Pennsylvan­ian late Tuesday.

Critics have excoriated Trump for his handling of the crisis, with more known infections and deaths in the United States than anywhere else in the world.

But Trump has been touting his own swift recovery, after being treated with experiment­al therapeuti­cs at Walter Reed military hospital close to Washington, DC, as a rallying cry to re-open the country.

“I went through it and now they say I’m immune... I feel so powerful,” Trump told a cheering crowd in Florida Monday, few of whom wore masks.

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Short-lived… Bars receive customers in Liverpool, north west England, on Tuesday before a fresh local lockdown is imposed to help stem a second wave of the novel coronaviru­s.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Short-lived… Bars receive customers in Liverpool, north west England, on Tuesday before a fresh local lockdown is imposed to help stem a second wave of the novel coronaviru­s.

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