India cases jump as storm threatens US
INDIA reported nearly 55,000 new coronavirus cases yesterday and Japan recorded more than 1,500 for a second day, while Florida was braced for a tropical storm that threatened to hamper efforts to combat the disease.
A curfew was imposed on Australia’s second-largest city, Melbourne, following a rise in infections.
The United States, India and South Africa are struggling to rein in their first wave of infections, while South Korea and other countries where the disease abated try to avert a second wave as curbs on travel and trade ease.
India’s 54,735 new cases were down from the previous day’s record 57,118, but raised the country’s total to 1.75 million. July accounted for more than 1.1 million of those cases.
The major cities of New Delhi and Mumbai might have passed their peaks, said a government expert, Randeep Guleria. Cinemas and other public facilities are closed until August 31.
In Japan, the government said all but five of its 1,540 new cases were transmitted domestically. The daily total was close to Friday’s record of 1,579. The rise in Japanese cases, most of them people in their 20s and 30s, prompted warnings that young people were letting their guard down.
Governor Yuriko Koike of Tokyo, which has about one-third of the new infections, says she might declare an emergency to contain the outbreak.
In Florida, authorities were trying to prepare storm shelters while enforcing social distancing, as Tropical Storm Isaias churned towards the heavily populated state. It was due to be near the coast early yesterday. Florida reported 179 deaths on Saturday, raising its total to more than 7,000.
In Australia, Premier
Daniel
Andrews of the southern state of Victoria announced an 8pm to 5am curfew on Melbourne, a city of five million people. Schools statewide are to return to home-based teaching and day care centres were closed.
Mr Andrews said there were seven deaths and 671 new cases since Saturday. “If we don’t make these changes, we’re not going to get through this,” he added.
Also yesterday, China and South Korea reported more infections but spikes in both countries appeared to be tailing off.
China had 49 new confirmed cases, up from the previous day’s 45. Thirty were in Xinjiang in the north west, where authorities are trying to contain an outbreak focused on the regional capital, Urumqi.
Three cases were found in students who returned from Russia to Wuhan, the southern city where the pandemic began in December.