Albuquerque Journal

Some countries report new infection peaks

New cases in Russia surge; Britain’s death toll is now close to Italy’s

- BY FRANCES D’EMILIO, PABLO GORONDI AND DANICA KIRKA ASSOCIATED PRESS

ROME — While millions of people took advantage of easing coronaviru­s lockdowns to enjoy spring weather, some of the world’s most populous countries reported worrisome new peaks in infections Sunday, including India, which saw its biggest single-day jump yet.

Second in population only to China, India reported more than 2,600 new infections. In Russia, new cases exceeded 10,000 for the first time. The confirmed death toll in Britain climbed near that of Italy, the epicenter of Europe’s outbreak, even though the U.K. population is younger than Italy’s and Britain had more time to prepare before the pandemic hit.

The United States continues to see tens of thousands of new infections each day, with more than 1,400 additional deaths reported Saturday.

At a virtual town hall Sunday night, President Donald Trump acknowledg­ed Americans are worried about getting sick as well as the economic damage from business closures worldwide.

“We have to get it back open safely but as quickly as possible,” Trump said.

China, which reported only two new cases, saw a surge in visitors to newly reopened tourist spots after domestic travel restrictio­ns were loosened ahead of a fiveday holiday that runs through Tuesday. Nearly 1.7 million people visited Beijing parks on the first two days of the holiday, and

Shanghai’s main tourist spots welcomed more than 1 million visitors, according to Chinese media. Many sites limited visitors to 30% of capacity.

On the eve of Italy’s first steps toward easing restrictio­ns, the Health Ministry reported 174 COVID-19 deaths in the 24-hour period ending Sunday evening, the lowest day-to-day number since the national lockdown began March 10. Parks and public gardens were set to reopen on Monday.

In Spain, many ventured outside for the first time since the country’s lockdown began March 14, but social distancing rules were still in place. Masks are mandatory starting Monday on public transit.

In Britain, Prime Minister Boris Johnson is under pressure to reveal how the country will lift its lockdown. The restrictio­ns are due to last through Thursday, but with hundreds of deaths still being reported daily — twice as many recently as Italy or Spain — it’s unclear how the country can safely loosen the restrictio­ns.

The 55-year-old Johnson, who spent three nights in intensive care while being treated for COVID-19, told The Sun newspaper that he knew his doctors were preparing for the worst.

“It was a tough old moment, I won’t deny it,’’ he said. “They had a strategy to deal with a ‘death of Stalin’-type scenario’’ if he succumbed to the virus.

Another potentiall­y troubling sign emerged in Afghanista­n’s capital, Kabul, where a third of the 500 people selected in a random test came up positive for the virus.

In the U.S., New Jersey reopened state parks, and several had to turn people away after reaching a 50% limit in their parking lots. Margie Roebuck and her husband were among the first on the sand at Island Beach State Park.

“Forty-six days in the house was enough,” she said.

If restrictio­ns are lifted too soon, the virus could come back in “small waves in various places around the country,” said Dr. Tom Inglesby, director of the Center for Health Security of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

“Nothing has changed in the underlying dynamics of this virus,” he said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced that his state would join with six others to create a regional supply chain for masks, gowns, ventilator­s, testing supplies and other equipment for fighting the disease.

The divide in the United States between those who want lockdowns to end and those who want to move more cautiously extended to Congress.

The Republican-majority Senate will reopen Monday in Washington. The Democrat-controlled House of Representa­tives is staying shuttered.

Russia’s latest tally of infections was nearly double the new cases reported a week ago. More than half of Russia’s new cases were in Moscow, where concern is rising about whether the capital’s medical facilities will be overwhelme­d.

The number of confirmed cases in India neared 40,000 as the population of 1.3 billion marked the 40th day of a nationwide lockdown. The official death toll reached 1,323.

The virus has infected 3.5 million people and killed more than 246,000 worldwide, including more than 66,000 dead in the United States, according to a count by Johns Hopkins University.

 ?? MATT DUNHAM/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? On Sunday, a jogger stops to tie his shoe in front of a new mural with a National Health Service Superman motif. Street artist Lionel Stanhope painted the mural, which is in the Waterloo area of London.
MATT DUNHAM/ASSOCIATED PRESS On Sunday, a jogger stops to tie his shoe in front of a new mural with a National Health Service Superman motif. Street artist Lionel Stanhope painted the mural, which is in the Waterloo area of London.

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