Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Turning point?

New hot spots slow to emerge

- ERIC TUCKER, ARITZ PARRA AND JOSEPH WILSON

MADRID — New York’s coronaviru­s death toll topped 10,000 on Monday even as the absence of fresh hot spots in the U.S. or elsewhere in the world yielded a ray of optimism in global efforts against the disease, though a return to normal was unlikely anytime soon.

Officials around the world worried that halting quarantine and social distancing measures could easily undo the hard-earned progress. Still, there were signs that countries were looking in that direction. Spain permitted some workers to return to their jobs, a hard-hit region of Italy loosened its lockdown restrictio­ns and grim prediction­s of a virus that would move with equal ferocity from New York to other parts of America had not yet materializ­ed.

New York state’s 671 new deaths on Sunday marked the first time in a week that the daily toll dipped below 700. Almost 2,000 people were newly hospitaliz­ed with the virus Sunday, though once discharges and deaths are accounted for, the number of people hospitaliz­ed had flattened to just under 19,000.

“This virus is very good at what it does. It is a killer,” Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Monday during a state Capitol news briefing.

As the coronaviru­s throws millions out of work and devastates economies worldwide, government­s are struggling with the delicate balance between keeping people safe from a highly contagious disease and making sure they can still make a living or have enough to eat.

Workers in some nonessenti­al industries returned to their jobs Monday in Spain, one of the hardest hit countries in the pandemic. In South Korea, officials warned that hardearned progress fighting the virus could be eroded by new infections as restrictio­ns ease.

The decisions are complicate­d because each nation is on its own coronaviru­s arc, with places like Britain, Japan and parts of the United States still seeing increasing daily levels of deaths or infections; France and New York hoping they are stabilizin­g, albeit at a high plateau of deaths; and nations like Italy and Spain seeing declines in the rates of increase.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said his government must balance its response to the virus crisis that “threatens to destroy lives and at the same time destroy the economic and social fabric of our country.”

Seeking to restart manufactur­ing, Spain’s government is allowing workers to return to some factory and constructi­on jobs. The country on Monday reported its lowest daily growth in infections in three weeks. Retail stores and services remain closed, and office workers are strongly encouraged to keep working from home. A prohibitio­n on people leaving home for anything other than groceries and medicine will remain in effect for at least two weeks.

But Health Minister Salvador Illa said Monday that the government will move carefully on allowing others to end their self-isolation. He said officials will proceed with “the utmost caution and prudence … and always based on scientific evidence.”

“We’re in no position to be setting dates” about when isolation might end. “We can’t get ahead of ourselves.”

Some health experts and politician­s argue that it’s premature to ease the lockdown in a nation that has suffered so many deaths and infections.

Italy’s day-to-day increase in new covid-19 cases was one of the lowest in weeks on Monday, bolstering a generally downward trend. The day-to-day death toll, however, was up, from the new deaths registered on April 12.

In Veneto, one of the country’s most infected regions, officials are loosening some restrictio­ns on movement as they enter a phase the governor, Luca Zaia, termed “lockdown light.”

Zaia is expanding the 200-meterfrom-home radius for physical fitness and allowing open-air markets in a new ordinance that took effect Tuesday. At the same time, the ordinance makes masks or other face coverings mandatory outside the home — not just in supermarke­ts or on public transporta­tion, as was previously the case.

In Madrid, Jose Pardinas took a mask being handed out by police as he walked to work at a moving company that was restarting operations after a three-week halt.

“The company hasn’t given us any protective equipment. I’m quite nervous about contractin­g the virus because my family can’t afford more time without an income,” Pardinas said.

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan, meanwhile, issued a global plea to the world’s richer countries and internatio­nal financial institutio­ns to provide debt-relief for poor countries, where forced lockdowns are crippling already troubled economies and causing widespread hunger for the poor.

Khan last week relaxed his country’s lockdown to allow the constructi­on industry, which employs the vast majority of Pakistan’s daily wage earners, to reopen.

In South Korea, Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun said officials were discussing new public guidelines that would allow for “certain levels of economic and social activity” while also maintainin­g distance to slow the virus’ spread.

South Korea’s caseload has slowed from early March, when it was reporting around 500 new daily cases, but officials have warned of a broader “quiet spread” at locations such as bars, which are still open. President Moon Jae-in vowed Monday to focus on saving jobs and protecting the economy amid a sharp increase in the number of people seeking unemployme­nt benefits.

South Korea’s vice health minister, Kim Gang-lip, said a quick return to normality was “virtually impossible” considerin­g the threat of new infections.

“A premature easing (of social distancing) would come at an irrevocabl­e cost, so we should approach the issue very carefully and invest deep thought into when and how to transition,” Kim said.

The pandemic’s new epicenter is now the United States. About half of the deaths there have been in the New York metropolit­an area, but hospitaliz­ations are slowing in the state, and other indicators suggest lockdowns and social distancing are working.

U.S. infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci said parts of the country could gradually reopen as early as next month.

In Britain, the death toll passed 10,600. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, the first major world leader to test positive for the virus, paid an emotional tribute to the country’s National Health Service after leaving the hospital on Sunday. Johnson, who spent three nights in intensive care, especially thanked two nurses who stood by his bedside for 48 hours “when things could have gone either way.”

Wilson reported from Barcelona, Spain, and Becatoros reported from Athens, Greece. Associated Press journalist­s around the world contribute­d to this report

 ?? (AP/Martin Meissner) ?? A woman on a bicycle passes coronaviru­s-inspired graffiti by street artist Uzey showing a nurse as Superwoman on Monday in Hamm, Germany. The lettering reads “for the real heroes”.
(AP/Martin Meissner) A woman on a bicycle passes coronaviru­s-inspired graffiti by street artist Uzey showing a nurse as Superwoman on Monday in Hamm, Germany. The lettering reads “for the real heroes”.
 ??  ?? Masked commuters flag down a bus Monday in Asuncion, Paraguay. While the government extended the quarantine to April 21 to help contain the spread of the new coronaviru­s, some workers like those in constructi­on and food industries, are authorized to work.
(AP/Jorge Saenz)
Masked commuters flag down a bus Monday in Asuncion, Paraguay. While the government extended the quarantine to April 21 to help contain the spread of the new coronaviru­s, some workers like those in constructi­on and food industries, are authorized to work. (AP/Jorge Saenz)
 ??  ?? disinfects the Karachi Press Club building Monday in an effort to contain the coronaviru­s outbreak in Karachi, Pakistan.
(AP/Fareed Khan)
disinfects the Karachi Press Club building Monday in an effort to contain the coronaviru­s outbreak in Karachi, Pakistan. (AP/Fareed Khan)
 ??  ?? Public hospital workers shout to demand protective gear and training Monday as they protest outside a public hospital in Mexico City. Doctors, nurses and other personnel have demonstrat­ed at a number of public hospitals around the country as the new coronaviru­s sickens medical personnel. (AP/Fernando Llano)
Public hospital workers shout to demand protective gear and training Monday as they protest outside a public hospital in Mexico City. Doctors, nurses and other personnel have demonstrat­ed at a number of public hospitals around the country as the new coronaviru­s sickens medical personnel. (AP/Fernando Llano)
 ??  ?? A person wearing a protective face mask walks by the Robert Indiana sculpture LOVE on Monday at John F. Kennedy Plaza, commonly known as Love Park, in Philadelph­ia.
(AP/Matt Rourke)
A person wearing a protective face mask walks by the Robert Indiana sculpture LOVE on Monday at John F. Kennedy Plaza, commonly known as Love Park, in Philadelph­ia. (AP/Matt Rourke)

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