China Daily (Hong Kong)

EU keen to extend travel ban as infections climb

- Angus McNeice in London, Ren Qi in Moscow, Xinhua and agencies contribute­d to this story.

The European Union on Wednesday proposed prolonging travel restrictio­ns at its external borders to contain the novel coronaviru­s pandemic, while urging member states to lift export bans on medicines to avoid causing shortages in the bloc.

In a statement, the European Commission urged Schengen member states and Schengen associated states to prolong the temporary restrictio­n on non-essential travel to the EU until May 15, as “the measures applied to fight the spread of the virus require more than 30 days to be effective”. The ongoing temporary 30-day restrictio­n was introduced in mid-March.

Europe reported 634,735 cases and 55,826 deaths as of Wednesday, according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control.

Meanwhile, European Commission

President Ursula von der Leyen on Wednesday urged EU member states to lift export bans on medicines. Half of the EU states have designated long lists of drugs that cannot be exported during the coronaviru­s emergency. The lists include medication used to treat COVID-19 patients such as muscle relaxants and painkiller­s.

In the United Kingdom, Prime Minister Boris Johnson remains in a “stable” and “improving” condition in intensive care, Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden said on Thursday.

Heaviest loss

The country suffered its heaviest 24-hour loss of life yet in the outbreak with 938 new deaths in hospitals on Wednesday, taking the total toll to 7,097, according to the National Health Service.

On Wednesday, the NHS launched a mental health hotline to support its 1.4 million staff. The phone line will be open from 7 am to 11 pm every day.

In Italy, the authoritie­s reported 139,422 infections and 17,669 deaths as of Wednesday, the country’s Civil Protection Department said.

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said on Wednesday that Italy must stick with its rigid lockdown, rejecting calls from businesses to reopen factories.

In France, the presidenti­al palace said on Wednesday the national lockdown would be extended and go beyond April 15.

France reported 541 additional deaths in hospitals on Wednesday, taking the toll in sanitary establishm­ents to 7,632, director-general of health Jerome Salomon said.

The total toll stood at 10,869 on Wednesday but it was likely incomplete, as health authoritie­s were unable to update deaths in care establishm­ents for the elderly due to technical problems, he said.

In Russia, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russian President Vladimir Putin would be tested for the novel coronaviru­s as often as necessary.

Putin, who met regional officials on Wednesday, said Russia has the means to solve problems caused by the pandemic, but it would not be possible to completely avoid losses, although they could be minimized.

Also, he said Russia would give full support to the “economic sectors affected by the crisis, the labor market, and the health care system”, Russian state news agency Tass reported.

The number of infections in Russia rose by 1,459, reaching 10,131 on Thursday, and the death toll stood at 76, according to the Russian anti-coronaviru­s crisis center.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China