Global Times

World sees new viral surge

Trump pushes school reopenings with US still in turmoil

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The US topped 3 million confirmed coronaviru­s cases on Wednesday as President Donald Trump pushed for schools to reopen amid a COVID-19 resurgence in many southern hot spots.

The US remains by far the worst-affected country, with over 132,000 deaths, while Brazil – whose virus-skeptic President Jair Bolsonaro has tested positive for the disease – is a distant second with close to 67,000 deaths from almost 1.7 million cases.

As infections rose by a further 55,000 to reach a total of 3,046,351 on Wednesday, Trump called for students to return to their schools in the fall and lashed the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for issuing guidance that he said was too restrictiv­e.

The agency’s head later said the guidelines were “not requiremen­ts” and that the CDC would soon update its advice.

Harvard and MIT meanwhile sued the administra­tion after it threatened to revoke the visas of foreign students whose entire courses have moved online because of the pandemic.

The virus has infected almost 12 million people worldwide and killed more than 500,000 so far.

Across the world, citizens chafed under renewed restrictio­ns as countries experience fresh waves of disease.

In the Australian city of Melbourne, millions were preparing for a return to lockdown to fight an upsurge that is seeing more than 100 new cases reported each day, with panic buyers stripping supermarke­t shelves.

France, which had flattened its curve by imposing a strict lockdown earlier in the pandemic, said Wednesday it was girding for a possible surge in cases.

But, mindful of potentiall­y disastrous consequenc­es of attempting to thrust millions back into their homes, France’s new prime minister aimed to soothe fears by promising no new full shutdown.

“We’re not going to impose a lockdown like the one we did last March, because we’ve learned... that the economic and human consequenc­es from a total lockdown are disastrous,” Jean Castex said, promising “targeted” measures instead.

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