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Coronaviru­s digest: Venezuelan players test positive on eve of Copa America

Venezuela's team has brought in more players for Copa America after at least eight tested positive for COVID. And Brazil's president has been fined for flouting a mask mandate. Follow the latest with DW.

- Middle East

The Venezuelan national football team was hit by a COVID-19 outbreak a day before the opening match of the Copa America against host Brazil on Sunday.

Eight players and four coaches tested positive shortly after arriving in Brasilia, said Brazilian Health Minister Marcelo Queiroga.

"They're all fine. They're all isolated in their hotel, along with those who had contact with them," he said.

Queiroga added that players would only be able to leave Brazil after testing negative for coronaviru­s.

Later, the South American football confederat­ion, CONMEBOL added that a thirteenth member of the Venezuelan team had tested positive.

Venezuela has brought in 15 new players to join the squad for the month-long tournament, it announced Saturday.

Venezuela was allowed to make vast changes to its squad after Venezuela CONMEBOL removed the limit of five substituti­ons due to COVID-19 in the final list sent by teams.

Copa America was delayed by 12 months due to the pandemic.

Colombia and Argentina were the original co-hosts, but they pulled out respective­ly due to violent anti-government protests and a surge in COVID-19 infections.

Here's a roundup of other coronaviru­s news from around the world

Americas

Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro was fined about $110 (€90) for violating COVID-19 measures in Sao Paulo state by failing to wear a mask on Saturday as he led thousands of supporters at a motorcycle rally.

Bolsonaro was seen waving to a huge crowd from his motorcycle as his supporters, wearing helmets but mostly without masks, cheered and chanted.

The president has been criticized throughout the pandemic for downplayin­g the seriousnes­s of coronaviru­s.

Brazil has recordedth­e highest number of COVID cases in Latin America.

Bolsonaro has insisted that masks were useless for those who were vaccinated, contrary to the advice of public health experts.

"Whoever is against this proposal is because they don't believe in science, because if they are vaccinated, there is no way the virus can be transmitte­d," he said.

According to local authoritie­s, nearly 12,000 motorcycle­s participat­ed in the event.

Peru has managed to distribute five million COVID-19 vaccine doses so far, reaching a new record of 167,000 people vaccinated in one day last Tuesday.

This inoculatio­n drive had led to daily coronaviru­s infections dropping for the seventh consecutiv­e week.

The southern city of Arequipa is the only city to record increases of cases.

Peru is one of the worsthit countries in the world, with 180,000 deaths recorded so far as a result of the global pandemic.

In Venezuela, an MP has called requests to block the country′s ability to buy vaccines via Covax ″a crime.″

Opposition MP Jose Gregorio Correa said it was ″inconceiva­ble that having paid the total amount for the acquisitio­n of vaccines, some Venezuelan­s abroad ask for vaccine supply to be blocked″.

He added that ″the vaccines cannot be politicize­d as it harms the Venezuelan population″.

President Nicolas Maduro asked US president Joe Biden to ″unblock the vaccine funds″ on Friday after he said that the last $10 million sent to the Covax system run by the World Health Organizati­on was blocked by the US government.

Europe

Germany's justice minister has called on federal states to review their mandatory mask requiremen­ts.

The states should "clarify whether and where a mask requiremen­t is still a proportion­ate measure if the incidence figures are low and continue to fall," minister Christine Lambrecht told the Bild am Sonntag newspaper.

"This also applies to schools, because pupils are particular­ly affected by the mask regulation," the SPD politician said.

Also, Germany's list ofgovernme­nt- designated "risk areas" in several European countries will be shorter as of Sunday.

The regions of Tirol and Vorarlberg in Austria, along with parts of Greece, Croatia and Switzerlan­d will be removed from the high-risk list. Anyone arriving from these regions by land will not be subject to coronaviru­s-related restrictio­ns.

Air travelers, however, will still have to present evidence of a negative test.

On Sunday, the number of COVID cases in Germany increased by 1,489 while the death toll rose by 18, according to data from the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) for infectious diseases.

Denmark will lift its mask mandate starting Monday in all public places — easing one of several COVID-19 measures. The only exception will be public transport, but even there, it will only apply during rush hour and for standing passengers.

The country also plans to phase out its "corona pass" required for some activities by October 1.

"We will be able to do everything that we have missed, because we now have the epidemic under control," Health Minister Magnus Heunicke told reporters.

France has administer­ed the first dose of the COVID vaccines to more than 30 million people, hitting the government's target for mid-June, health authoritie­s said.

Scientists in Russia are planning to launch a new nasal spray of the Sputnik V vaccine for children from 8 to 12-years-old on September 15.

Alexander Gintsburg of the Gamaleya Institute that created the Sputnik V vaccine said on Saturday that tests on a shot with ″a nozzle, instead of a needle″ had been successful, according to TASS news agency.

He said researcher­s had found no side effects or heat changes when testing the age group, although he gave no details of how many children were involved in the study.

Around 60,000 vaccinated Saudi Arabian residents will be able to attend this year's hajj pilgrimage in July. However, no foreign pilgrims will be allowed.

"The decision [was made] to guarantee the safety of hajj amid uncertaint­y over the coronaviru­s," the kingdom's health minister Tawfiq al-Rabiah said during a televised press conference.

This is the second year in a row that the pilgrimage to Mecca has been affected by concerns over COVID-19. Read more on this story here.

Asia

China is using a fleet of 60 drones to keep people indoors in the southern city of Guangzhou during an outbreak of the more contagious Delta-variant, originally discovered in India.

Six new cases have pushed the number of cases to 100, so police forces are using drones with cameras to tell people to stay at home.

The flying vehicles can even detect the health status of nearby users via their cellphones by checking their temperatur­e and are most active in areas of high infection.

Several neighborho­ods in the city of Guangzhou and the rest of the Guangdong province are now under lockdown, with cinemas and indoor entertainm­ent barred from opening.Despite the pandemic, China has continued to expand its economy.

 ??  ?? The delta variant of the coronaviru­s has now hit southern China
The delta variant of the coronaviru­s has now hit southern China
 ??  ?? Copa America was delayed by 12 months due to the pandemic.
Copa America was delayed by 12 months due to the pandemic.

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