Arab Times

Masks, travel curbs, testing as COVID-19 case numbers surge

Dubai lifts months-long nightly curfew

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BANGKOK, June 25, (AP): Government­s and businesses are ramping up precaution­s as coronaviru­s case numbers rise to dire new levels in parts of the US and around the world, potentiall­y wiping out two months of progress.

Indonesia was expected to pass the 50,000 mark for confirmed infections on Thursday. In Melbourne, health workers planned to go doorto-door to test more than 100,000 residents in a coronaviru­s hot spot that threatens to undo the nation’s success in battling the virus.

In the Indian capital of New Delhi, which has reported more than 70,000 cases, authoritie­s said they would conduct house-to-house screening over the coming two weeks. With the city’s hospitals overwhelme­d, military personnel were providing care at makeshift medical wards fashioned from railroad coaches.

India reported a record high 16,922 cases on Thursday, taking the national total to 473,105, with nearly 15,000 deaths.

The Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the continent’s cases have surged to more than 336,000, up by 10,000 from a day earlier. The Africa CDC chief said the pandemic on the 54-nation continent “is picking up speed very quickly” while shortages of testing materials and medical equipment remain severe in many countries.

The actual numbers of cases everywhere, are thought to be far higher due to a number of reasons including limited testing.

World financial markets were rattled by the setbacks in fighting the pandemic, which cloud prospects for recoveries of economies mired in their worst downturn since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

Asian shares fell Thursday after the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost over 700 points overnight for a drop of 2.7 percent and the broader S&P 500 fell 2.6 percent.

In China, where the virus first appeared late last year, an outbreak in Beijing appeared to have been brought under control. China reporting 19 newly confirmed cases nationwide amid mass testing in the capital. Case numbers both nationally and in Beijing were up by only single digits from Wednesday.

South Korea was still struggling to quell an outbreak there, reporting 28 new cases on Thursday, mostly associated with nightlife, churches, a huge e-commerce warehouse and door-to-door sales. But the numbers have not reached the hundreds of new cases every day in late February and early March.

While some government­s are considerin­g more aggressive action to stem fresh outbreaks, in other places such precaution­s are being unwound.

Skyscraper-studded Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates, ended a monthslong nightly curfew, with the city-state’s media office saying in a tweet that there would be “free move all day & night” as long as people wore masks and maintained social distancing.

European nations appeared on track to reopen their shared borders by July 1, and their EU representa­tives debated criteria for lifting restrictio­ns on visitors from outside Europe. In Greece, aviation officials were visiting airports regional opens due to open to direct internatio­nal flights on July 1.

Americans are unlikely to be allowed into EU nations, given how the pandemic is flaring in the US and President Donald Trump’s ban on Europeans entering the United States.

American hospital administra­tors and health experts warned Wednesday that politician­s and a public tired of being cooped up are letting a disaster unfold. The 34,700 COVID-19 cases reported Tuesday returned the US to near its late April peak of 36,400 new cases in one day, according to a count kept by Johns Hopkins University.

New York Gov Andrew Cuomo, New Jersey Gov Phil Murphy and Connecticu­t Gov Ned Lamont announced their states, which were devastated by early outbreaks that appear to be under control, will require travelers from certain states to quarantine for 24 days upon arrival.

The quarantine applies to people coming from states with a positive test rate higher than 10 per 100,000 residents on a seven-day average, or with a 10 percent or higher positive rate over seven days.

Several states have set single-day case records this week. They include Arizona, California, Mississipp­i, Nevada, Texas and Oklahoma. Some also broke hospitaliz­ation records, as did North Carolina and South Carolina.

The virus has been blamed for over 120,000 US deaths — the highest toll in the world — and more than 2.3 million confirmed infections nationwide.

On Wednesday, the widely cited University of Washington computer model of the outbreak projected nearly 180,000 deaths by Oct 1.

 ??  ?? A ragpicker pushes his tricycle as Christians sit in their vehicles maintainin­g social distancing to prevent the spread of COVID-19 during a drive-in service at Bethel AG Church in Bengaluru, India on a recent Sunday. (AP)
A ragpicker pushes his tricycle as Christians sit in their vehicles maintainin­g social distancing to prevent the spread of COVID-19 during a drive-in service at Bethel AG Church in Bengaluru, India on a recent Sunday. (AP)
 ??  ?? In this June 18, 2020 file photo, people sit outdoors to watch a movie as part of a program offered by the Miami Dolphins at Hard Rock Stadium during the coronaviru­s pandemic in Miami Gardens, Florida. Elected officials such as Florida’s governor have argued against reimposing restrictio­ns, saying many of the newly infected are young and otherwise healthy. But younger people, too, face the possibilit­y of severe infection and death. And authoritie­s worry that older, more vulnerable people could be next. (AP)
In this June 18, 2020 file photo, people sit outdoors to watch a movie as part of a program offered by the Miami Dolphins at Hard Rock Stadium during the coronaviru­s pandemic in Miami Gardens, Florida. Elected officials such as Florida’s governor have argued against reimposing restrictio­ns, saying many of the newly infected are young and otherwise healthy. But younger people, too, face the possibilit­y of severe infection and death. And authoritie­s worry that older, more vulnerable people could be next. (AP)

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