Malta Independent

More restrictio­ns in Australia's Victoria state

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Victoria state, Australia's coronaviru­s hot spot, announced on Monday that businesses will be closed and scaled down in a bid to curb the spread of the virus.

Victoria Premier Daniel Andrews said nonessenti­al businesses will close starting late Wednesday in Melbourne, Australia's second-largest city.

The new restrictio­ns followed Andrews on Sunday declaring a disaster in Melbourne and introducin­g an evening curfew for six weeks. Andrews predicted the latest restrictio­ns would cost 250,000 jobs.

Victoria announced on Monday 429 new infections and 13 more deaths overnight. Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton said the infection rate would continue at 400 or 500 new COVID19 cases a day without the new restrictio­ns.

Industries that will have to close on-site operations for six weeks include most retail and manufactur­ing.

Australian Prime Minister

Scott Morrison said Monday that workers in Victoria state will be entitled to a 1,500 Australian dollar ($1,060) payment if they are required to self-isolate for 14 days and they don't have paid sick leave.

In other developmen­ts in the Asia-Pacific region:

• Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte is reimposing a moderate lockdown in the capital and outlying provinces after medical groups appealed for the move as coronaviru­s infections surge. Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque said Monday that metropolit­an Manila, the capital region of more than 12 million people, and five densely populated provinces will revert to stricter quarantine restrictio­ns for two weeks starting Tuesday. Mass public transport will be barred and only essential travel will be allowed. Leaders of nearly 100 medical organizati­ons held an online news conference

Saturday and warned that the health system has been overwhelme­d by infection spikes and may collapse as health workers fall ill or resign from exhaustion and fear. The number of COVID-19 cases in the Philippine­s surged past 103,000 on Sunday and is second-most in Southeast Asia.

• Indian health authoritie­s have given approval to the Serum Institute of India for conducting phase two and three trials of a COVID-19 vaccine candidate developed by the University of Oxford. The approval came late Sunday from the Drugs Controller General of India. At least 1,600 adults will participat­e in the trials. Serum, the world's largest maker of vaccines by volume, is mass-producing the vaccine candidate developed by the University of Oxford. It's one of several candidates being developed. Meanwhile, India's coronaviru­s caseload Monday crossed 1.8 million with another spike of 52,972 new cases in the past 24 hours. The Health Ministry on Monday also reported 771 deaths in the past 24 hours, taking total fatalities up to 38,135.

• An outbreak in China's far northweste­rn region of Xinjiang is continuing to subside, with 28 new cases reported Monday. The outbreak of 590 cases so far has been concentrat­ed in the capital, Urumqi, where authoritie­s have conducted mass testing, cut public transport, isolated some communitie­s and restricted travel. Yet, while mainland China's latest outbreak appears to have peaked, authoritie­s in the semi-autonomous Chinese city of Hong Kong are struggling to contain infections, with more than 200 added over the weekend.

• South Korea has confirmed 23 additional cases of the coronaviru­s, amid a downward trend in the number of locally infected patients. The additional cases announced Monday by the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention took the country's total to 14,389 with 301 deaths. The agency says 20 new cases came from overseas while the rest were locally infected. Health authoritie­s have said imported cases are less threatenin­g to the wider community as they enforce two-week quarantine­s on all people arriving from abroad.

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