Orlando Sentinel

Leaders search for optimism about future, loosening widespread lockdown measures while simultaneo­usly controllin­g a potential second wave of people infected due to the virus.

On Mother’s Day, leaders feel positive about road ahead

- By Frank Jordans and Nomaan Merchant

BERLIN — As families in the U.S. and elsewhere marked Mother’s Day in a time of social distancing and isolation due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, world leaders projected optimism they could loosen lockdowns while controllin­g a potential second wave of infections.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin predicted the American economy would rebound in the second half of this year from unemployme­nt rates that rival the Great Depression. Another 3.2 million U.S. workers applied for jobless benefits last week, bringing the total over the last seven weeks to 33.5 million.

“I think you’re going to see a bounce-back from a low standpoint,” said Mnuchin, speaking on “Fox News Sunday.”

But the director of the University of Washington institute that created a White House-endorsed coronaviru­s model said states’ moves to reopen businesses “will translate into more cases and deaths in 10 days from now.” Dr. Christophe­r Murray of the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation said states where cases and deaths are going up more than expected include Illinois, Arizona, Florida and California.

Across Europe, many nations were easing lockdowns even as they prepared to clamp down on any new infections.

Germany, which managed to push new infections below 1,000 daily before deciding to loosen restrictio­ns, has seen regional spikes in cases linked to slaughterh­ouses and nursing homes. Health officials say the number of people each confirmed coronaviru­s patient infects rose above 1 again, reflecting a renewed increase in cases. The number must be below 1 for outbreaks to decline. German officials expressed concerns about the growing number of large demonstrat­ions, including one in the southweste­rn city of Stuttgart that drew thousands. Police in Berlin stepped in Saturday after hundreds of people failed to respect social distancing measures at anti-lockdown rallies.

Later Sunday, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was expected to announce a 14-day quarantine for all travelers coming to the U.K., except those from Ireland. His Conservati­ve government was criticized for being slow to react to the pandemic, but after falling ill with the virus himself, Johnson has taken a tougher line.

Aviation and travel industry groups already have protested the expected measures as devastatin­g to the British economy.

France, which has a similar number of infections as Germany but a far higher death toll at over 26,300, is letting some younger students go back to school Monday after almost two months out. Attendance won’t be compulsory right away, allowing parents to decide the safety.

With tourism a major industry in Italy, hotel owners, tour guides, beach resorts and others who depend heavily on the summer season are pressing to know when citizens can travel across the country. In a newspaper interview, Premier Giuseppe Conte promised that the restrictio­n on inter-regional movement would be lifted, but only after authoritie­s better determine how the virus outbreak evolves.

Residents in some Spanish regions will be able to enjoy limited seating at bars, restaurant­s and other public places Monday, but Madrid and Barcelona, the country’s largest cities, will stay shut down. Spain reported 143 new deaths from the virus, the lowest daily increase since March 19.

Russia, in contrast, is still reporting rising infections. Figures on Sunday recorded 11,012 new cases, the highest one-day tally yet, for a total of nearly 210,000 cases and 1,915 reported deaths. Russian officials attribute the sharp rise in part to increased testing, but health experts say Russia’s coronaviru­s data has been significan­tly underrepor­ted.

China reported 14 new cases Sunday, its first double-digit rise in 10 days. Eleven of 12 domestic infections were in the northeaste­rn province of Jilin, prompting authoritie­s to raise the threat level in one of its counties, Shulan, to high risk, just days after downgradin­g all regions to low risk.

Authoritie­s said the Shulan outbreak originated with a 45-year-old woman who had no recent travel or exposure history but spread it to her husband, three sisters and other relatives. Train services in the county were suspended.

“Epidemic control and prevention is a serious and complicate­d matter, and local authoritie­s should never be overly optimistic, war-weary or off-guard,” said Jilin Communist Party secretary Bayin Chaolu.

Jilin also shares a border with North Korea, which insists it has no cases, much to the disbelief of internatio­nal health authoritie­s.

South Korea reported 34 more cases as new infections linked to nightclubs threaten its hard-won gains against the virus. It was the first time that South Korea’s daily infections were above 30 in about a month.

The U.S. has seen 1.3 million infections and nearly 80,000 deaths — the most in the world by far, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

Worldwide, 4 million people have been reported infected and nearly 280,000 have died, according to Johns Hopkins.

 ?? AIJAZ RAHI/AP ?? A stranded Kashmiri girl anxiously looks at officials checking documents Sunday in Bangalore, India.
AIJAZ RAHI/AP A stranded Kashmiri girl anxiously looks at officials checking documents Sunday in Bangalore, India.

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