ROME (Reuters) – The death toll from an outbreak of coronavirus in Italy climbed by 756 to 10,779, the Civil Protection Agency said on Sunday, the second successive fall in the daily rate.

The number of fatalities, by far the highest of any country in the world, account for more than a third of all deaths from the infectious virus worldwide.

Italy’s largest daily toll was registered on Friday, when 919 people died. There were 889 deaths on Saturday.

The total number of confirmed cases in Italy rose on Sunday to 97,689 from a previous 92,472, the lowest daily rise in new cases since Wednesday.

Of those infected nationwide, 13,030 had fully recovered on Sunday, compared to 12,384 the day before. There were 3,906 people in intensive care, up from the previous 3,856.

Lombardy, the hardest hit Italian region, reported a rise in deaths of around 416 on Sunday.

More than 662,700 people have been infected by the novel coronavirus across the world and 30,751 have died, according to a Reuters tally.

Reporting by Giulia Segreti

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-italy-tally-idUSKBN21G0PT

The mayor rejected criticism that his response has been behind the curve, adding that if the country had the testing it needed, “this could have been a different reality.”

“Other than that concern, a travel advisory isn’t something I’m going to fixate on,” de Blasio added. “I want to know when we’re going to get the ventilators, the PPEs [personal protective equipment] and the doctors and the nurses to save lives here in New York that would be lost otherwise, because that’s the standard.”

The city has enough supplies until April 5, with the exception of ventilators, he said. De Blasio also requested more doctors, nurses and military personnel by that deadline.

“We’re talking about a sharp escalation ahead,” the mayor said. “We’ve got almost 30,000 cases now, over 500 deaths already. We are over a quarter of the nation’s cases here in New York City.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/03/29/de-blasio-downplays-cdc-travel-advisory-154162

Get all the latest news on coronavirus and more delivered daily to your inbox. Sign up here.

NBC News anchor Chuck Todd raised eyebrows Sunday morning when he asked if President Trump had “blood on his hands” for his delayed response to the coronavirus outbreak.

During an interview with former Vice President Joe Biden, Todd pointed to the Democrat’s campaign messaging on the pandemic, which says a failure to take aggressive action “could cost lives.”

“Do you think there is blood on the president’s hands considering the slow response?” Todd asked. “Or is that too harsh of a criticism?”

Even Biden, who has been critical of the president throughout the crisis, thought the question was “a little too harsh.”

TRUMP SCOLDS ABC NEWS REPORTER DURING TENSE EXCHANGE AT WHITE HOUSE PRESSER: ‘DON’T BE A CUTIE PIE’

“I think that’s a little too harsh,” he said. “I think … he should stop thinking out loud and start thinking deeply. … He should listen to the health experts. He should listen to his economists.”

Biden added that there should be “laser focus” on implementing the massive financial relief bill passed by Congress to help struggling businesses and families.

The “Meet the Press” moderator faced backlash on social media for asking the question on the long-running Sunday morning show.

“Tim Russert would never ask a question like this. Even Joe Biden didn’t take the bait to assist in a viral moment attempt,” The Hill media reporter Joe Concha said, referring to Todd’s “Meet The Press” predecessor.

Concha added: “Chuck Todd served as a moderator of an NBC News debate on Feb 19, which was more than two weeks after President Trump suspended travel from China. Number of questions Todd asked any of the candidates about Coronavirus? Zero.”

Todd served as a moderator at the two-hour MSNBC/NBC News Democratic debate last month, where there was no mention of the ongoing virus outbreak.

CNN CRITICIZED AFTER GRAPHIC WRONGLY STATES THAT TRUMP WAS ‘INCORRECT’ ABOUT US VIRUS TESTING CLAIM

Others also piled on the NBC News anchor over his exchange with Biden.

“Infuriating, Rage-inducing media gaslighting,” Turning Point USA chief creative officer Benny Johnson said.

GOP rapid response director Steve Guest called Todd “completely unhinged” over the question.

“When Chuck Todd’s attacks on @realDonaldTrump are too much for even Biden, you got a problem,” Guest said.

CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

This isn’t the first time Todd’s commentary landed him in hot water. Last month, the MSNBC anchor was slammed after suggesting that supporters of Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., were part of a  “digital brownshirt brigade.”

Those remarks were later condemned by the Anti-Defamation League.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/nbc-news-chuck-todd-trump-blood-on-his-hands

Italy reported 756 new coronavirus deaths on Sunday taking the total number of fatalities to 10,779 as it continues to pay the heaviest price in the world from the contagion.

Spain’s health ministry announced 838 new coronavirus deaths, marking the country’s highest daily jump in fatalities and bringing its total to 6,528.

More:

In New York, the death toll surged by 237 in 24 hours, and the state announced 7,195 new cases.

Worldwide, the number of cases has reached more than 685,000. Some 145,000 people have recovered, while more than 32,000 have died. 

Here are the latest updates:

Sunday, March 29

17:36 GMT – UAE reports 102 new cases: local media

The United Arab Emirates reported one new coronavirus death and 102 new positive cases, bringing the total number of cases to 570, local media outlet Gulf News reported.

The gulf nation has so far reported a total of 

17:26 GMT – India railway carriages become isolation wards amid virus outbreak

Indian authorities have been converting train coaches into isolation wards in preparation for a possible surge in new coronavirus cases. 

The Indian railways minister announced the initiative on Saturday, with local media reporting the government plans to convert 170 coaches into wards every week.

The preparations come as the country continues its a 21-day lockdown to combat the spread of the new virus, which has infected at least 987 people and killed 25 in the country.


17:15 GMT – Ireland reports 10 more coronavirus deaths to bring total to 46

Ten more patients have died from COVID-19 infections in Ireland to bring the total death toll to 46, the Department of Health said.

It confirmed 200 new confirmed cases for a total of 2,615.

16:45 GMT – New York state coronavirus deaths increase by 237 in past day

The number of deaths from the coronavirus in New York state increased by 237 over the past 24 hours, reaching a total of 965 since the outbreak began, Governor Andrew Cuomo said.

The state also reported 7,195 new confirmed coronavirus cases in the past day for a total of 59,513, Cuomo told a news conference. Another 1,175 people were hospitalised in the past day, increasing the total to more than 8,500 hospitalisations in the state, including more than 2,000 in intensive care. New York has been the most affected US state. 

16:35 GMT – UK life may not be normal for six months or longer: official

Britain’s deputy chief medical officer warned life may not return to normal for six months or more, as the country battles the coronavirus outbreak.

Jenny Harries said the current lockdown would be reviewed every three weeks, warning if the measures were lifted too quickly, the virus could surge once again.

More:

16:23 GMT – Turkey’s coronavirus deaths up to 131 with 1,815 new cases

Turkey’s deaths from the coronavirus increased by 23 to 131 as the number of confirmed cases rose by 1,815 to 9,217, Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said.

Some 105 patients have recovered so far.

The minister added on Twitter that 9,982 tests had been conducted in the last 24 hours, bringing the total number of tests carried out in Turkey to 65,446 since the outbreak began.

16:20 GMT – Saudi seizes 5 million hoarded masks as death toll doubles

Saudi authorities seized more than five million medical masks that were illegally stockpiled amid the coronavirus outbreak..

The commerce ministry seized 1.17 million masks from a private store in Hail, northwest of the capital, after authorities Wednesday confiscated more than four million masks stored in a facility in the western city of Jeddah in violation of commercial regulations, the official Saudi Press Agency reported. 

The ministry said people behind such activities would be prosecuted, and the confiscated masks would be redistributed to the open market.

16:16 GMT – Italy coronavirus deaths rise by 756, total death toll to 10,779

The death toll from an outbreak of coronavirus in Italy climbed by 756 to 10,779, the Civil Protection Agency said, the second successive fall in the daily rate.

The number of fatalities, by far the highest of any country in the world, account for more than one-third of all deaths from the infectious virus worldwide.

Italy’s largest daily toll was registered on Friday when 919 people died. There were 889 deaths on Saturday.


16:09 GMT – Netherlands recalls defective masks imported from China

Dutch officials have recalled tens of thousands of masks imported from China and distributed to hospitals battling the coronavirus outbreak because they do not meet quality standards.  

They received a delivery of masks from a Chinese manufacturer on March 21, the health ministry said in a statement.

The masks did not meet their standards when they were inspected. Part of the shipment had already been distributed to health professionals, the statement said.

 Read more here.

15:44 GMT – Four in 10 people worldwide confined in some form

More than 3.38 billion people worldwide have been asked or ordered to follow confinement measures in the fight against COVID-19, according to an AFP news agency database.

That represents around 43 percent of the total world population, which is 7.79 billion people according to a United Nations count in 2020.

The Chinese province Hubei and its capital city Wuhan, the first epicentre of the novel coronavirus, were the first to introduce confinement measures at the end of January.


15:24 GMT – Syria reports first death from coronavirus

Syria’s Health Ministry reported its first death due to Covid-19.

A woman died soon after she was admitted to a hospital where a test confirmed she had been infected with the novel coronavirus,  the ministry added in a statement.

Meanwhile, the Syrian government banned movement between provinces, from late Tuesday until April 16, as a precautionary measure to prevent the spread of the virus.

15:15 GMT – Plane catches fire on takeoff at Philippine airport, eight dead

A Japan-bound plane caught fire on takeoff at Manila airport in the Philippines, killing all eight people on board, airport authorities said.

The Westwind aircraft was headed for Haneda airport on a medical evacuation mission carrying six Filipino crew members and two passengers, an American and a Canadian, authorities said without naming any of them.

Firefighters rushed to the end of the runway where the aircraft was engulfed in flames, dousing it with chemical foam, an airport authority statement said.

Most passenger aircraft at the airport have been grounded for weeks since the government put Manila and the rest of the main Philippine island of Luzon on quarantine to fight the spread of the novel coronavirus.

15:01 GMT – Saudi Arabia expands lockdown as coronavirus death toll doubles

Saudi Arabia halted entry and exit into Jeddah governorate, expanding lockdown rules as it reported four new deaths from a coronavirus outbreak that continues to spread in the region despite drastic measures to contain it.

The Saudi health ministry said four more foreign residents, in Jeddah and Medina, had died from the virus, taking the total to eight.

The kingdom confirmed 96 new infections to raise its tally to 1,299, the highest among Gulf Arab states.


14:47 GMT – Modi seeks ‘forgiveness’ from India’s poor over COVID-19 lockdown

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has asked the nation’s poor for forgiveness, as the economic and human toll from his 21-day nationwide lockdown deepens and criticism mounts over a lack of adequate planning ahead of the decision.

“I apologise for taking these harsh steps that have caused difficulties in your lives, especially the poor people,” Modi said in his monthly address broadcast on state radio.

Read more here

14:36 GMT – Areas in Pakistan capital disinfected after coronavirus cases reported

Officials sprayed disinfectant in a suburb of Pakistan’s capital Islamabad where some cases of the new coronavirus have been identified.

All points of entry to the city have been cordoned off by police, and the military has been deployed to enforce checkpoints.

Federal health authorities in Pakistan have reported that the number of people testing positive for the new virus is increasing. 

14:22 GMT – Fauci says coronavirus deaths in US could top 100,000

The United States government’s foremost infection disease expert says the country could experience more than 100,000 deaths and millions of infections from the coronavirus pandemic.

Dr Anthony Fauci, speaking on CNN’s State of the Union on Sunday, offered his prognosis as the federal government weighs rolling back guidelines on social distancing in areas that have not been hard-hit by the outbreak at the conclusion of the nationwide 15-day effort to slow the spread of the virus.

“I would say between 100,000 and 200,000 cases,” he said, correcting himself to say he meant deaths. “We’re going to have millions of cases.”

But he added, “I don’t want to be held to that” because the pandemic is “such a moving target”.

 Read more here

More:

14:05 GMT – Italy to extend lockdown beyond April 3: minister

Italy’s government will “inevitably” extend beyond April 3 the containment measures it had approved to stem the coronavirus outbreak in the country, the regional affairs minister said.

Italy has suffered the most deaths from the virus epidemic and was the first Western country to introduce severe restrictions on movement after uncovering the outbreak just over five weeks ago.

The government has since increasingly tightened them and these were initially expected to be softened from next Friday. “The measures that were due on April 3 will inevitably be extended,” Francesco Boccia said in an interview with SkyTG24.


13:48 GMT – Over one hundred new coronavirus cases reported in Pakistan

Pakistan’s coronavirus infections continued to increase with the addition of 121 new cases. The South Asian nation now has 1,526 cases of the coronavirus.

Thirteen people have died so far of the Covid-19 disease it can cause, according to Health Minister Zafar Mirza.

Mirza said that 71 per cent of coronavirus cases in Pakistan are imported, mainly pilgrims who returned from Iran.

13:29 GMT – UK coronavirus death toll rises to 1,228 people

The number of people who have died after testing positive for coronavirus in the United Kingdom rose to 1,228, according to figures released on Sunday, an increase of 209.

The previous increase saw the death toll rise by 260 people.

13:12 GMT – Swiss govt says 257 dead from coronavirus

The Swiss death toll from coronavirus has reached 257, the country’s public health agency said, up from 235 people the previous day.

The number of confirmed cases also increased to 14,336 from 13,213 on Saturday, it said.




Hello, this is Usaid Siddiqui in Doha taking over from my colleague Ramy Allahoum.


12:50 GMT – Saudi toll double to eight 

Saudi Arabia’s death toll from the coronavirus doubled to eight after four died overnight, according to a health ministry spokesman.

The kingdom reported 96 new cases, bringing the total number of infections to 1,299, the highest among Arab Gulf countries.

12:30 GMT – Dutch coronavirus cases surpass 10,000 

The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in the Netherlands surged past the 10,000 mark, health authorities said, adding that deaths and hospitalisations were waning. 

The Netherlands’ National Institute for Health (RIVM) said confirmed cases rose by 1,104 to 10,866, an 11% increase. There were 132 new deaths, bringing the total number of fatalities to 771.

“Just as in the preceding days, the number of hospitalized patients and the number of deaths are increasing less quickly than would have been expected without measures,” the RIVM said.

But because health authorities were mostly testing the very sick and healthcare workers for the virus, the real number of infections is likely to be far higher, the RIVM said.

11:50 GMT – Coronavirus tests credibility, utility of EU: French minister 

The European Union’s response to the coronavirus outbreak will determine the bloc’s credibility and utility, Amelie de Montchalin, France’s European Affairs minister, has warned.

“If Europe is just a single market when times are good, then it has no sense,” de Montchalin told France Inter radio, warning that the continent’s far-right parties stand to gain the most if member states failed to coordinate efforts. 

11:40 GMT – Pope Francis backs UN chief’s call for global ceasefire 

Pope Francis has backed calls by United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres for a global ceasefire in order to better deal with the coronavirus pandemic.

Speaking at his weekly blessing, Francis appealed to everyone to “stop every form of bellicose hostility and to favour the creation of corridors for humanitarian help, diplomatic efforts and attention to those who find themselves in situations of great vulnerability”.

11:30 GMT – Switzerland reports 22 deaths, 1,123 new infections

The Swiss death toll from coronavirus reached 257 up from 235 people the previous day, according to the country’s public health agency.

It said infections rose by 1,123 to 14,336.

11:15 GMT – Philippines reports 343 new cases, three deaths 

The Philippine health ministry announced 343 new coronavirus cases in what is the biggest overnight jump in infections to date. Three additional fatalities raised the death toll to 71.

The country of some 104 million people registered 1,418 infections while 42 patients recovered.


10:55 GMT – Malaysia announces 150 new cases, seven deaths 

Malaysia has confirmed 150 new coronavirus cases, making it the southeast Asian countries with the most infections at 2,470.

Fatalities meanwhile rose by seven to 34, according to the health ministry.

10:50 GMT – Qatar Airways to need state support

Qatar Airways, one of the few airlines maintaining scheduled commercial passenger services, will continue to fly, Chief Executive Akbar al-Baker said in an interview, but warned that the carrier could soon run out of cash and seek state support.

“We will surely go to our government eventually,” Baker told Reuters news agency, saying the company had enough cash to sustain operations for a “very short period”.

Over the next two weeks, Qatar Airways expects to operate 1,800 flights. Some of flights have had 50 percent occupancy or less and if the company fills 45 percent of seats on flights over the next two weeks it will carry about 250,000 passengers.

“We have received many requests from governments all over the world, embassies in certain countries, requesting Qatar Airways not to stop flying,” Baker said. “We will fly as long as it is necessary and we have requests to get stranded people to their homes, provided the airspace is open and the airports are open.”

Watch the video below to find out more about the airline industry’s woes amid the pandemic.


10:20 GMT – Indonesia cases rise by 130 to 1,285 

Indonesia has announced 130 new coronavirus cases, bringing to total number of infections to 1,285. The death toll meanwhile rose to 144 from 132 the previous day, according to Achmad Yurianto, a health ministry official. 

Yurianto added that more than 6,500 people had been tested across the country.

09:55 GMT – Deadliest day for Spain

Spain’s coronavirus death toll rose by 838 cases overnight to 6,528, according to the health ministry. 

On Saturday, the country had reported 832 new deaths.

The total number of those infected rose to 78,797 from 72,248 on Saturday.

09:40 GMT – UK gov’t ‘very concerned’ after cases surge past 1,000 mark 

The British government is “very concerned” following the latest figures which show more than 1,000 people had died after testing positive for coronavirus, senior minister Michael Gove said on Sunday.

“Naturally we are very concerned and our thoughts and prayers are with the families of all those who have lost loved-ones in the last few days,” he told Sky News.


09:35 GMT – China worried imported cases could lead to second wave

A spokesperson for the Chinese health authority has expressed concern about the possibility of imported cases leading to a second wave of infections.

“Chinese already has an accumulated total of 693 cases entering from overseas, which means the possibility of a new round of infections remains relatively big,” said Mi Geng of the National Health Commission. 

The commission reported 45 new COVID-19 cases on the mainland, of which all but one were imported by travelers from overseas.

09:15 GMT – German cases reach 52,547, total deaths 389

The total number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Germany has reached 52,547 after 3,965 people tested positive overnight, according to the Robert Koch Institute for infectious diseases’ latest tally.

Meanwhile, the death toll rose to 389 from 325 the previous day.


08:45 GMT – Worry over COVID-19 spreading in African refugee camps 

Scary, distressing, catastrophic: A bleak assessment by experts, humanitarians and epidemiologists on what a severe coronavirus outbreak would look like in countries across Africa sheltering millions of refugees and other vulnerable people.

As the rapidly spreading virus gains ground, aid groups warn of the potentially disastrous consequences of a major outbreak of COVID-19, the highly infectious respiratory disease caused by the new coronavirus, in places where healthcare systems are already strained and not easily accessible to large segments of the population.

Read more here.  

08:30 GMT –  ‘Things could get worse before they get better’: UK’s Johnson

In a letter being sent out to households across the country, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the government was contemplating further measures to curb the spread of the coronavirus. 

“We will not hesitate to go further if that is what the scientific and medical advice tells us we must do,” wrote Johnson, who is working remotely after testing positive for the virus. 

“It’s important for me to level with you – we know things will get worse before they get better,” the letter reads.

“But we are making the right preparations, and the more we all follow the rules, the fewer lives will be lost and the sooner life can return to normal.”


08:15 GMT – Saudi shuts entry and exit into Jeddah

Saudi Arabia has shut down entry and exit into the Jeddah governorate and brought forward a curfew there to begin at 3 pm local time, the official Saudi Press Agency said.

The same measures were applied to Riyadh, Mecca and Medina last week.

08:00 GMT – Mexico tells residents to stay home for a month 

Hugo Lopez-Gatell, Mexico’s deputy health minister, asked all residents in the country to stay at home for a month to reduce the spread of the coronavirus.



“This is our last chance. To the residents of Mexico, we say #StayHome,” he wrote on Twitter.

There are 848 confirmed cases in the country. Some 16 people have died so far.

07:40 GMT – Kenyans brace for economic hardship

Like many others in Kenya’s capital, Nairobi, Gerrard Ogut has decided to send his family to his village in the countryside for the foreseeable future.

“They’re safer there,” says Ogut, a father of three. Besides, “Life in the city just got unbearably tougher.”

Indeed, these are hard times for many Kenyans – not least because of the fear of contracting the new coronavirus, for which there is no vaccine or known treatment regimen, but also due to the crushing blow the pandemic could deliver on East Africa’s largest economy.

Read Pauline Mpungu’s story from Nairobi here.


This is Ramy Allahoum in Doha, taking over the live blog from my colleague Zaheena Rasheed.


07:15 GMT – Tokyo confirms 68 new cases in biggest jump yet 

The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Japan rose by 68 overnight, a record daily increase which brings the total number of infections to more than 1,700, public broadcaster NHK reported.

Japan has reported 55 deaths, excluding those from a cruise ship quarantined last month, according to NHK.


07:00 GMT – Myanmar temporarily suspends entry visas

Myanmar suspended issuing entry visas starting on Sunday as part of efforts to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

The foreign ministry said diplomats, UN officials and ship and airline staff will be exempted from the measure which will go into effect on Sunday and last until late April.

Health authorities have so far reported five cases of COVID-19 in Myanmar.

06:50 GMT – Australia boosts funding to tackle domestic violence

Australia’s Prime Minister Scott Morrison has allocated 150 million Australian dollars ($100m) in funding to support people “experiencing domestic, family and sexual violence due to the fallout from the coronavirus”.

In a statement, Morrison said Google was seeing a 75 percent increase in searches for domestic violence help – the highest in the past five years – and the new funds would be spent on counselling support for both victims and abusers.

The money is part of an AU$1.1bn ($700m) package to deal with the effects of the health and economic crisis caused by the coronavirus epidemic. It includes AU$669m ($413m) to be spent on expanding telehealth services and an initial AU$74m ($48m) will be spent on supporting the mental health of all Australians, the statement said.

06:20 GMT – Venezuela’s Guaido calls for emergency government

Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido called for the creation of a “national emergency government” to fight the spread of the coronavirus in the crisis-wracked country.

“Given the situation in Venezuela, which is going to worsen with the pandemic, today I present to the country the need to form a national emergency government,” said Guaido, who had declared himself interim president of the South American country last year following a disputed election in 2018.

The unity government would include representatives from parties across the political divide, “but for obvious reasons cannot be led by” President Nicolas Maduro, Guaido said in a series of tweets.



05:15 GMT – Thailand reports 143 new cases and one death 

Thailand recorded 143 new coronavirus infections and one death on Sunday, Reuters news agency said, citing a spokesman for the Thai government. 

The latest victim was a 68-year-old man from Nonthaburi province who had attended a crowded boxing match in Bangkok where there had been a cluster of infections, according to Taweesin Wisanuyothin. 

The new figures bring the total number of cases and deaths since the beginning of the outbreak in Thailand to 1,338 and seven, respectively. 

04:00 GMT – As cases continue to slow in China, Wuhan reopens rail stations

China’s National Health Commission reported 45 new COVID-19 cases on the mainland, of which all but one were imported by travellers from overseas. 

There were five new deaths in Wuhan, the city that was once at the epicentre of China’s outbreak. Life is gradually returning to normal in the city, which has only reported one new case in the past 10 days, according to state media. 

Wuhan’s subway and railway stations reopened on Saturday after two months of suspension, and a China- Europe cargo train departed Wuhan for Germany, carrying medical supplies.

Mainland China has recorded 81,439 confirmed cases and a total of 3,300 deaths throughout the outbreak.


03:40 GMT – Canadian PM’s wife recovers from COVID-19 

Sophie Gregoire Trudeau said she has received a “clear bill of health” two weeks after testing positive for COVID-19. 

“It’s all good for me now,” she said in a video posted on Instagram. “We are going through some really rough times, and we are going to stick through it together.” 

03:25 GMT – CDC issues travel advisory for New York area

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) urged residents of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut states to “refrain from non-essential domestic travel for 14 days effective immediately”. 

The travel warning did not apply to employees of critical infrastructure industries, including trucking, public health professionals, financial services and food supply, the agency said on its website. 

02:45 GMT – New Zealand confirms first coronavirus death 

New Zealand reported its first death from COVID-19, prompting Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern to renew calls on the public to “stay at home, break the chain and save lives”. 

The woman who died was a 70-year-old who had initially been diagnosed with influenza. Some 21 staff who were involved in the patient’s care were now in self-isolation, according to a statement by the health ministry.

New Zealand recorded 60 new infections in the past 24 hours, bringing the number of confirmed cases to 476. 

01:15 GMT – South Korea reports 105 new cases, total at 9,583

Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 105 new cases of COVID-19, bringing the total number of infections throughout the outbreak in the country to 9,583.

A total of 5,033 people have fully recovered, while the death toll was 152, the public health agency said.

00:50 GMT – Trump to issue ‘strong travel advisory’ for New York region

Trump said he will not impose a quarantine on the states of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, but would instead issue a “strong travel advisory” for the region.

In a Twitter post, Trump said he made the decision after consulting with the White House taskforce leading the federal response and the governors of the three affected states.

He wrote: “I have asked the @CDCgov to issue a strong Travel Advisory, to be administered by the Governors, in consultation with the Federal Government. A quarantine will not be necessary.”

00:40 GMT – Coronavirus deaths surge past 2,000 in US

The death toll from coronavirus infections in the US doubled in two days, surging past 2,000, according to a tally by the Johns Hopkins University.  

The US now ranks sixth in deaths, after Italy, Spain, China, Iran and France.

The state of Rhode Island announced its first two deaths from the coronavirus, leaving just three states with zero reported deaths: Hawaii, West Virginia and Wyoming.



00:33 GMT – New York governor slams quarantine idea as ‘anti-American’

Andrew Cuomo slammed Trump’s suggestion of a quarantine in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, saying such a lockdown would amount to “a federal declaration of war”.

If you start walling off areas all across the country, it would be totally bizarre, counterproductive, anti-American, anti-social,” the governor of New York told CNN, calling the idea “preposterous” and illegal. 

Cuomo added that roping off the nation’s financial capital could “paralyse the economy” at a time Trump has called for measures to get the economy back on track.  


Hello, I’m Zaheena Rasheed in Male, Maldives, with Al Jazeera’s continuing coverage of the coronavirus pandemic.

Read all the updates from yesterday, March 28, here

Source Article from https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/03/trump-weighs-coronavirus-lockdown-york-live-updates-200328234401911.html

A hospital ship was racing for New York’s harbor Sunday as federal health officials issued a travel advisoryfor the region and the U.S. death toll from the coronavirus pandemic climbed above 2,000.

The U.S. death total has doubled in two days.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, citing “extensive community transmission” of COVID-19 in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, late Saturday urged residents to refrain from non-essential travel for 14 days effective immediately. The advisory does not apply to employees of critical infrastructure industries such as trucking, public health professionals, financial services and food supply.

“Just a little bit of separation can stop a fire from spreading,” CDC Director Dr. Robert Redfield said, 

The U.S. counted more than 124,000 cases of coronavirus early Sunday, with almost 2,200 deaths, according to the Johns Hopkins University data dashboard. More confirmations are expected as the U.S. ramps up testing. 

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2020/03/29/coronavirus-update-donald-trump-cdc-travel-advisory-nypd-deaths/2918869001/

Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., talks about the coronavirus stimulus bill on Wednesday in one of several speeches about the crisis streamed on his campaign website.

Handout/berniesanders.com via Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Handout/berniesanders.com via Getty Images

Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., talks about the coronavirus stimulus bill on Wednesday in one of several speeches about the crisis streamed on his campaign website.

Handout/berniesanders.com via Getty Images

After Bernie Sanders suffered three straight weeks of big losses across the country, the Vermont Senator returned home to “assess his campaign.”

It appeared, in that moment, that Sanders’ campaign was all but over. He trailed former Vice President Joe Biden by about 300 delegates and was facing calls to drop out. The conventional wisdom in political circles was that Biden would effectively wrap up the nomination by the end of March.

But the coronavirus outbreak has largely put the presidential race on hold, with most upcoming primaries postponed and all in-person campaigning cancelled. The immediate political focus has shifted to stopping the pandemic and offering financial relief to struggling Americans. And in this moment, Sanders voice and vision seem to have had a resurgence.

His allies and supporters are convinced that, as the crisis has unfolded and the country suffers from record unemployment, the issues that the Vermont senator has long touted, like income inequality and “Medicare for All,” will force the country to have a reckoning about its financial and healthcare systems. In other words, they’re convinced the crisis is resuscitating Sanders’ agenda.

“The reality that so many people have healthcare attached to their jobs and how vulnerable that makes them is showing its face right now,” said Ana Maria Archila, the co-executive director of the Center for Popular Democracy, a coalition of progressive groups that endorsed Sanders. “I think many of his ideas, which were deemed radical just a few months ago, are now being promoted.”

As evidence, supporters of Sanders point to recent bills in Congress that include cash payments to individuals, expanded unemployment and paid sick time — all ideas, they note, that the senator has long championed.

They also point to a speech Sanders delivered from the Senate floor last week that went viral, in which he ripped into a group of conservative Republicans who were concerned that the roughly $2 trillion relief package Congress was set to pass might result in some low-income workers making more money because of expanded unemployment benefits.

But the senator’s critics suggest, despite the big speeches and viral videos, he was not as present on Capitol Hill as others. Some point to his former presidential rival Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who was key in shaping the corporate oversight portion of the bill. In fact, last weekend, Sanders skipped a vote in Congress to instead hold a virtual town hall from Vermont with members of the so-called “squad,” freshman Democratic Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib.

Still, Sanders has remained in a policy-making role in this moment and that gave him a spotlight that his primary opponent does not have.

Biden, who for most of his adult life was in some form of elected office, found himself in the strange situation of being somewhat powerless — no longer a senator and no longer a vice president. No media outlets took his virtual coronavirus speeches live, but they routinely turned to updates from Capitol Hill, where Congress was debating the largest rescue package in American history.

Campaigning against the virus

Outside of Congress, Sanders continues to hold virtual town halls and send emails to his supporters, but his message has shifted.

“In every classical facet of what a campaign does, we’ve basically moved away from that and become a coronavirus campaign,” said Faiz Shakir, Sanders’ campaign manager.

The campaign is not regularly contrasting with and critiquing Biden; instead, it is largely focused on educating people about the virus and the economic assistance available.

The campaign is no longer actively spending on advertising and diverting money that would otherwise fill its coffers.

“The fundraising that you associate with the campaign, raising for the candidate, has all suspended,” said Shakir. “All we’re raising for is groups who are doing front line work to help vulnerable communities; we’ve raised over $3 million.”

As for the Sanders candidacy itself, Shakir insists the senator is still reassessing his future.

“It’s gonna be a very steep road, I would not deny that for a moment,” Sanders told NPR’s Morning Edition a few days ago. At the same time he suggested that he would like to continue debating Biden, as the former vice president has said they’ve had enough debates.

Sanders supporters and allies do not know if he will stay in the race and fight until the last primary, now postponed to June 23, less than three weeks before the scheduled start of the Democratic National Convention.

Nor are they saying he should.

But they emphasize that the senator has more influence and power in this moment because he’s a presidential candidate.

“The campaign is a vehicle through which he can continue to engage people, so even for that reason alone the campaign is important,” said Archila.

Without a national campaign, Sanders’ megaphone wouldn’t be as loud — whether it’s for himself, his issues, or aiding the coronavirus crisis.

“It’s Sanders’ last stand in electoral politics,” said Barry Burden, director of the the elections research center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “He’s old enough that I don’t think anyone expects him to make another run for the presidency. He may be in his last term in the Senate or near it. Right now, he still has something of a national stage. Once he leaves the campaign that will be gone.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/03/29/822749003/facing-likely-defeat-bernie-sanders-campaign-found-a-new-cause

Get all the latest news on coronavirus and more delivered daily to your inbox.  Sign up here.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom has ordered a two-month delay on evictions for those who can’t pay their rent due to coronavirus, effective immediately.

Other states have taken similar action to protects renters who may be unable to work due to the health crisis, including New York, Michigan, Illinois, Louisiana and New Jersey.

CLICK HERE FOR FULL CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

Newsom’s executive order, enacted Friday, requires tenants to retain documentation and file a declaration, no more than seven days after rent is due, stating that they cannot pay due to the coronavirus.

TRUMP SAYS HUD WILL SUSPEND ‘ALL FORECLOSURES AND EVICTIONS’ AMID COVID-19 OUTBREAK

Newsom had previously authorized local governments to halt evictions, slow foreclosures and protect households against utility shutoffs. The new order builds off those steps, creating blanket protections for renters statewide.

“People shouldn’t lose or be forced out of their home because of the spread of COVID-19,” Newsom said. “Over the next few weeks, everyone will have to make sacrifices – but a place to live shouldn’t be one of them.”

While the order stops evictions, it does not prevent back-due rent, which will be due after the order is lifted.

RENT STRIKES ACROSS US DURING CORONAVIRUS COALESCING INTO MOVEMENT

The order is more restrictive than those of other states, such as New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s move to halt all evictions for 90 days.

With unemployment on the rise, many people across the nation have started to demand a rent strike, with movements growing in several states and across social media.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

The California order will remain in effect through May 31.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/california-declares-ban-on-evictions-for-60-days

Saudi Arabia’s air defences have intercepted two ballistic missiles above the kingdom’s capital, Riyadh, and the southern city of Jizan, according to a spokesman for the Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen.

Turki al-Malki, in a statement quoted by the Saudi Press Agency, blamed the foiled assaults on Yemen’s Houthi rebels and said the missiles were destroyed around 23:23 (20:23 GMT) on Saturday. 

More:

There was no immediate claim of responsibility, however. 

Al-Malki said the interception of the missiles had resulted in “debris scattering on some residential areas” in Riyadh and Jizan. 

The SPA later said “two civilians were slightly injured due to the falling of the intercepted missile’s debris as it exploded in mid-air over residential districts”. Residents in Riyadh reported at least three blasts late on Saturday night, followed by emergency vehicle sirens in some northern districts.

Saudi-owned Al-Arabiya television said US Patriot missile defence systems were used in the interception.

Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthis battling the Saudi-led coalition have launched hundreds of missiles and drones across the border, mostly at nearby military and civilian targets, but also at Riyadh.

The city is about 1,000 kilometres (620 miles) north of the border with Yemen, and the last attempted attack on the capital was in June 2018.


The latest missile attack comes after all parties in Yemen’s long conflict offered support on Thursday for the United Nations’ call for a ceasefire to protect civilians from the novel coronavirus pandemic. The call coincided with the fifth anniversary of Saudi Arabia’s intervention in Yemen’s civil war, at the helm of a military coalition supporting the internationally recognised government against the Houthi rebels.

In his statement, al-Malki said that firing missiles at this time by the Houthis and Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps showed the real threat the group, and the Iranian government supporting it, posed. 

He added: “This escalation by the Houthi militia does not reflect its announcement of acceptance of the ceasefire and de-escalation, nor any seriousness in engaging in confidence-building measures and reaching a comprehensive political solution with the Yemeni government to end the coup.”

The Saudi-led coalition intervened in Yemen’s civil war in 2015 to try to restore the internationally recognised government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, deposed by the Houthis in 2014. The conflict has killed more than 100,000 people, many by Saudi-led air raids. It has also created the world’s worst humanitarian crisis, leaving millions suffering from food and medical shortages.

The warring sides had earlier shown an interest in de-escalation, with a Saudi official saying in November that Riyadh had an “open channel” with the rebels with a goal of ending the war.

The Houthis also offered to halt all missile and drone attacks on Saudi Arabia after attacks on its oil installations last September, which were claimed by the armed group but widely blamed on Iran, despite its denials.

But those efforts seem to have unravelled. Observers say the rebels may have used the lull to bolster their military capabilities.

Sami Hamdi, editor-in-chief of the UK-based International Interest magazine, also blamed Saturday’s missile attack on the Houthis, calling it a “PR stunt” by the rebels aimed at “appearing stronger than they are”. 

Noting the Houthi support for a ceasefire, as well as an offer last week by the group to release Saudi captives in exchange for Palestinian Hamas members, Hamdi told Al Jazeera: “This is part of a PR offensive to win the wider Arab public opinion outside Yemen … They knew the missiles wouldn’t cause any damage to Riyadh. They knew the missiles would not cause any impact militarily against Saudi Arabia, but the aim is to show the world ‘Look how the Houthis are sending missiles towards the Saudis’.”

With the recent escalation in fighting in Yemen, more than 40,000 people have been displaced since January, adding to the roughly 3.6 million who have fled their homes since the war began.

A number of those fleeing in recent weeks, including women and children, escaped on foot, walking for days without food or water across open desert, according to a recent statement by the United Nations refugee agency.

Yemen’s broken healthcare system has not so far recorded a case of the COVID-19 illness, but aid groups have warned that when it does hit, the effect will be catastrophic in a country already regarded as facing the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

Saudi Arabia is scrambling to limit the spread of the disease at home. The kingdom’s health ministry has reported 1,203 coronavirus infections and four deaths from the disease so far.

Source Article from https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/03/rockets-intercepted-saudi-capital-riyadh-jazan-report-200328212702883.html

As the number of cases increases, the U.S. death toll nears 2,000.

Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XlL0_m675_4

In Atherton, the richest town in America for the past four years, according to Bloomberg, where the median household income tops $500,000, residents complained that construction workers were not complying with social distancing, ate lunch in groups, shared cellphones and congregated in front of food trucks, City Manager George Rodericks said. They also grumbled that workers’ vehicles blocked their right of way while residents were “trying to shelter in place and recreate in place,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2020/03/28/construction-lockdown-coronavirus/

In the capital, Delhi, thousands of migrants, including whole families, packed their pots, pans and blankets into rucksacks, some balancing small children on their shoulders as they walked along interstate highways. Some planned to walk hundreds of miles. But as they reached the Delhi border, many were beaten back by police.

“You fear the disease, living on the streets. But I fear hunger more, not corona,” said Papu, 32, who came to Delhi three weeks ago for work and was trying to get to his home in Saharanpur in the state of Uttar Pradesh, 125 miles away.

So far, 980 people have tested positive for the coronavirus in India, with 24 dead, according to officials.

India already had one of the world’s largest homeless populations, and the lockdown may have tripled it overnight, workers for nongovernmental organizations say. A 2011 government census put the number of homeless at 1.7 million, almost certainly a vast underestimate in this country of 1.3 billion.

The lockdown, which includes a ban on interstate travel, was announced with just four hours’ notice on Tuesday, leaving India’s enormous migrant population stranded in big cities, where jobs lure them in vast numbers from the countryside.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/29/world/coronavirus-news.html

Florida governor plans checkpoints to screen Louisianians, suspend vacation rentals as cases pass 4,000

When the number of coronavirus deaths reached 54 in Florida on Saturday, Gov. Ron DeSantis told the state’s surgeon general, Dr. Scott Rivkees, to get on the phone and send a public health alert to every Florida resident.

The message Rivkees texted Saturday afternoon was a repeat of the advisory he issued Wednesday, that people 65 and older, and those with underlying medical conditions, should stay home and avoid crowds, and everyone should practice “social distancing.”

By Saturday evening, the number of coronavirus cases in Florida stood at 4,038, more than a fivefold increase from a week ago, when the state reported 706 infections. The death count creeped up to 56.

The virus has been particularly fatal for those over the age of 65, with that group making up 89% of statewide deaths. Another 35% were between the ages of 55 and 74, while people younger made up 4% of the fatalities and those over 85 were 19% of deaths.

“Protect yourself. Now is not the time to go outside. Don’t get involved in any big crowds, use this time to protect yourself,” DeSantis said in a briefing live-streamed from his conference room in the Capitol.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/travel/news/2020/03/28/florida-coronavirus-cases-pass-4000-border-checkpoints-vacation-rentals-suspended/2934407001/

An American, a Swede and people from the UK and Netherlands are among the four who have died on the coronavirus-stricken Holland America cruise stuck off the coast of Panama, according to a new report.

A spokesman for the cruise company confirmed the nationalities of the deceased passengers Friday, as it sought port in Florida.

“We continue to work with the Panamanian authorities on approval to transit the Panama Canal for sailing to Fort Lauderdale,” spokesman Erik Elvejord told the Florida Sun-Sentinel.

The Zaandam has been searching for a port that will allow it to dock since Chile denied the ship entry on March 21, the day the cruise was scheduled to end.

Two passengers have tested positive for COVID-19 and another 138 are sick with flu-like symptoms, double the number from just three days ago.

The causes of the four deaths have not been reported. An announcement on board notified passengers Friday morning that one person died earlier in the week, two on Thursday and another overnight; all were “older guests,” the announcer said.

The cruise’s 1,243 passengers, including 305 Americans, were told to stay in their rooms starting last Sunday.

With wires

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2020/03/28/american-among-four-dead-on-coronavirus-stricken-cruise-in-panama/

The United States now leads the world in confirmed coronavirus cases, with more than 86,000 as of March 27. That exceeds the number of cases in China or Italy, both of which were once epicenters of the Covid-19 pandemic.

New York City is still the center of the coronavirus outbreak in the US, with 365 deaths so far, 85 of which occurred in just the past 24 hours. But other hot spots are emerging across the country, including in Louisiana and Michigan.

Hospitals and officials across the country are warning that vital medical supplies and equipment, including ventilators, are running out and are begging for help from the federal government — or, really, anyone who can help out. Yet President Donald Trump dismissed some of those pleas in an interview with Fox News’s Sean Hannity on Thursday night.

Meanwhile, Europe continues to grapple with its own coronavirus crisis: Spain on Thursday recorded its highest single-day death toll: 769 people. And British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Friday that he has tested positive for Covid-19.

Here’s what you need to know today about the latest coronavirus news.

The US leads the world on coronavirus, in the worst of all ways

As of Thursday, the United States now has the most confirmed coronavirus cases worldwide. The number stands at more than 86,000, but an increase is inevitable.

As Vox’s Kelsey Piper explains, this doesn’t mean the US has the worst outbreak in the world, and the country still doesn’t have as many cases per capita as others.

At the same time, though, these numbers likely don’t capture the full scope of the coronavirus crisis in the US, as the country is likely still under-testing in many parts of the country, and not everyone who has symptoms is being accounted for. Of course, this is also likely true of other countries, too, including Iran and China.

And the virus is still spreading around the globe.

New York says it needs tens of thousands of ventilators. Trump isn’t so sure.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has said in press conference after press conference that New York needs 30,000 ventilators to care for patients as the epidemic peaks in the coming weeks. Cuomo said this week that the state had procured 7,000, including 400 from the federal government — though Vice President Mike Pence later said that the federal government would be shipping an additional 4,000 ventilators to the state.

Still, that only brings the total to 11,000 — well short of what New York says it needs.

But President Donald Trump doesn’t agree. In an interview with Fox New’s Sean Hannity Thursday night, Trump suggested that the numbers didn’t add up.

“I have a feeling that a lot of the numbers that are being said in some areas are just bigger than they’re going to be,” he told Hannity. “I don’t believe you need 40,000 or 30,000 ventilators. You go into major hospitals sometimes, and they’ll have two ventilators. And now all of a sudden they’re saying, ‘Can we order 30,000 ventilators?’”

But some New York hospitals are already trying to mitigate potential shortages by doubling people up on a single ventilator. It’s still a relatively untested method — according to the New York Times, it was used in the wake of the 2017 Las Vegas mass shooting and has been tried in Italy in recent days. And it can’t work for every patient.

Cuomo also explained at a press conference Thursday that while non-coronavirus patients spend an average of three to four days on a ventilator, coronavirus patients typically need ventilator assistance much longer: between 11 to 21 days.

New York State already has nearly 38,000 cases as of March 27. As that number continues to grow, the equipment shortages will only become more acute.

Boris Johnson tests positive for coronavirus

In a video posted on Friday, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced that he had developed mild symptoms of Covid-19 — a fever and “persistent cough.” He took a test, and it came out positive.

“So I am working from home, I’m self-isolating and that’s entirely the right thing to do,” Johnson said. “But, be in no doubt, that I can continue, thanks to the wizardry of modern technology, to communicate with all my top team to lead the national fight back against coronavirus.”

Johnson’s diagnosis comes just days after the prime minister implemented strict stay-at-home measures Monday that shuttered businesses and limited gatherings to two or more people. The mandate is in place for at least three weeks.

The UK’s early coronavirus response faced widespread criticism, after the government balked on banning mass gatherings and closing schools, and even exposing a large portion of the British population to the virus to help establish “herd immunity.”

And some good news

You may remember “BBC Dad,” the South Korea expert who was on a live video chat with BBC News back in 2017 when his toddler adorably pranced into the room and interrupted his interview.

Well, now that so many of us are working from home thanks to the coronavirus, video interruptions of all sorts are a part of life now.

So the BBC Dad (whose real name is Robert Kelly) decided to appear on BBC News once again — this time, with his whole family joining him — to offer some insight on the coronavirus outbreak in South Korea, where the family lives, and on the challenges and joys of working from home with young children.

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/2020/3/27/21196790/coronavirus-update-us-cases-boris-johnson-trump-ventilators

Key developments in the global coronavirus outbreak today include:

Global death toll reaches 30,000

The number of coronavirus deaths around the world has reached 30,652, with confirmed cases passing 660,000, according to the Johns Hopkins University. To date, 139,415 have recovered.

Spain: all non-essential workers must stay home

The Spanish government has ordered all non-essential workers to stay at home for the next two weeks in an attempt to lower the spread of the coronavirus and reduce the pressure on the country’s healthcare system. It came after the head of Spain’s centre for health emergencies said that the country might be close to peaking in the number of cases of coronavirus.

Panama allows stranded cruise to pass

Panama’s government has said it will allow the Zaandam cruise ship to pass through the Panama Canal. The cruise ship has 130 people with flu-like symptoms, and four have died. At least two of those with symptoms are confirmed to have coronavirus. Previously, Panama’s authorities had not given approval to let the ship pass through the canal, leaving passengers stuck on board. No one from the ship will be allowed to disembark in Panama, but the passage will allow the ship to attempt to dock in Florida.

Northern Ireland to get tougher restrictions

Northern Ireland has announced a series of restrictive measures aimed at reducing the spread of coronavirus. Gatherings of more than two people have been banned, and anyone who can work from home must do so. The regulations also give the authorities the power to close certain premises and prohibit anyone from leaving home without a reasonable excuse. Authorities will have the power to enforce the measures, which came into force at 11pm GMT on Saturday.

French death toll passes 2,000

The coronavirus death toll in France has reached 2,317, with more than 38,000 cases. The official death tally is expected to jump next week, when authorities begin to include deaths in retirement homes, as well as just hospitals.

Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s prison leave extended

The British-Iranian aid worker who has been detained in Iran on spying charges has had her prison leave extended and her case put forward for clemency, her husband said. Richard Ratcliffe said his wife’s father had been told that her temporary release from Evin prison in Tehran would now continue until 18 April. The leave was originally granted in response to the spread of coronavirus in Tehran, with Zaghari-Ratcliffe reportedly suffering from symptoms of Covid-19 before her recovery earlier this month.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/mar/28/coronavirus-latest-march-at-a-glance

“Hi, my name is Gretchen Whitmer, and that governor is me,” she wrote. “I’ve asked repeatedly and respectfully for help. We need it. No more political attacks, just PPEs, ventilators, N95 masks, test kits. You said you stand with Michigan — prove it.”

Friday evening, hours before he signed the emergency order she’d repeatedly demanded, Trump gave the governor he previously refused to name a trademark nickname: Gretchen “Half” Whitmer.

Michigan has the fifth-most coronavirus cases of any state, with more than 3,600 confirmed cases and 92 deaths as of Saturday afternoon. The United States this week surpassed China to become the world leader in confirmed coronavirus cases.

Sen. Chris Murphy weighed in on the drama on Saturday, suggesting that Whitmer’s claim was akin to allegations made against Trump during his impeachment investigation that disbursement of aid was dependent upon personal favors being carried out for him.

“Michigan is the new Ukraine,” Murphy tweeted.

Republican governors, too, like Massachusetts’ Charlie Baker, have broken with Trump’s response to the crisis.

Baker, whose state was also granted an emergency declaration by the White House on Saturday, has said Massachusetts will not be “up and running” by Easter, bucking Trump’s previous suggestion that the country could loosen social distancing guidelines by April 12.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/03/28/trump-gretchen-whitmer-war-of-words-152759

Carl Chan was shopping at the San Francisco Premium Outlets when he covered his mouth to cough a little. A couple standing about 20 to 30 feet away from him stared in alarm. The woman turned and ran away.

Another time, he was walking down an Oakland street with a group of people when someone started coughing. It wasn’t Chan, but people turned around, glared at him and covered their mouth.

The dirty looks happened weeks ago, before California Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered the state’s 40 million residents to stay at home. Before President Donald Trump referred to the deadly COVID-19 as the “Chinese virus.” Before the coronavirus pandemic sent the country’s economy into a tailspin. And before it killed hundreds of Americans and infected thousands more.

“They look at me and think I’m some kind of virus,” said Chan, president of the Oakland Chinatown Chamber of Commerce. 

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2020/03/28/coronavirus-racism-asian-americans-report-fear-harassment-violence/2903745001/