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Coronavirus live news: global Covid-19 cases pass 13m as WHO warns against ‘shortcuts’ | World news

Brian Rodriguez, July 14, 2020





9.32pm EDT21:32

Mexico’s Health Ministry on Monday reported 4,685 new confirmed coronavirus infections and 485 additional fatalities, bringing the country’s totals to 304,435 cases and 35,491 deaths.

The government has said the real number of infected people is likely significantly higher than the confirmed cases.

Vendors are pictured at Central de Abastos, one of the world’s largest wholesale market complexes, as the coronavirus outbreak continues in Mexico City, Mexico 13 July 2020.

Vendors are pictured at Central de Abastos, one of the world’s largest wholesale market complexes, as the coronavirus outbreak continues in Mexico City, Mexico 13 July 2020. Photograph: Carlos Jasso/Reuters





9.15pm EDT21:15

Charlotte Graham-McLay reports for the Guardian:

International arrivals to New Zealand in May fell to their lowest in 61 years as stringent border restrictions that bar anyone except New Zealanders, their families, and certain essential workers from entering the country took hold.

There were 5,600 arrivals to New Zealand in May, according to the country’s statistics agency, compared to nearly 1m last May.

It’s the lowest number since May 1959, when 4,700 people arrived in New Zealand.
May was the second month of New Zealand’s border closure, which was implemented to quell the spread of Covid-19. The country has no known community transmission and 25 active cases – all of them returning travellers in government-managed quarantine.

No one is in hospital with the virus. There have been 1,195 total confirmed cases of the coronavirus in New Zealand, with 22 deaths.






9.04pm EDT21:04

California orders closure of bars and indoor operations of restaurants and theaters

California’s governor has ordered all bars to close statewide and all restaurants, movie theaters and museums to halt indoor operations, in a dramatic rolling back of reopening efforts as coronavirus cases continue to surge.

In addition to the statewide closures, the 30 counties on the state’s monitoring list must also shut down indoor operations at places of worship, fitness centers, hair salons, barbershops and malls.

California is contending with a rapidly growing caseload; the state has seen an average of 8,211 daily cases over the past week, an uptick from the 7,876 average from the week before. The positivity rate has increased to 7.4%, up from 6.1% a few weeks prior.

“It’s incumbent on all of us to recognize, soberly, that Covid-19 is not going away anytime soon,” said Gavin Newsom, California’s governor.






8.51pm EDT20:51

Daniel Hurst

Daniel Hurst

Australian agricultural exporters are reassessing their dependence on the China market after previously viewing financial benefits of such trade as being worth the risk, a senior public servant has said.

A range of agricultural groups and industry bodies will today give evidence to a parliamentary inquiry looking into the need to diversify Australia’s trade and investment profile.The Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment has told the inquiry the impact of Covid-19 had “highlighted the vulnerabilities from reduced demand and disruptions to global supply chains” and it warned that trade concentration could “sharpen” the consequences of a disruption in a key market.

In a submission, the department says exports to China accounted for 29% of the total value of Australia’s agricultural, fisheries and forestry exports in 2018-19, up from 21% four years earlier.

David Hazlehurst, the acting secretary of the department, was asked to explain the claim in the department’s submission that the “likelihood of a targeted trade disruption is reduced where there is mutual dependence, such as Australia’s live cattle exports to Indonesia and Vietnam or in the case of a range of Australia’s exports to China”.

The chair of the Joint Standing Committee on Trade and Investment Growth, George Christensen, likened it to “mutually assured destruction” theory from during the Cold War.Hazlehurst replied that countries would operate in a way that they perceived to be in their own interests.

Explaining what had driven Australian exporters to focus on China, Hazelhurst said:


Particularly as many have observed in relation to China, the price premium for many agricultural products is so high that it’s led to many agribusinesses making the judgments that the risk is worth taking. Now those judgements may be being recalculated by those businesses over time, but the judgement they made at the time was that that premium was worth taking that risk.”






8.42pm EDT20:42

China reported on Tuesday five new coronavirus cases in the mainland for 13 July, compared with eight cases a day earlier, the health authority said.

All of the new infections were imported cases, the National Health Commission said in a statement. There were no new deaths.

China also reported five new asymptomatic patients, down from six a day earlier. As of 13 July, mainland China had a total of 83,605 confirmed coronavirus cases, it said.

China’s death toll from the coronavirus remained unchanged at 4,634.

A man rides a tricycle with the garbage in Shanghai, China, 13 July 2020.

A man rides a tricycle with the garbage in Shanghai, China, 13 July 2020. Photograph: Alex Plavevski/EPA

Updated
at 8.43pm EDT






8.31pm EDT20:31

Rebecca Smithers

Rebecca Smithers

Nearly 10 million people were unable to attend the funeral of someone they knew during lockdown, according to a new study from the UK’s largest undertaker, which warned that the nation is heading towards a national grief “pandemic”.

In its report, Co-op Funeralcare found Covid-19 restrictions meant that 9.7 million mourners had to stay away from cremations and burials. The figure is based on an estimate that 243,000 funerals went ahead in the UK during lockdown with an average of 10 attendees due to coronavirus rules, compared with 50 in normal times.

Warning of the long-term psychological impact of being unable to grieve properly, the study said the UK could experience a prolonged period of mourning for months, or even years, to come.

Updated
at 8.31pm EDT






8.21pm EDT20:21

Delta Air Lines may be able to avoid involuntary furloughs in the fall after receiving interest from more than 15,000 employees for early exit deals, one person with knowledge of the matter said.

The person said Delta was also looking at extending reduced work hours for employees past September in an effort to save costs as the coronavirus pandemic continues to whip the airline industry.

Delta declined to comment.






8.02pm EDT20:02

UK experts fear up to 120,000 Covid-19 deaths this winter

Ian Sample

Ian Sample

Britain must start “intense preparations” for a second wave of coronavirus that has the potential to kill as many as 120,000 hospital patients in a worst case scenario, experts have warned.

Senior doctors and scientists convened by the Academy of Medical Sciences said on Tuesday that, without urgent action, a resurgence of cases this winter could overwhelm the NHS when services are already stretched because of flu and other seasonal pressures.

The experts were commissioned by Sir Patrick Vallance, the government’s chief scientific adviser, to model a “reasonable worst case scenario” for Covid-19 this winter. Their report, which has been shared with ministers and local health authorities, calls for immediate efforts to prepare for a second wave.






7.40pm EDT19:40

Hong Kong reimposes social distancing prompting Disneyland Park closure

Hong Kong Disneyland is closing temporarily following the city’s decision to ban public gatherings of more than four people because of the pandemic.

Disney officials posted on the resort’s website that the Hong Kong park was closing on Wednesday until further notice. The resort’s hotels will remain open with adjusted levels of service.

Hong Kong announced new coronavirus-related restrictions on Monday.

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam arrives at a press conference in Hong Kong, Monday, 13 July 2020.

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam arrives at a press conference in Hong Kong, Monday, 13 July 2020. Photograph: Vincent Yu/AP

The Hong Kong park and Shanghai Disneyland closed in January. Tokyo Disneyland closed the following month and Disney parks in the United States and Europe shut their doors in March.

Shanghai Disneyland reopened in May, as did Hong Kong Disneyland Park last month.

Two of Walt Disney World’s theme parks in Florida reopened last Saturday, despite a spike in coronavirus cases in Florida.

Disneyland Paris also is welcoming back visitors this week for the first time since March. The reopening of Disney’s California parks was postponed pending the issuance of state guidelines.






7.26pm EDT19:26

5.4 million Americans have lost their health insurance during the pandemic

The New York Times reports that, “about 5.4 million Americans lost health insurance in the pandemic, more than have ever lost coverage through job losses in a year,” according to a new study:


The study, to be released Tuesday by the nonpartisan consumer advocacy group Families USA, found that the estimated increase in uninsured laid-off workers over the three-month period was nearly 40% higher than the highest previous increase, which occurred during the recession of 2008 and 2009. In that period, 3.9 million adults lost insurance.

Updated
at 7.27pm EDT






7.15pm EDT19:15

WHO chief warns against ‘shortcuts’

The WHO chief Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned that there would be “no return to the old normal for the foreseeable future”, adding: “There are no short cuts out of this pandemic.”

Speaking critically of leaders in countries where “mixed messages” have led to a breakdown in trust, he said that if this approach is taken, matters are going to get “worse and worse”.

“I know that many leaders are working in difficult circumstances”, he said, but that nonetheless, “There are no short cuts out of this pandemic,” he adds.






7.08pm EDT19:08

Global cases pass 13m

There are more than 13 million coronavirus cases worldwide, an increase of 1m cases in 5 days, Johns Hopkins University data show.

The current total is 13,026,225. There have been 570,924 known deaths so far.






7.02pm EDT19:02

Summary

Hello and welcome to today’s live coverage of the coronavirus pandemic with me, Helen Sullivan.

A reminder that you can get in touch throughout the day on Twitter @helenrsullivan or via email: helen.sullivan@theguardian.com.

As global cases passed 13 million, rising by 1m in just five days – compared to the 1m per week for the last few weeks – WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that there would be “no return to the old normal for the foreseeable future”, warning that “There are no short cuts out of this pandemic.”

A number of countries, cities and regions have seen lockdown or social distancing measures reimposed. Hong Kong reimposed social distancing measures after a sudden spike in coronavirus infections, banning public gatherings of more than four people. In the US state of California governor Gavin Newsom ordering bars to close and banning indoor restaurant dining, among other measures.

About 250,000 people in Manila in the Philippines will return to lockdown in an attempt to stall the infection rate there.

Here is a roundup of the key developments from the last few hours:

  • There are more than 13 million coronavirus cases worldwide, an increase of 1m cases in 5 days, Johns Hopkins University data show. The current total is 13,026,225. There have been 570,924 known deaths so far.
  • The WHO chief Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned that there would be “no return to the old normal for the foreseeable future”, adding: “There are no short cuts out of this pandemic.”
  • China has stepped up a travel warning to Australia, telling its citizens of a risk of being searched “arbitrarily” by law enforcement authorities. Apart from warning of discrimination recently, China’s culture and tourism ministry advised against travelling to Australia last month due to increasing racism linked to the virus.
  • More than 880 employees of private contractors running US immigration detention centres have tested positive for coronavirus, according to congressional testimony given by company executives.
  • An entire hospital in Mexico’s southern Oaxaca state has been put in quarantine after 68% of its remaining staff tested positive for Covid-19. Doctors and nurses at the Macedonio Benítez Fuentes hospital in the town of Juchitán de Zaragoza held protests last week, calling for a lockdown after 120 of their colleagues were put under isolation after positive tests.
  • Face masks will become mandatory in shops across England, UK government ministers are to announce on Tuesday, following mixed messages, a cabinet split and mounting pressure on the country’s prime minister Boris Johnson to change public advice.
  • Hong Kong reimposed social distancing measures after a sudden spike in coronavirus infections, banning public gatherings of more than four people.
  • The US state of California did similar, closing down many businesses recently allowed to reopen. Its governor Gavin Newsom ordered bars to close and banned indoor restaurant dining, among other measures.
  • A new UN report said that coronavirus could mean an additional 130m people going hungry this year. It added that “after steadily declining for decades, chronic hunger slowly began to rise in 2014 and continues to do so”.
  • Angela Merkel warned that a special EU summit might not be able to agree a deal on a coronavirus recovery fund, with some countries nervous that the €750bn proposals were too extravagant.
  • The death toll in Latin America has reached 144,758, taking it past that in the US and Canada, and leaving the region second only to Europe. A Reuters tally meanwhile found that the global number of infections has risen by 1m in five days.
  • In the US, the Trump administration came under fire for its apparent attempt to sideline infectious disease expert Dr Anthony Fauci for disagreeing with the president.
  • About 250,000 people in Manila will return to lockdown in an attempt to stall the infection rate there. The Philippines has the second highest number of infections in south-east Asia.

Brian Rodriguez

Zombie specialist. Friendly twitter guru. Internet buff. Organizer. Coffee trailblazer. Lifelong problem solver. Certified travel enthusiast. Alcohol geek.

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