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    Home»Top News»Coronavirus live news: India sees record daily case rise as global deaths near 750,000 | World news
    Top News

    Coronavirus live news: India sees record daily case rise as global deaths near 750,000 | World news

    Brian RodriguezBy Brian RodriguezAugust 13, 2020No Comments10 Mins Read
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    2.45am EDT02:45

    Record daily jump in cases in Ukraine

    Ukraine recorded a record daily jump of 1,592 coronavirus cases on Wednesday, the national council of security and defence said on Thursday.

    The number of infections has increased sharply in Ukraine in the past two months as authorities have eased some restrictions, allowing cafes, churches and public transport to reopen.

    Health minister Maksym Stepanov urged people to obey broader restrictions that remain in place. “I will insist on strict adherence to all the rules. The situation is very tense,” Stepanov told a televised briefing.

    The total number of cases rose to 86,140, including 1,992 deaths and 46,216 recoveries, as of Aug. 13.






    2.33am EDT02:33

    Australia posted its lowest one-day rise in new Covid-19 cases in more than three weeks on Thursday, stoking hopes that a second wave of new infections gripping Victoria state is finally being brought under control.

    Australia, once heralded as a global leader in combating the virus, has struggled to contain an outbreak in the country’s second most populous state, which has seen triple digit daily new cases for weeks.
    But Australian states and territories on Thursday reported just 292 new infections in the past 24 hours, down from 4xx the previous day and the lowest since July 20.
    “We now believe, cautiously, that we have early signs of the flattening of the curve,” Australia’s minister for health Greg Hunt said in a televised media conference.

    The bulk of the new infections again came in Victoria, which detected 278 new infections in the past 24 hours, down from 410 a day earlier.






    2.16am EDT02:16

    Sarah Marsh

    Sarah Marsh

    Hello everyone. I am taking on the global live feed from London and will be bringing you all the latest updates on what is happening around the globe. Please do keep in touch with me as I work and contact me if you have any questions, news tips or thoughts. Thanks in advance.

    Twitter: @sloumarsh
    Instagram: sarah_marsh_journalist
    Email: sarah.marsh@theguardian.com






    2.11am EDT02:11

    That’s it from me, Helen Sullivan, for today. Thanks for following along.

    My colleague Sarah Marsh will take you through the next few hours.






    1.49am EDT01:49

    Jon Henley

    Jon Henley

    British tourists cancelling trips to France because they may have to quarantine for 14 days on their return might be upset, but the owners – often British too – of the places they had booked to stay are losing more than just a holiday.

    “For every potential visitor, there’s an owner who depends on that rental for their livelihood,” said Gavin Quinney, who runs a large farmhouse gîte in Créon near Bordeaux and is now staring at a blank late August and a very shaky September.

    “You can understand people hesitating, for all sorts of reasons. But we’re going to have to work out what the rules are, what’s fair, because there are people who are really suffering from the permanent stop-start uncertainty of this summer.”

    France is reportedly “on the cliff-edge” of being removed from the British government’s list of quarantine-exempt destinations amid a continuing rise in infections, with a decision expected by the end of the week:






    1.36am EDT01:36

    New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has said Auckland’s Covid-19 outbreak will get worse before it gets better, and warned of extended lockdowns after the country reported the first new cases in 102 days without community transmission.

    Ardern stressed New Zealand’s approach of going hard early remained their best chance of slowing the spread and urged caution over growing misinformation around coronavirus:


    New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern warns Covid-19 cluster will ‘grow before it slows’ – video





    1.16am EDT01:16

    Summary

    Here are the key developments from the last few hours:

    • Global deaths near 750,000. There are 749,358 known coronavirus deaths globally, according to the Johns Hopkins University tracker, as the world nears the sombre milestone of 750,000 dead in nearly eight months since the first coronavirus cases were reported.Two days ago, cases passed the staggering total of 20m. Already, they stand at 20,620,847.
    • India reported another record daily rise in novel coronavirus infections on Thursday, while the death toll from Covid-19 surpassed 47,000. Infections grew by 66,999 on Thursday from a day earlier to reach a total of nearly 2.4 million to date, India’s health ministry said. The country, with the world’s biggest case load behind the United States and Brazil, has now reported a jump of 50,000 cases or more each day for 15 straight days.
    • France sees most new daily virus cases since May. More than 2,500 new coronavirus cases were registered in France in 24 hours in the sharpest increase since May, government data showed on Wednesday, as officials said indicators were “clearly worsening”. Of 600,000 tests over the past week, more than 11,600 were positive, the health ministry’s DGS public health division said.
    • Jordan will close its border with Syria for a week starting Thursday, after staff at their only open land crossing tested positive for coronavirus, state media said. Jordan has seen a drop in virus cases, with new infections recorded mainly among travellers arriving from abroad, but it registered 25 cases of the Covid-19 illness in the past two days, mostly at the Jaber crossing with its war-torn northern neighbour.
    • The Australian state of Victoria has recorded 278 new coronavirus cases overnight, consistent with a recent downward trend that is bringing cases to numbers closer to those seen in mid-July, after increases to the 600s in early August.Eight people have died overnight.
    • Venezuela’s communications minister and close adviser to President Nicolás Maduro said Wednesday that he has been diagnosed with the coronavirus, as the daily cases in the nation steadily rise. Jorge Rodríguez becomes the latest of several high-ranking officials in Maduro’s government to become infected in the pandemic, following the July announcement by Venezuela’s socialist party boss Diosdado Cabello, who says he is recovering.
    • Germany on Wednesday added Bucharest and several other areas of Romania to a list of places considered a high risk for coronavirus infections, forcing a German minister to cancel a work trip to the Romanian capital.
    • Peru extended its lockdowns following surge in coronavirus cases. The Peruvian president Martín Vizcarra has banned family gatherings and extended lockdowns to five more regions of the country amid a fresh surge in cases of coronavirus.Fifteen of Peru’s 25 regions were already covered by rolling lockdowns.
    • Italy has ordered travellers arriving from Croatia, Greece, Malta and Spain to be tested for Covid-19 and added Colombia to a list of countries under a complete travel ban amid growing concern over new infections. With the annual summer holiday reaching its peak, health services are bracing for a return of travellers from destinations where social distancing, face masks and other protective measures appear to have been widely ignored.
    • France reported 2,524 new coronavirus infections over the past 24 hours, a new post-lockdown daily record. Despite the rise in infections, the number of people in hospital with Covid-19 continued to fall and was down by 121 to 4,891, the first time it fell below 5,000 since 19 March.
    • Turkey is to delay the reopening of schools by almost a month. Students will return to classrooms in Turkey in late September, nearly a month after the start of the new academic year, the government announced, as daily coronavirus cases remain above 1,000. It will be a gradual transition, starting with online learning before transitioning to in-person education.
    • Chile will lift one of the world’s longest lockdowns on Monday. The capital Santiago’s central business district and adjoining Central Station will move to a “transitional” stage under a “Step by Step” reopening. The mayor said citizens should remain indoors whenever possible, wear masks in public and wash their hands. People may leave their homes on weekdays without the previously required police permissions, and meet in small groups, while businesses can gradually reopen.

    Updated
    at 1.17am EDT






    1.05am EDT01:05

    Global deaths near 750,000

    There are 749,358 known coronavirus deaths globally, according to the Johns Hopkins University tracker, as the world nears the sombre milestone of 750,000 dead in nearly eight months since the first coronavirus cases were reported.

    Two days ago, cases passed the staggering total of 20m. Already, they stand at 20,620,847.






    12.57am EDT00:57

    India sees record one-day case rise

    India reported another record daily rise in novel coronavirus infections on Thursday, while the death toll from Covid-19 surpassed 47,000, Reuters reports, citing the Health Ministry.

    Infections grew by 66,999 on Thursday from a day earlier to reach a total of nearly 2.4 million to date, India’s health ministry said.

    The country, with the world’s biggest case load behind the United States and Brazil, has now reported a jump of 50,000 cases or more each day for 15 straight days.

    A medical worker wears personal protective equipment and a plastic bag over his head in Bhagalpur, Bihar, India, 27 July 2020.

    A medical worker wears personal protective equipment and a plastic bag over his head in Bhagalpur, Bihar, India, 27 July 2020. Photograph: Danish Siddiqui/Reuters





    12.37am EDT00:37

    Dan Collyns

    Dan Collyns

    As surging Covid-19 cases across Latin America leave cemeteries and funeral homes struggling to keep pace, engineers in Bolivia have come up with a solution as pragmatic as it is macabre: a mobile crematorium.

    The five-metre by two-and-half-metre oven is small enough to fit on to a trailer, and is powered by locally produced liquefied petroleum gas – making it a cheap option for families who cannot afford a funeral service.

    Three canisters of LPG can cremate a body in 30 to 40 minutes, said the mobile crematory’s inventor, Carlos Ayo, an environmental engineer who says he designed the device to help his country in a time of crisis.

    A man stands near the prototype of a mobile crematorium with a banner reading “Mobile crematorium, Made in Bolivia”, built by a local engineer to alleviate the backlog of bodies at local crematoriums, in La Paz, Bolivia 4 August 2020.

    A man stands near the prototype of a mobile crematorium with a banner reading “Mobile crematorium, Made in Bolivia”, built by a local engineer to alleviate the backlog of bodies at local crematoriums, in La Paz, Bolivia 4 August 2020. Photograph: David Mercado/Reuters

    “We wanted to help in this pandemic, and one possibility was showing others how to make a crematory oven,” said Ayo in a telephone interview.

    “Then we asked ourselves wouldn’t it be better if it could be mobile, to move it from one place to another?”

    Ayo said he had received orders from several local councils in Bolivia, where authorities are struggling to deal with the rising death toll. Crematoriums are only found in the country’s main cities, and even then, many Bolivians cannot afford the fees:






    12.21am EDT00:21

    Katharine Murphy

    Katharine Murphy

    More than one million Australians are now out of work, according to the latest labour force data, which shows the unemployment rate is now 7.5%.

    Even though seasonally adjusted employment increased by 114,700 people between June and July, and hours worked increased 1.3%, the unemployment rate in July edged up from 7.4% in June.

    The survey was completed before Victoria implemented the stage four lockdown in an effort to contain a second wave of coronavirus infections in the state, so the monthly result is likely more rosy than the current reality:

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    Brian Rodriguez

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

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