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Costa Rica to halt reopening of economy as virus cases rise – as it happened

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Country hits grisly milestone as WHO says pandemic is entering ‘new and dangerous phase’

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Fri 19 Jun 2020 19.38 EDTFirst published on Thu 18 Jun 2020 19.31 EDT
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A gravedigger paints numbers on crosses at the Sao Francisco Xavier cemetery in Rio de Janeiro during the coronavirus pandemic.
A gravedigger paints numbers on crosses at the Sao Francisco Xavier cemetery in Rio de Janeiro during the coronavirus pandemic. Photograph: Ian Cheibub/Reuters
A gravedigger paints numbers on crosses at the Sao Francisco Xavier cemetery in Rio de Janeiro during the coronavirus pandemic. Photograph: Ian Cheibub/Reuters

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Josh Taylor
Josh Taylor

What does it mean if we can’t tell how someone caught coronavirus?

Eighteen new Covid-19 cases were recorded in the state of Victoria, Australia on Thursday, including eight of community transmission where the source of the infection is unknown.

Nearly 10% of all coronavirus cases in Australia remain unresolved. That’s 733 people who have caught the virus but authorities have been unable to determine where from. Should we be worried about community transmission as lockdown restrictions are eased?

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In an interview with AFP on Thursday, Dr Anthony Fauci stressed a localised approach would be required as the country takes further steps to return to normal - including on the crucial question of when to reopen schools.

“Counties where there are certainly no cases at all, there’s no problem with the schools opening,” he said.

“There are other parts where there’s a modest amount of infection (where) you may delay school openings.

“And there are other parts of the country where there’s minimum infection, where you want to make some modification of the process, namely: alternate days, morning versus afternoon, seating people apart from each other wearing masks.”

Anthony Fauci thinks return to full lockdowns is unlikey

The United States does not require more widespread lockdowns to get its Covid-19 outbreak under control, despite the fact that the national daily infection rate is not showing signs of decline, leading government expert Anthony Fauci told AFP in an interview Thursday.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

“I don’t think we’re going to be talking about going back to lockdown,” he said when asked whether places like California and Texas that are seeing a surge in their caseload should reissue stay-at-home orders.

“I think we’re going to be talking about trying to better control those areas of the country that seem to be having a surge of cases.”

The US leads the world in the number of confirmed infections and in deaths – with the fatality toll approaching 120,000.

But while former epicenters New York and New Jersey have succeeded in controlling their outbreaks, the virus is now increasing in 20 states – creating a plateau in the national case graph.

Fauci, who has led America’s response to every major epidemic since the outbreak of AIDS in the 1980s, said one thing that bothered him was a lack of compliance to authorities’ recommendations about wearing masks.

“We have a country where even when the recommendations are to wear a mask, a recommendation that I’ve been involved in making, there are some groups that actually do the recommendations very strictly and they adhere to it.

“And then... you see pictures of people in bars and in congregations without that. So again, it’s a mixed bag. Some people are doing it fine, and some are not.”

Mexico confirms record new cases

Mexico’s health ministry reported on Thursday a record 5,662 new confirmed cases of coronavirus infections and 667 additional fatalities, bringing the total in the country to 165,455 cases and 19,747 deaths.

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

A health worker gives alcohol to a vendor to disinfect her hands at the Central de Abasto market in Mexico City, Thursday, 18 June 2020. Photograph: Marco Ugarte/AP

Non-essential shops in Wales can reopen from Monday

Steven Morris
Steven Morris

All non-essential shops in Wales will be able to reopen from Monday so long as physical distancing can take place, as part of the devolved government’s cautious easing of lockdown restrictions.

But the Labour-led administration is not expected to change its guidance that people should not travel more than five miles. The government will review the requirement to stay local by 6 July.

Denis Campbell
Denis Campbell

Two in five adults in the UK feel lonelier under the lockdown amid the tight limits it has placed on social contact, new research has revealed.

Survey results by the British Red Cross paint a stark picture of Britain as a society where a substantial minority lack regular face-to-face interaction and feel alone and uncared for.

In a survey of 2,000 adults that was representative of the population, the charity found that 28% worried that no one would notice if something happened to them.

Even more – 33% – said they feared that their feelings of loneliness would get worse in the years ahead.

San Quentin: outcry after Covid-19 cases at California prison triple in two weeks

Abené Clayton
Abené Clayton

The number of coronavirus cases in California’s San Quentin state prison has tripled within the last two weeks, prompting advocates, families and attorneys to demand urgent action to fast track the release of prisoners and curb the spread among correctional officers.

San Quentin, California’s oldest prison and home to the state’s only death row for male prisoners, reported its first batch of 15 positive cases on 3 June. Since then, that number has risen to 46.

Organizers are pointing to the 30 May transfer of more than 100 incarcerated people from the California Institution for Men (CIM) in Chino as a catalyst for the spread of Covid-19 in the prison:

WHO eyes 2bn vaccine doses by end of 2021

The World Health Organization said Thursday that a few hundred million Covid-19 vaccine doses could be produced by the end of the year - and be targeted at those most vulnerable to the virus.

The UN health agency said it was working on that assumption, with a view to two billion doses by the end of 2021, as pharmaceutical firms rush to find a vaccine.

WHO chief scientist Soumya Swaminathan said researchers were working on more than 200 vaccine candidates around the world, including 10 that are in human testing.

“If we’re very lucky, there will be one or two successful candidates before the end of this year,” she told a virtual press conference.

She identified three groups most in need of the first wave of vaccine doses.

They are front-line workers with high exposure, such as medics and police officers; those most vulnerable to the disease, such as the elderly and diabetics; and people in high-transmission settings, such as urban slums and care homes.

Pharmaceutical company executives said late last month that one or several COVID-19 vaccines could begin rolling out before 2021, but warned that an estimated total of 15 billion doses would be needed to suppress the virus.

US questions new China virus figures, seeks observers

The United States on Thursday questioned China’s credibility on reporting fresh coronavirus cases in Beijing and called for neutral observers to assess the extent of the outbreak.

China has locked down the capital as it seeks to prevent a second wave of Covid-19, reporting 158 cases since a fresh cluster was detected last week.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, an outspoken critic of China, urged greater transparency during talks Wednesday in Hawaii with senior Chinese official Yang Jiechi.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images

“I would hope that their numbers and their reporting are more accurate than what we saw in the case of Wuhan and other places in the PRC, but that remains to be seen,” said David Stilwell, the top US diplomat for East Asia who accompanied Pompeo.

“As far as numbers, it would be good to have folks on the ground to get confirmation” in Beijing, he told reporters.

Stilwell pointed to reports in scientific journals that gave higher estimates for COVID-19 cases in Wuhan, the metropolis where the global pandemic was first detected late last year.

“So once your credibility is lost, you will have to find a way to re-establish that,” Stilwell said.

“I think the only way to do that is by bringing in neutral observers to help understand exactly what happened there.”

Summary

Hello and welcome to a new coronavirus blog with me, Helen Sullivan. I’ll be bringing you the latest pandemic news from around the world for the next few hours.

You can get in touch with me directly on Twitter @helenrsullivan, or via email: helen.sullivan@theguardian.com. Questions, comments, jokes, news, tips, and, naturally, compliments all welcome.

The United States on Thursday questioned China’s credibility on reporting fresh coronavirus cases in Beijing and called for neutral observers to assess the extent of the outbreak. China has locked down the capital as it seeks to prevent a second wave of Covid-19, reporting 158 cases since a fresh cluster was detected last week.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, an outspoken critic of China, urged greater transparency during talks Wednesday in Hawaii with senior Chinese official Yang Jiechi, as David Stilwell, the top US diplomat for East Asia who accompanied Pompeo, said ““I would hope that their numbers and their reporting are more accurate than what we saw in the case of Wuhan and other places in the PRC, but that remains to be seen.”

Meanwhile, as the global death toll passed 450,000 on Thursday, the World Health Organization said that a few hundred million Covid-19 vaccine doses could be produced by the end of the year - and be targeted at those most vulnerable to the virus. The UN health agency said it was working on that assumption, with a view to two billion doses by the end of 2021, as pharmaceutical firms rush to find a vaccine.

Here are the other key developments from the last few hours:

  • Global death toll from Covid-19 passes 450,000. The number of people who have lost their lives in the pandemic so far stands at 451,118, according to the Johns Hopkins University tracker. There are 8,421,357 known cases worldwide. Both figures are likely to be higher, due to differing testing rates and definitions, time lags and suspected underreporting.
  • Canada reaches 100,000 Covid-19 cases. Canada reached 100,000 cases of coronavirus on Thursday. The province of Ontario announced another 190 cases a day after public health agency data showed 99,853 people had been diagnosed positive. That pushed the country over the 100,000 mark and into 17th place on the global list.
  • Iran nearing 10,000 deaths from Covid-19. Iran is approaching 10,000 deaths from the coronavirus outbreak in the country, according to official figures from the Ministry of Health. There have been nearly 200,000 people infected with the new coronavirus in the Islamic Republic and the number deaths in a single day from the pandemic topped 100 for the first time in two months on Sunday.
  • WHO condemns football celebrations in Italy as ‘reckless’. The World Health Organization has condemned as “reckless” celebrations on the streets of Naples in Italy after Napoli’s 4-2 penalty win over Juventus in the Coppa Italia. Large crowds of fans congregated in the city, ignoring social distancing rules in place to prevent the spread of Covid-19.
  • Chinese medical expert says coronavirus under control in Beijing. “The epidemic in Beijing has been brought under control,” said Wu Zunyou, the chief epidemiologist of China’s Center for Diseases Prevention and Control, although he said the capital can still expect sporadic new cases. The city has recorded 158 infections since confirming the first on 11 June in its worst outbreak since early February, which has been traced to the sprawling wholesale food centre of Xinfadi in the south-west of the city.
  • WHO hopes hundreds of millions of vaccine doses can be produced this year. WHO chief scientist Soumya Swaminathan said: “I’m hopeful, I’m optimistic. But vaccine development is a complex undertaking, it comes with a lot of uncertainty”. She added: “The good thing is, we have many vaccines and platforms so even if the first one fails, or the second ones fails, we shouldn’t lose hope, we shouldn’t give up.”
  • Thousands quarantined in Germany after local outbreak. In Germany’s western state of North Rhine-Westphalia, around 7,000 people have been placed in quarantine and schools and kindergartens have been closed after an outbreak of coronavirus. The spread is believed to have come from Tönnies, a meat processing plant in Rheda-Wiedenbrück, where there have been 657 confirmed cases of the virus. Elsewhere, Martin Hikel, mayor in the southern Berlin district of Neukölln, has said authorities are trying to trace the origins of a worrying new spread of the virus there, which has so far infected around 70 local residents.
  • New York to reopen hairdressers, shops and outdoor dining spaces. The city will begin phase two of reopening on Monday, Mayor Bill de Blasio said on Thursday, citing continued improvements in coronavirus data. Offices, in-store retail, outdoor dining, hair salons and barbershops are among the businesses allowed to reopen their doors during phase two.

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