Tag Archives: caribbean

Seven children among the 16 active cases

 

Seven children in St. Kitts and Nevis are among the 16 active cases of COVID-19 in the Federation Cheif Medical Officer Dr Hazel laws has confirmed.

On Tuesday Dr Laws announced 16 active cases the highest number since the Federation started its COVID response. 

She said of the 16 cases it includes seven children between ages three and 15 and nine adults between 33 and 49.

She said the active cases are stable and are being monitored.

“We are working assiduously to contain this cluster of COVID-19 cases.

William Vincent Hodge Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Education said that  COVID-19 is making a huge impact on the schools.

“Learning is disrupted just on the brink of examinations schools are forced to abandoned field trips and educational tours, graduations may not be held except virtually, parents are forced to remain at home to provide care for their children. 

“COVID-19 is in our schools, teachers students and axillary staff are contracting the virus, some are in quarantine.”

Hodge called on parents and teachers to leverage resources to stop the spread of the virus.

“Parents and teachers must be vaccinated. We have a moral and God-given responsibility to protect the children God has given to us.”

He said the ministry had embarked on vaccines information sessions for parents and teachers 

“I say to parents and to teachers to stop stiffening our necks and hardening our hearts. As of today, we can say the virus is rampant in our schools and has forced our schools to close for the next two weeks in the first instance.”

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Bermuda Reopens with New Hotel, Cruise Ships

Bermuda is back. After a year of battling the pandemic, the Island announced its reopening with a new luxury hotel, the St. Regis and cruise ships arriving.

As the St Regis Bermuda welcomed its first guests after a ribbon-cutting ceremony, the Viking Orion anchored off Dockyard in what was hailed as a landmark moment in the island’s recovery from the coronavirus pandemic.

Premier David Burt, who is also Tourism Minister, said the opening of St Regis was “another major step forward in the start of the tourism renaissance” and something that would bring much-needed activity to St George’s at the island’s east end.

Miguel Purroy, a representative of the hotel’s owners, said the St Regis opened on time and on budget and he was confident the final product would make Bermuda´s tourism industry proud.

He added that it was hoped the hotel “contributes to place Bermuda as the luxury destination we all dream of”.

The oceanside hotel, which has a newly renovated golf course, will include 120 guest rooms and suites alongside a luxury residential development with a range of two- and three-bedroom condominiums with views looking over Gates Bay.

Ground-breaking for the hotel on a site that had lain empty for almost 30 years took place in 2017 — during the previous One Bermuda Alliance administration’s one term in office — after a number of attempts to build a new hotel had failed to get off the ground.

Once a Holiday Inn, the hotel later became a Loews property before Club Med took it over. It closed in 1988 and 20 years later was demolished by implosion.

Although Royal Caribbean International has cancelled plans to homeport its Vision of the Seas ship in Bermuda for seven-night cruises to the Bahamas, Viking Ocean Cruises has gone ahead with its Bermuda homeporting plan.

Acting Transport Minister Walter Roban hailed the Viking Orion’s arrival as a watershed in the battle back to normality from COVID-19, which has battered the island’s already struggling economy.

“The sight of a cruise ship returning to our shores brings with it the promise of much-needed economic activity.

“Many sectors depend on business from cruise passengers and crew and through the successful realisation of homeporting for Bermuda, the government has taken another important step to get Bermudians back to work,” Roban added.

The Orion will stay at anchor until crew quarantining is completed on Thursday.  The ship will sail from Bermuda on a series of eight-day cruises from June 15 and will also call at Hamilton, St George’s and Dockyard, the island’s three ports, but with half its normal 900-passenger capacity.

The cruises are scheduled to end on August 3, but the government hopes the programme will be successful enough to get an extension.

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World View: Trump Jury, Myanmar Terror, India COVID, Cable Car Arrests,More

May 26, 2021

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The Associated Press

The Rundown

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NEW YORK (AP) — New York prosecutors have convened a special grand jury to consider evidence in a criminal investigation into former President Donald Trump’s business dealings, a person familiar with the matter told The Associated Press on Tuesday….Read More

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BEIRUT (AP) — Auto magnate-turned-fugitive Carlos Ghosn is campaigning to clear his name, and hopes a visit by French investigators to his home in exile in Lebanon will be his first real opportunity to defend himself since the bombshell arrest that…Read More

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Two black pickups speed down an empty city street in Myanmar before coming to a sudden stop. Security forces standing in the back of the trucks begin firing at an oncoming motorbike carrying three young men. …Read More

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate Republicans revived negotiations over President Joe Biden’s sweeping investment plan, preparing a $1 trillion infrastructure proposal that would be funded with COVID-19 relief money as a counteroffer to the White House ahea…Read More

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NEW DELHI (AP) — As the coronavirus tears through India, night watchman Sagar Kumar thinks constantly about getting vaccines for himself and his family of five amid critical shortages of shots in the country. …Read More

OTHER TOP STORIES

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Angelina Jolie criticized a judge deciding on custody arrangements for her and Brad Pitt’s children during their divorce, saying in a court filing …Read More

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — For Vanessa Gregson, the four-lane highway that borders the beach along San Francisco’s Pacific Ocean is now an automobile-free sanctuary where s…Read More

ROME (AP) — Police in northern Italy arrested three people early Wednesday in the cable car disaster that killed 14 people after an investigation showed a clamp, inte…Read More

WASHINGTON (AP) — The federal government will issue cybersecurity regulations in the coming days for U.S. pipeline operators following a ransomware attack that led to…Read More

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Child Poverty Root Issue Facing Jamaica’s Kids

The founder of Hear the Children’s Cry Betty-Anne Blaine says child poverty is one of the serious root problems affecting the nation’s children.

Blaine, who was addressing a virtual meeting of Kiwanis Club of New Kingston recently, noted that approximately 45 per cent of the nation’s children have experience poverty.

“If we are serious about fixing this problem of our children — the abuse, the neglect — we are going to have to understand what we are dealing with. Child poverty is one of the root problems. If there is an indicator in our country of the two Jamaicas in which we live, the child population is perhaps the most blatant indicator to me,” she argued.

Making reference to Secret Gardens, a monument in downtown Kingston which has the names of children who died violently since 2004, Blaine pointed out that there are some issues that affect the children of the poor and working class, but do not affect children from the middle and upper classes.

“I would say that over 90 per cent of the names of children on that monument are children of the poor and working classes in our country. Children who die in fires, who go missing, who are abducted and murdered and typically those children who die in motor vehicle accidents — a lot of them are in buses or taxis are mainly children of the poor and working classes. Those are the names on that monument,” said Blaine.

Blaine also used her address to renew her call for a child emergency summit.

“We are saying that the situation with Jamaican children now is so serious that we believe we need an Emergency Child Summit, where we can bring two groups of persons together. One group would include people working in the trenches, know the problems and have solutions, and the other group would include people who can provide resources,” she said

“It’s not a talk shop, it is a summit where we bring critical stakeholders together, to look at the problems and see if we can come up with one solution that will radically or dramatically change the situation for children in a positive way,” she added.

– Brittny Hutchinson

 

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Canada Starts Reopening After 3rd COVID Wave

CNN- Several Canadian provinces are cautiously announcing reopening plans as the country slowly recovers from the third wave of Covid-19.

Dr. Theresa Tam, Canada’s chief public health officer, said Tuesday that the infection rate has fallen about 40% since the peak of activity in mid-April.

However, she said that hospitalizations and critical care admissions have only dropped by 15% and 10%, respectively.

Canada Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he was hopeful the accelerating pace of vaccination would enable the country to return to a more normal way of life by fall.

“We will have more than enough doses in Canada by the end of June to give a first dose to every Canadian who wants one, and second doses will continue to ramp up through June and into the summer,” Trudeau said during a press conference in Ottawa Tuesday.

Canada’s third wave on track to become its worst yet as hospitalizations spike

Health Canada said more than half of all Canadians are now partially vaccinated but less 5 percent are fully accinated

With new, daily cases of Covid-19 dropping, both British Columbia and Quebec announced reopening plans Tuesday that were still cautious compared to the US and the UK.

In British Columbia, residents can now meet a few friends at a restaurant and dine indoors again and, significantly, people can start inviting visitors into their homes again.

The provincial government laid out a phased-in re-opening that will allow for more organized sports, travel and larger indoor gatherings later in spring and early summer.

Quebec announced it would finally lift a months-long curfew throughout the province this Friday, restaurant patios can also reopen everywhere and small social gatherings outside can resume.

But it was a different picture in Manitoba, where the province is in the middle of a devastating third wave. To cope with rising intensive care admissions, public health officials said they will continue to transfer patients out of province and are even looking into the possibility of sending patients to North Dakota for treatment, but only if absolutely necessary.

According to Johns Hopkins University data, Manitoba currently has the highest rate of infection of any province or state over the last seven days.

“This reckless behavior of some is threatening the ability of our health care system to care for those most in need including themselves,” Brian Pallister, Manitoba’s premier, said at a news conference Tuesday regarding people flouting Covid-19 restrictions.

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Havana Claims Biden Continuing Trump Anti Cuban Policies


Cuba charged has said the Biden administration has continued the policies of former U.S. President Donald Trump against Havana with a decision to maintain a Trump-era determination that it is not fully cooperating in the fight against terrorism.

“I hereby determine and certify to the Congress that the following countries are not cooperating fully with United States antiterrorism efforts,” U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken wrote in a brief note, which listed Cuba along with Iran, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Syria and Venezuela.

The note was signed by Blinken on May 14 but was not released until Tuesday.

“The slander is surprising and irritating as are the application of Trump’s policy and his 243 sanctions,” the Communist-run country’s foreign minister, Bruno Rodriguez, tweeted.

Asked to explain the U.S. decision, a U.S. State Department representative said on Tuesday: “In making the annual determination on ‘not cooperating fully,’ we undertake a review of a country’s overall level of cooperation in our efforts to fight terrorism.”

The State Department representative added the decision was made under a “separate statutory authority” than the one for state sponsors of terrorism.

U.S. President Joe Biden, a Democrat, vowed during his campaign to reverse some of Republican Trump’s Cuba measures that “have inflicted harm on the Cuban people and done nothing to advance democracy and human rights.”

He was vice president when former President Barack Obama agreed to a historic detente with then Cuban President Raul Castro and in 2016. Trump, after taking office in 2017, re-imposed many of the restrictions on Cuba business and travel that Obama had eased or lifted.

Those who supported detente on and off the Caribbean island had high hopes Biden would quickly reverse Trump’s policy, but his administration has said a shift in policy toward Cuba is not among its top foreign priorities.

Calling human rights a core pillar of U.S. Cuba policy, a senior White House official told Reuters this month that Biden remains committed to promises of loosening the flow of remittances from Cuban Americans and easing restrictions on family travel to the island. But the official declined to say when such moves might happen. read more

Trump designated Cuba a state sponsor of terrorism just before leaving office, a designation the Biden administration says it is reviewing. Trump set the stage for putting Havana on the U.S. blacklist when in May 2020 he placed it back on the list of countries that do not cooperate fully with U.S. efforts to counter terrorism.

“This is odd since Cuba is already on the state supporter of terrorism list, which is obviously a more severe designation than non-cooperating,” said William LeoGrande, a professor of government at American University in Washington, referring to Blinken’s note. He added the listing only restricted arms sales and had to be renewed by May 15.

Nevertheless, numerous experts said it was one more signal that Biden was not Obama when it comes to Cuba.

“Biden has been largely inactive and silent on Cuba policy, indicating a lack of shift away from Trump’s posture,” said Andrew Zimbalist, a Cuba expert at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts.

“To my knowledge, this is the first proactive policy step and, hence, appears to be a harbinger of a non-return to Obama’s engagement,” he added.

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Mothers Brave Teargas in Continued Colombia Demonstrations

Vanesa protects herself from the hail of tear gas, rocks and fire hose streams that often mark protests in Colombia with just safety glasses, a helmet, a bandanna over her nose and mouth and a flimsy black wooden shield.

The mother-of-three is part of a group of 10 women calling themselves “Front Line Moms” who attend the protests to protect youth from alleged police violence.

The Andean country has seen nearly a month of demonstrations and thousands of road blockades. Though protest leaders reached pre-agreements for talks with the government late on Monday, they have promised marches against inequality and police abuse, among other issues, will continue. read more

“If our children go to fight, if our children go to march, we mothers will support them and together with them struggle,” the group chanted at a recent protest.

Vanesa, 39, lost her job as a tango dancer because of the coronavirus pandemic and began selling coffee on the street.

“We’re a group of single moms who are now trying to fight for the violated rights of young people,” said Vanesa, who declined to share her surname.

The group has appeared in social media videos, one of which shows a sound grenade thrown by police exploding near them during a demonstration.

Vanesa said the moms were inspired to take action after they attended a protest where the national riot squad tear-gassed a group of protesting mothers and children.

“That was the spark to decide we were going to do something different,” she said.

The government says just 17 deaths are directly connected with marches, while human rights groups claim dozens more. The attorney general’s office says it has found 290 people reported missing and is seeking 129 others.

Entire families have joined marches galvanized by poverty, which shot up to 42.5% last year, and high unemployment which have aggravated already-deep inequalities.

“We’re tired of there not being work, of there not being healthcare, of the violation of our rights even to protest,” Vanesa said, as protesters lined up for a meal in southern Bogota, observed by police.

Other similar mothers’ groups have sprung up in cities, including western Pasto.

Vanesa called on police to respect marchers.

“They have mothers, too.”

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Drug Gang: Mexican Police Chief Killed in Hail of 2OO Bullets

The police chief in Mexico’s north-western Sinaloa state, Joel Ernesto Soto, has been killed while he was driving to the state capital, Culiacán.

Local police said gunmen had fired some two hundred bullets at his car.

Soto had survived an earlier ambush three weeks ago, when the convoy he was travelling in was attacked near the city of Mazatlán.

The state of Sinaloa is notorious for gang violence with the Sinaloa cartel the most deadly and violent.

It is not yet clear who may have been behind the attack on Soto.

Sinaloa’s state security secretary, Cristóbal Castañeda, said Soto had been on leave and was returning from a trip to see his family when he was ambushed.

Mr Castañeda said Soto was travelling with his bodyguards but had decided to keep a “low profile” and travelled in a “discreet car” when he was attacked.

Last year, more than 500 police officers were murdered in Mexico with many targeted by the country’s powerful criminal gangs and drug-trafficking cartels.

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Peru: 16 Killed in Shining Path Anti-Election Violence

BBC- Sixteen people, including at least two children, have been killed in a rebel attack in Peru, the country’s defence minister has confirmed.

The far-left Shining Path guerrilla group says it was behind the attack.

It left pamphlets at the scene ordering people not to vote in the upcoming presidential election.

The Maoist rebel group lost much of its power after the arrest of its leader in 1992 but remnants are still active in Peru’s coca-producing region.

The government says the Shining Path has since turned into a criminal group engaged in drug trafficking.

What happened?

A local official said he had been alerted to an attack in the village of San Miguel del Ene on Sunday evening local time.

He said he found bodies strewn across the floor of two bars on opposite banks of a small river. He told local media that the bodies had bullet holes and that some of them, including those of two children, had been burned.

Initial reports spoke of 18 bodies, which was later revised down to 14. But Defence Minister Nuria Esparch said that following the arrival of the security forces at the site on Monday, she could confirm that 16 people had been killed.

Peru’s armed forces said that next to the bodies pamphlets signed by the Central Committee of the Militarised Communist Party of Peru – the official name of an offshoot of the Shining Path – had been found warning people not to vote in the upcoming presidential election on 6 June.

The pamphlets also said that the group would “clean” the area of “informants and traitors” and other “parasites”.

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Moderna 100%, State Vaccine Lotteries, Trump Claims Win on China Virus

 

Moderna moves closer to offering vaccine to 12- to 17-year-olds

Moderna announced on Tuesday that studies had found that its COVID-19 vaccine was 100 percent effective at stopping infection in adolescents aged 12 to 17.

The company intends to submit its data for the age group to global regulators, including the FDA, in early June.

The studies included 3,732 participants aged 12 to 17 and no cases of COVID-19 were found in any vaccinated participants. “No significant safety concerns” were identified.

The vaccine was 93 percent effective after the first dose and 100 percent effective after the second.

“We are encouraged that mRNA-1273 was highly effective at preventing COVID-19 in adolescents,” Moderna CEO Stéphane Bancel said in a statement. “It is particularly exciting to see that the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine can prevent SARS-CoV-2 infection.”

What this means: FDA’s emergency authorization for Moderna to be given to 12- to 17-year-olds would open up more opportunities for older students to get vaccinated before the next school year starts. The FDA has already granted emergency authorization for the Moderna vaccine to be given to those 18 and older and the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine to be given to those 12 and older. Pfizer and its partner BioNTech received the emergency authorization for 12- to 15-year-olds about two weeks ago, after the FDA permitted it to be given to those 16 and older in December.

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Big Bucks Vaccine Lottereies Grow

States are increasingly turning to lotteries as a way to try to get hesitant people vaccinated against the coronavirus and boost lagging numbers.

New York and Maryland on Thursday announced that residents who get the COVID-19 vaccine will be eligible for prize money, with Oregon unveiling similar plans on Friday. All three states are following in the footsteps of Ohio, which launched a lottery-focused campaign earlier this month.

Health officials in the Buckeye State are already reporting some promising results: Vaccinations for people 16 and older increased 28 percent the weekend after the lottery announcement, compared to the previous weekend.

Dan Tierney, a spokesman for Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R), said vaccinations had been trending down before the lottery.

“Really the only thing that has changed was the availability of the Vax-a-Million incentive,” Tierney said.

Vaccinated residents in Ohio will be entered to win one of five $1 million prizes.

The approach is garnering interest in other parts of the country. About 10 other states have talked to DeWine or his staff about the lottery incentive, Tierney said.

The White House also gave its support to the idea on Friday.

“From the data we’ve seen, they appear to be working,” White House senior adviser for the COVID-19 response Andy Slavitt said during a press briefing.

“I think the reason they work is because the vast number of people who are not yet vaccinated are actually not opposed to getting vaccinated,” he added. “They’re just not prioritizing it very high. There are other things going on in their lives. Things that draw attention to it, like the lotteries in those states you mentioned, are, not surprisingly, very effective. And so we’re enthusiastic.”

Health officials are looking for new ways to spur people to get vaccinated, now that the most eager Americans have already received their shots. Nationally, vaccinations have fallen from over 3 million per day in April to about 1.8 million per day, according to Our World in Data.

Still, some experts cautioned that the lotteries are not a cure-all. While lotteries can prompt people who have not gotten around to getting a vaccine yet, they do not address underlying issues like concerns about safety or worries about taking time off work to get vaccinated.

“It doesn’t at all deal with the structural obstacles that might still be there,” said Micah Berman, associate professor of public health and law at The Ohio State University.

“It certainly creates a buzz. It just can’t be the only thing that the state does,” he added.

While there appears to be a short-term increase in vaccinations after the announcement, he noted, it is also unclear whether that will be sustained over the longer term.

“If someone is concerned about the safety of the vaccine, will a lottery push them over that tipping point such that they would get the vaccine? I think we’ll need to see,” said William Moss, executive director of the International Vaccine Access Center at Johns Hopkins University. “My guess right.

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US achieves full vaccinations for half of adults

CDC data showed the U.S. reached a huge milestone with its COVID-19 vaccination effort on Tuesday, with half of the nation’s adults being considered fully vaccinated.

Fifty percent, or more than 129 million, of Americans 18 and older are considered fully vaccinated.

A person is considered fully vaccinated in the U.S. two weeks after receiving their second dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccines or two weeks after receiving the only dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

What’s next: President Biden’s next target is to ensure that 70 percent of adults have received at least one dose of the vaccine by the Fourth of July. Tuesday’s data shows 61.6 percent of adults, amounting to more than 158 million, have received at least one dose.

The U.S. is also nearing half of its total population having received at least one dose of the vaccine, as Tuesday’s data shows 49.5 percent of Americans have reached this point.

But vaccinations have slowed in recent weeks after the most eager recipients received their vaccines, prompting states to institute incentives, including lotteries, to encourage unvaccinated people to get their shots.

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CDC identifies only 10,000 COVID-19 infections in fully vaccinated, but likely an undercount

More than 10,000 fully vaccinated people in the U.S. have experienced a “breakthrough” COVID-19 infection, according to a new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) study.

According to the CDC, a total of 10,262 vaccine breakthrough infections had been reported from 46 U.S. states and territories as of April 30, out of the approximately 101 million people who were fully vaccinated against COVID-19 at the time.

The agency noted, however, that the breakthrough number in the report is likely a substantial undercount.

State health departments voluntarily report vaccine breakthrough infections to the CDC, and people voluntarily report infections to states, so the data might not be complete or representative.

Many people with vaccine breakthrough infections, especially those who are asymptomatic or who experience mild illness, might not seek testing, CDC said.

Going forward, the CDC is limiting the monitoring of people who have been infected while vaccinated. The agency is only sequencing a limited number of the cases, which has drawn concern from scientists. CDC said only 5 percent of breakthrough cases were sequenced.

In addition, beginning May 1 the CDC shifted from monitoring all reported breakthroughs to only those that result in hospitalization or death. The agency said the narrowed focus means only the cases of “highest clinical and public health significance” get reported.

Why it matters: Tracking and sequencing help identify who might be more at risk, and whether certain variants can escape the vaccine’s neutralizing effects. Scientists have questioned the benefit of limiting surveillance, when casting a wider net would likely be more beneficial.

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Trump on Wuhan lab: Now everyone agrees ‘I was right’

Former President Trump on Tuesday took a victory lap for his assertion that the coronavirus originated in a lab in Wuhan, China, and defended using the term “Chinese virus,” which has been criticized as racist and blamed in part for a spike in violence against Asian Americans.

“Now everybody is agreeing that I was right when I very early on called Wuhan as the source of COVID-19, sometimes referred to as the China Virus,” Trump said in a statement.

Top U.S. public health officials and experts are increasingly lending credibility to the need for a deeper investigation into the origins of the coronavirus, but so far there is no definitive proof the virus leaked from a lab.

Experts and officials have also noted that even if the virus escaped from a lab, that doesn’t mean it was manufactured in one.

Still, Trump says he’s vindicated.

“To me it was obvious from the beginning but I was badly criticized, as usual. Now they are all saying ‘He was right.’ Thank you!” Trump added.

Keeps using that term: The World Health Organization last February urged people to avoid terms like the “Wuhan virus” or the “Chinese virus,” fearing it could spike a backlash against Asians.

Trump never followed that advice though, and researchers have found his tweets led to an increase in anti-Asian backlash. Last week, he was sued by a civil rights group for calling COVID-19 the “China virus.”

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WORLD STATS

Coronavirus Cases:

168,544,945

Deaths:

3,500,470

Recovered:

150,087,791
Highlighted in green
= all cases have recovered from the infection
Highlighted in grey
= all cases have had an outcome (there are no active cases)

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Latest News

May 26 (GMT)

Updates

  • 8,373 new cases and 406 new deaths in Russia [source]
  • 2,483 new cases and 265 new deaths in Mexico [source]

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