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Monday 25 May 2020 22:50
Greece has restarted regular ferry services to its islands while restaurants and bars have reopened as the country attempts to salvage its summer tourism season from the impact of coronavirus.
Travel to the islands has mostly been off-limits since a lockdown was imposed in late March, but the country’s low infection rate has prompted the government to start the holiday season earlier than expected.
Meanwhile, children in Australia have begun returning to full-time face-to-face lessons on Monday, allowing many parents to return to offices.
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The World Health Organization has warned Brazil against reopening its economy before it can perform enough testing to control the spread of the virus.
The organisation’s executive director, Michael Ryan, said in a news conference that Brazil’s “intense” transmission rates meant it should keep some sort of stay-at-home measures in place, regardless of negative impacts on the economy.
Rio de Janeiro’s Mayor Marcelo Crivella, an evangelical bishop, announced today he was including religious institutions in the list of “essential services.” This means churches would be able to open their doors, while keeping a minimum two meters between attendees, in spite of existing recommendations for people to stay at home and most businesses remaining shut.
For Dominic Cummings, sorry is the hardest word – writes Andrew Grice.
He adds: “His lengthy defence against the charge he broke the lockdown rules by taking his family from London to Durham might ease some of the pressure from Tory MPs on Boris Johnson to sack his closest adviser.
More below:
With Brazil emerging as one of the world’s most infected countries, President Jair Bolsonaro is deflecting all responsibility for the coronavirus crisis, casting blame on mayors, governors, an outgoing health minister and the media.
By contrast, he portrays himself as a clear-eyed crusader willing to defend an unpopular idea — that shutting down the economy to control Covid-19 will ultimately cause more suffering than allowing the disease to run its course. The refusal of governors to fall into line with his decree allowing gyms to open, he said, verged on authoritarianism.
Asked about Brazil’s death toll surpassing China’s, he feigned impotence: “I don’t work miracles. What do you want me to do?” Confronted with a travel ban imposed on Brazil by the US because of widespread Covid-19, one of his advisers called it press hysteria.
Healthcare academics have weighed in on Dominic Cummings’ decision to travel to Durham.
“This is an important reason why Cummings should have stayed put, and he like all senior government advisers will have been well aware of this.”
Prof Cassell added: “We will need to protect the NHS for a long time. I would not be surprised to see targeted travel restrictions within the UK over the summer to protect NHS facilities outside the major cities.”
Dr Head added: “There are also issues of taking up emergency healthcare resource in an area of the country where you are not resident – this makes a mockery of healthcare planning where ideal number of intensive care beds are based on population numbers in the local area.
“It is also very poor public health practice to put your family in a car and go for a 60-mile drive in order to test your eyesight.”
Trump threatens to move Republican convention from North Carolina
Donald Trump has warned he may move the Republican National Convention from North Carolina if the event faces social distancing restrictions due to coronavirus.
The president wrote on Twitter that if the state’s Democratic governor Roy Cooper does not immediately answer “whether or not the space will be allowed to be fully occupied”, the party will find another site.
Our reporter,
Graig Graziosi, has the full story below:
Dubai will begin allowing free movement and business activity to restart from Wednesday, Crown Prince Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed has said.
Starting from Wednesday there will be no restrictions on movement or business operations between 6.00 am and 11.00 pm, the Dubai Media office said in a press release.
The NHS Confederation, which represents 500 healthcare organisations has said they are concerned by the potential damage to public confidence caused by Dominic Cummings.
Responding to Mr Cummings about his actions during the coronavirus lockdown, NHS Confederation Chief Executive Niall Dickson said: “It is not for us to comment on the merit of individual cases nor to comment on the actions of any member of the Prime Minister’s team.
“However, whether or not any criticism is justified, we and our members are concerned at the damage that may be done to public and NHS staff confidence in government guidance because of the way this story has unfolded.
“We cannot stress too much that the guidance has saved tens of thousands of lives and that following the guidance in the weeks ahead is going to be as vital as ever, when discretion will inevitably be greater as the lockdown eases.”
Boris Johnson urged people to go to the shops to help the economy bounce back.
The Prime Minister said: “I’m certainly not going to discourage them from spending at all.
“I think that it’s early days but we are very much hoping there will be a bounce back over the next few months.”
Johnson – ‘I’ve been wearing glasses since coronavirus infection’
Pulling out a pair of glasses from his jacket pocket, the Prime Minister told the Downing Street press conference: “I’m finding that I have to wear spectacles for the first time in years – I think because of the effects of this thing – so I’m inclined to think there’s some … I think that’s very, very plausible that eyesight can be a problem associated with coronavirus.”
Boris Johnson said he regretted the “confusion and anger” caused by the Dominic Cummings row.
At the daily Downing Street press conference, the Prime Minister said: “Do I regret what has happened? Yes, of course I do regret the confusion and the anger and the pain that people feel.”
He added: “This is a country that has been going through the most tremendous difficulties and suffering in the course of the last 10 weeks and that’s why I really did want people to understand exactly what had happened.”
Outdoor markets and car showrooms across England can reopen from 1 June and all other non-essential retail, including high street shops, department stores and shopping centres, from 15 June “once they are Covid-19 secure and can show customers will be kept safe”, prime minister Boris Johnson has said.
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Boris Johnson – shops will reopen on 15 June
Outdoor markets and car showrooms will reopen on 1 June, the prime minister added.
Mr Johnson said the country’s progress would be confirmed later this week ahead of the nation’s move to phase two of lockdown easing, which includes the reopening of schools and non-essential shops.
Boris Johnson begins daily briefing
The Prime Minister has begun today’s briefing by announcing the number of new deaths and infections.
Overall a total of 3,532,634 tests have been carried out and 261,184 cases have been confirmed positive.
Dominic Cummings’ statement in full
Dominic Cummings defended his decision to drive up to Durham – but questions will likely remain over trips out he took during that period including a stop off at Barnard Castle to check his eyesight.
The regularly scheduled Downing Street press briefing was set to begin at 6pm – but has now been pushed back by a total of two hours to 7pm.
The Prime Minister is set to take to the podium for the second time in as many days.
The Department for Health said 36,914 people had died in hospitals, care homes and the wider community after testing positive for coronavirus in the UK as of 5pm on Sunday, up by 121 from 36,793 the day before.
In the 24-hour period up to 9am on Monday, 73,726 tests were carried out or dispatched, with 1,625 positive results.
Overall a total of 3,532,634 tests have been carried out and 261,184 cases have been confirmed positive.
Ireland has reported no new coronavirus deaths for the first time since March.
The country has seen more than 24,000 infections over the course of the pandemic, and 1,608 deaths.
A clinical trial of malaria drug hydroxychloroquine has been suspended by the World Health Organization amid safety concerns, the body’s chief has confirmed.
“The executive group has implemented a temporary pause of the hydroxychloroquine arm within the Solidarity trial while the safety data is reviewed by the data safety monitoring board. The other arms of the trial are continuing”, WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told an online briefing.
The drug has been repeatedly endorsed by a world leaders including Brazil’s Jair Bolsonaro and US president Donald Trump – who yesterday said he had just finished a course of the medicine, which he claimed to have been taking as a preventative measure.
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Coming up: The Downing Street press briefing
Away from Dominic Cummings’ statement, the regularly scheduled Downing Street press briefing will begin at 6pm – an hour later than usual.
The Prime Minister is set to take to the podium for the second time in as many days.
Dominic Cummings has said he has no regrets about breaking the lockdown and driving to Durham after his wife had fallen ill with coronavirus, in a briefing at Downing Street.
Making a statement in Downing Street’s rose garden, Mr Cummings said: “I don’t regret what I did. I think reasonable people may well disagree about how I thought about what to do in the circumstances, but I think what I did was actually reasonable in these circumstances.
“The rules made clear that if you are dealing with small children that can be exceptional circumstances.
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