/Coronavirus news – live: New Zealand military to oversee border after UK cases imported, and dexamethasone hailed as breakthrough treatment

Coronavirus news – live: New Zealand military to oversee border after UK cases imported, and dexamethasone hailed as breakthrough treatment

Coronavirus UK news live: Latest updates as US doctors sceptical of dexamethasone ‘breakthrough’ | The Independent


LiveUpdated

Wednesday 17 June 2020 14:52

Related video: Dexamethasone now available on NHS

US doctors have expressed caution over the UK’s dexamethasone “breakthrough”, calling for the full results of the trial to be published and warning of potential side effects. Meanwhile, Germany’s health ministry declined to comment on the Recovery Trial study, but a spokesperson said there was no need to stockpile the drug.

Elsewhere, China has cancelled hundreds of flights to and from Beijing because of the capital’s new Covid-19 outbreak, linked to a wholesale food market. The city reported 31 new infections on Wednesday, up from 27 the day before.

And in New Zealand, the military has been tasked with overseeing the country’s border quarantine after two people infected with coronavirus were released early. Jacinda Ardern said the pair’s release on compassionate grounds was “unacceptable”. They had flown from London to visit a dying relative and authorities are now trying to trace more than 300 people they may have come into contact with.

Download the new Independent Premium app

Sharing the full story, not just the headlines


2020-06-17T13:50:28.000Z

Sturgeon pledge on schools

Nicola Sturgeon has pledged to “move heaven and Earth” to get schools running as normally possible by the time they are due to return in August.

Speaking at first minister’s questions on Wednesday, Ms Sturgeon committed to provide the cash needed by councils to ensure social distancing measures can be applied in schools.

Her comments come just hours after she said that, should the suppression of the virus continue over the summer as it is currently, then schools could return “nearer normality” on August 11.

Scottish Tory leader Jackson Carlaw responded: “France, Germany, Denmark and Ireland are moving heaven and Earth, this government is not.”


2020-06-17T13:40:06.000Z

US still in first wave of virus, Fauci says

Anthony Fauci, the Trump administration’s top infectious disease expert, has warned Americans against complacency as new Covid-19 cases spike in multiple US states where lockdown measures have been eased, writes Gino Spocchia.

The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases director argued on Tuesday that it was too soon to label new Covid-19 cases as a so-called “second wave”.

“When I look at the TV and I see pictures of people congregating at bars when the location they are indicates they shouldn’t be doing that, that’s very risky,” Dr. Fauci told The Daily Beast.


2020-06-17T13:30:19.000Z

NI police ombudsman to probe fines handed out at BLM protests

The police ombudsman is investigating how the PSNI has enforced coronavirus regulations at large public gatherings.

There were a number of complaints to the watchdog about fines issued to people who attended Black Lives Matter protests in Belfast and Londonderry on Saturday, 6 June.

Complainants claimed police had not done enough to enforce the same regulations during large gatherings on beaches and also at the Protect Our Statues gathering at Belfast City Hall on 13 June.

Marie Anderson said her investigation would focus on the police policy, how it was being communicated to rank-and-file officers, and how it was being implemented.

Ms Anderson’s office added that the legality of the fixed penalty notices is a matter for the courts.
The Northern Ireland Policing Board is also examining the complaints, and has agreed to liaise with the ombudsman’s office.


2020-06-17T13:20:23.000Z

UK figures update

A further 10 people have died after testing positive for Covid-19 in Wales, ​Public Health Wales said, taking the total number of deaths to 1,466. The total number of cases there increased by 53 to 14,922.

In Northern Ireland one further death with coronavirus has been has been recorded. The region’s Department of Health said the total was now 543. There were eight new confirmed cases of the virus, bringing the total to 4,862.


2020-06-17T13:10:39.000Z

Nurse who died after giving birth felt too ‘helpless’ to stop working

A nurse who died of coronavirus days after she gave birth by emergency caesarean section to a baby girl felt too “helpless” to ask her employers if she could stop working, her husband has said, writes Kate Ng.

Mary Agyeiwaa Agyapong succumbed to Covid-19 in April just a week after she was admitted to hospital with the infection and days after her daughter was delivered.

Her husband, Ernest Boateng, revealed in an interview with the BBC that the 28-year-old nurse felt she could not ask to stop working despite being heavily pregnant, even when she was warned by a union representative that it was not safe.


2020-06-17T12:55:43.000Z

Children’s doctors call on Johnson to prioritise schools

More than 1,500 paediatricians have urged Boris Johnson to make the reopening of schools a priority or “risk scarring the life chances of a generation of young people”.

The physicians signed a letter from the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health asking for authorities in England and Northern Ireland to follow Wales and Scotland in laying out detailed plans for getting children back to classrooms.

It reads: “The brunt of the impact of Covid-19 is and will continue to be borne by children and families who have the fewest resources and need the most support.”

Earlier today at prime minister’s questions, Mr Johnson repeatedly challenged his opponent Sir Keir Starmer to say whether he believed it was safe for children to return to school – in a reversal of the normal order of PMQs and a sign of how charged the issue has become.

Unions have also been doing battle with Conservative MPs as they warn that some schools may not be ready to fully reopen in September. You can read about that here.

Catch up on today’s PMQs clash below:


2020-06-17T12:40:45.983Z

Beijing flights cancelled amid new outbreak

More than 60 per cent of commercial flights in and out of Beijing have been cancelled because of the city’s new coronavirus outbreak.

New cases have been linked to a wholesale food market.

On Wednesday, the Chinese capital reported 31 new infections, up from 27 the day before.

The website of the Communist Party’s mouthpiece Global Times said that as of 9am, a total of 1,255 flights to and from the capital’s two major airports had been scrapped.

Sporting events are being cancelled and attractions like museums are being capped at 30 per cent capacity.

You can read our previous story about the situation in Beijing below:


2020-06-17T12:35:04.000Z

Schools may be unable to reopen fully in September, unions warn

Union leaders have warned that all schools may not be able to fully reopen in September under the government’s current social distancing rules, writes Lizzy Buchan.

Mary Bousted, joint general secretary of the National Education Union, raised doubts over whether all children could go back to the classroom in the autumn due to concern over shortages of space and teaching staff needed to meet coronavirus safety standards.

At a fiery hearing of the Commons Education Committee, Tory MPs clashed with leaders of four major teaching unions over what one Conservative branded a “disgraceful political campaign” to prevent schools from reopening.


2020-06-17T12:25:10.000Z

Sweden’s death toll passes 5,000

Coronavirus deaths in Sweden from have passed 5,000, the country’s public health agency has said.

The official figure is 5,041, up from 4,939 on Tuesday.

Sweden has taken a less stringent approach to tackling Covid-19 than its Nordic neighbours, allowing most schools, shops and restaurants to remain open.

The government has relied on voluntary measures such as social distancing and good hygiene.


2020-06-17T12:11:50.020Z

What is dexamethasone, how does it work and when will it be used?

Our video team explains.


2020-06-17T11:58:56.026Z

Health secretary says 240,000 doses of dexamethasone ‘in stock and on order’

Matt Hancock said that 240,000 doses of the drug dexamethasone are “in stock and on order”.

He said: “It is not by any means a cure but it is the best news we have had.”

Speaking in the Commons, he added: “Seven other drugs are currently being trialled as part of the Recovery Trial and a further nine further drugs are in live clinical trials as part of the Accord Programme which is looking at early-stage treatments.”

Mr Hancock said 592,204 people as of Tuesday have now had an antibody test on the NHS.


2020-06-17T11:52:07.000Z

Scotland’s coronavirus death toll increases by nine

A total of 2,462 patients have died in Scotland after testing positive for coronavirus, up by nine from 2,453 on Tuesday, Nicola Sturgeon said.

The figures are lower than the 4,070 deaths given earlier by the National Records of Scotland as they do not include suspected and probable coronavirus infections.

Speaking during First Minister’s Questions in the Scottish Parliament, Ms Sturgeon said 18,066 people have tested positive for the virus in Scotland, up by 21 from 18,045 the previous day.

There are 965 people in hospital with confirmed or suspected Covid-19, a decrease of 21.

Of these patients, 24 were in intensive care, an increase of five.


2020-06-17T11:41:33.000Z

Mink at Danish farm to be culled after contracting virus

Mink at a farm in Denmark were found to be infected with the new coronavirus and the whole stock now has to be culled, Danish authorities said on Wednesday.

The outbreak is the first in Denmark, the world’s largest producer of mink skins, but comes shortly after the virus was detected at 13 mink farms in the Netherlands where roughly 570,000 minks have been ordered culled.

“The government has decided, on a precautionary principle, that the infected mink stock will be culled to minimise the risk of potential spread of the disease,” said the Danish Veterinary and Food Administration in a statement.

Mink at the Danish farm were tested after a person affiliated with the farm tested positive with Covid-19.

The outbreaks on the Dutch mink farms are thought to have originated from their human handlers and then spread among the animals.


2020-06-17T11:28:33.000Z

Russia reportedly already using dexamethasone treatment

Russia already uses dexamethasone to treat patients with the novel coronavirus, but does not view it as a panacea against Covid-19, the RIA news agency cited Russian health ministry official Sergei Avdeev as saying.

Dexamethasone, a cheap and widely used steroid, has become the first drug shown to be able to save the lives of critically ill coronavirus patients in what scientists said is a major breakthrough in the coronavirus pandemic.


2020-06-17T11:20:15.000Z

Couple married for 71 years die just days apart

An elderly couple who were married for seven decades passed away within days of one another after contracting Covid-19, writes Sabrina Barr.

Pat Wood, 91, and Ron Wood, 94, were married at Broadwater Parish Church on 23 April 1949.
The couple were initially placed in separate male and female wards. However, hospital workers allowed for their beds to be moved next to each other in their final days.


2020-06-17T11:10:36.000Z

Changing two-metre rule ‘would barely increase bus capacity’

Switching to a one-metre social distancing rule would only increase capacity on buses by one passenger per vehicle, MPs have been told.

West of England mayor Tim Bowles said major reform of bus funding was required because operators are unable to meet demand on some routes.
He told the Commons’ Transport Select Committee: “First Bus have done work and trials on that. They did modelling on two-metre distancing, one-and-a-half-metre and one metre.

“If you think about how tight buses are, even if you reduce that to one metre they’ve worked out you will get one additional passenger on a bus.

“If you’re around about 25 per cent capacity on the bus, it means a double decker can really only accommodate around 20 or just over 20 people.

“We would only see one more on one of those routes, if they’re following the rules.”


2020-06-17T11:00:28.000Z

Iraq’s new PM has multiple threats to deal with. Coronavirus is just one

Iraq is threatened by multiple crises, each of which is capable of destabilising the country, writes Patrick Cockburn.

The most immediate dangers are twofold: a resurgence in the coronavirus pandemic and the collapse in the oil revenues on which Baghdad relies to pay all its bills.

In addition, Isis attacks have increased and, though much less deadly than the savage onslaughts of the past, they are enough to make Iraqis fear that there is worse to come.


2020-06-17T10:50:36.000Z

Spain to hold ceremony commemorating coronavirus victims

King Felipe of Spain will lead a ceremony to honour health workers and the country’s 27,000 victims of coronavirus, prime minister Pedro Sanchez has announced.

Spain is emerging from a three-month lockdown after suffering one the world’s heaviest death tolls from the disease caused by the novel coronavirus.

Mr Sanchez told parliament the state ceremony on 16 July would honour “the 27,000 compatriots who lost their lives”, as well as civil servants who had been on the frontline of the fight against the pandemic.

Ursula Von der Leyen, the European Commission president, the president of the European Council Charles Michel, top EU diplomat Josep Borrell and Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the head of the World Health Organisation, are set to attend, he added.


2020-06-17T10:40:49.000Z

Huge fall in Scotland’s economy

Scotland’s economy has shrunk by almost one-quarter since the coronavirus outbreak began, figures show.

It is estimated GDP has fallen by 23 per cent since February.

This includes an 18.9-per-cent drop in April – the first full month for which restrictions on business and travel were in place.

The economy is estimated to have contracted by 5 per cent in March despite Scotland only having been in lockdown for the final week of that month.


2020-06-17T10:30:35.000Z

Mink to be culled after contracting Covid-19

Mink at a farm in Denmark were found to be infected with the new coronavirus and the whole stock must now be culled, the Danish Veterinary and Food Administration has announced.

The outbreak among minks is the first in Denmark, but comes shortly culls were ordered at 10 mink farms in the Netherlands due to infection. 

You can read a previous story about the situation below.

The Independent is campaigning to end the trade in wild animals.