/Coronavirus news – live: Schools offered £1bn package to make up for lost time, as US states begin to make face masks mandatory

Coronavirus news – live: Schools offered £1bn package to make up for lost time, as US states begin to make face masks mandatory

UK coronavirus update live: Latest news as schools offered £1bn recovery package | The Independent


LiveUpdated

Friday 19 June 2020 09:14

Related video: UK’s over-50s and key workers to be given vaccine priority

Schools in England are to be offered a total of £1bn to help pupils catch up on lost learning. Some £350m is set aside for tutors for the most disadvantaged children, and primary and secondary schools will share the remainder in the 2020-21 academic year.

In the US, a growing number of states and cities are making the wearing of face masks mandatory to prevent coronavirus spread. Donald Trump has famously eschewed the use of masks and they have become something of a political marker.

Six US states posted record rises in infections yesterday, while a similar situation exists south of the border in Mexico, where 5,662 cases were confirmed on Thursday.

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2020-06-19T08:15:07.000Z

Chinese firm begins human vaccine trials

A potential coronavirus vaccine being developed by China’s Clover Biopharmaceuticals is now in early-stage human testing, the firm said on Friday.

Initial safety data from the trial, which is enrolling about 150 adults and also investigating the vaccine in combination with Dynavax’s adjuvant, is expected in August this year, Clover said.

The potential inoculation uses a vaccine booster developed by GlaxoSmithKline.


2020-06-19T08:05:35.000Z

‘Boris Johnson seems determined to ignore any lessons from coronavirus. It’s not good enough’

The government’s handling of the coronavirus crisis has been “world beating” only in delivering one of the highest death rates, writes Sarah Wollaston.

When ministers refuse to acknowledge that anything could or should have been handled differently, how on earth will they learn from mistakes?

Britain was in no position to follow World Health Organisation guidance on testing and tracing because inadequate equipment and facilities, combined with fragmented and underfunded public health systems, meant they were rapidly overwhelmed.


2020-06-19T08:00:20.000Z

Germany update

The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Germany increased by 770 to 188,534 on Friday, data from the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) for infectious diseases showed.

The reported death toll rose by 16 to 8,872.


2020-06-19T07:50:08.000Z

Thailand figures

Thailand authorities reported five new coronavirus cases, all of which were found in quarantine, on Friday.

It made 25 days without a confirmed domestic transmission of the virus.

The new cases were Thais returning from Saudi Arabia, said Taweesin Wisanuyothin, spokesperson for the government’s Covid-19 task force.

Thailand has recorded 58 deaths related to coronavirus among some 3,146 confirmed cases


2020-06-19T07:45:15.000Z

UK’s over-50s to get vaccine first

Over-50s are to be given priority for a coronavirus vaccine if and when it becomes available, along with key workers in the health and social care sectors and those with heart and kidney disease, the health secretary has said, writes Andrew Woodcock.

No jab is yet available, but human trials began on a second potential vaccine being developed at Imperial College London this week, while production has already started on another possible inoculation at Oxford with the aim of building up stockpiles to be ready for deployment if it is approved for use in the autumn.


2020-06-19T07:35:32.000Z

China releases genome of coronavirus from latest outbreak

China has released genome sequencing data of the coronavirus responsible for a recent outbreak in Beijing.

Officials have submitted the data to the World Health Organisation, they said. They also claimed it showed the virus was a European strain.

Seafood and meat areas of the gigantic Beijing wholesale market called Xinfadi have been found to be highly contaminated with coronavirus. Norwegian and Chinese officials have previously said they do not believe salmon from the Scandinavian nation is to blame for the outbreak.

Details published on China’s National Microbiology Data Center website revealed the genome data was based on three samples – two human and one environmental – collected on 11 June.

“According to preliminary genomic and epidemiological study results, the virus is from Europe, but it is different from the virus currently spreading in Europe,” Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention official Zhang Yong said in an article published on Friday. “It’s older than the virus currently spreading in Europe.”


2020-06-19T07:25:08.000Z

Singapore open for business again

People in Singapore reunited with lovers and friends on Friday as the city-state lifted restrictions on socialising, shopping and dining out after more than two months.

Many residents had been forbidden from mixing with non-family members since early April.

Singapore has had more than 41,000 cases of Covid-19.

In some restaurants customers scan QR codes on their phone as a pre-emptive measure to aid contact-tracing.

Gyms have also reopened.


2020-06-19T07:15:08.000Z

Catch up on our main story from overnight – NHS app U-turn

The government has ditched plans to develop a custom-made contact-tracing app in favour of a new model after the rollout was beset with problems, writes Lizzy Buchan.

In a major U-turn, ministers announced a switch to technology provided by Apple and Google – abandoning an NHS model which aimed to give the health service greater access to patient data.

Officials admitted the app, designed by the health service’s tech arm NHSX, was highly inaccurate, picking up just 4 per cent of contacts on Apple phones and 75 per cent of contacts on Android handsets.


2020-06-19T07:10:15.000Z

Has government signed contact-tracing contract with Apple and Google?

Nick Gibb couldn’t, or wouldn’t, say.

Asked if a deal to develop the app had been completed with the tech giants, the school standards minister told Sky News: “Well, that’s a matter for [Matt Hancock, the health secretary]. He’s working with Google and Apple, I don’t know the details of the contracts that they have.”

He added: “What I do know is that we are working with Google and Apple to iron out these problems with the system to make it robust and accurate in how it tracks and traces.”

Yesterday the government ditched its plans to administer the app data itself, in the latest of a series of high-profile U-turns.


2020-06-19T07:05:08.000Z

Mexico posts record daily infections

Mexico logged another record one-day increase in confirmed coronavirus infections on Thursdaay, with 5,662, while 667 more deaths were reported.

The daily death toll has been hovering around 700 for much of this week, but the daily case load increase has usually remained below 5,000.

Mexico now has seen 19,747 confirmed coronavirus deaths and 165,455 confirmed cases.

Officials have acknowledged that both figures are undercounts because of a lack of testing and delayed results.


2020-06-19T06:55:15.000Z

‘Clear intention’ to have all pupils back at school by September

The government’s “clear intention” is that all children should be back in classrooms across England by September, a minister has said.

Nick Gibb, the schools standards minister, told Sky News: “Our clear intention is that all pupils will return in September. We’ve had a very phased, very cautious approach to reopening schools to all children.”

Mr Gibb added: “Of course, we’re working on other contingency plans but the clear intention is that we’ll have all children back in school in September.”

He also said that schools would be able to use the £650m portion of the £1bn new funding announced this morning “at their discretion”.


2020-06-19T06:45:22.830Z

Schools get £1bn to help children catch up

State schools in England will be granted an additional £1bn of funding in a bid to help children catch up on teaching time lost during the lockdown, the government has announced, writes Vincent Wood.

The most disadvantaged children will have access to tutors through a £350m national programme for the 2020-21 academic year, as part of an attempt to prevent the attainment gap from widening further.

The education secretary, Gavin Williamson, has also announced that a further £650m will be shared across state primary and secondary schools to help children from all backgrounds who have lost teaching time.


2020-06-19T06:44:38.780Z

US states and cities eye mandatory mask rules

California, North Carolina and a number of American cities have either made wearing a face mask mandatory, or have urged authorities to allow them to do so, after six states set one-day records for rises in infections.

California governor Gavin Newsom ordered mask use in most places as the state for the second day in a row registered over 4,000 new cases.

And in Arizona, where another infection record was set, the Democratic mayors of Tucson and Phoenix respectively ordered and prepared to vote on mandatory face coverings after Republican governor Doug Ducey allowed cities to set their own rules.

The mayors of nine Texas cities have asked that state’s governor for similar powers.

Florida posted 3,207 new cases on Thursday, its second daily record in a week. Orange County mayor Jerry Demings ordered obligatory mask use, telling residents of Orlando and other cities it would help them avoid a second shutdown.

Wearing a face mask has become a political issue in the US. Donald Trump has refused to use them and many people see them as a marker of one’s political sympathies.


2020-06-19T06:02:13.313Z

Welcome to our live coronavirus coverage for Friday.