Coronavirus: latest global developments

Coronavirus: latest global developments

Here are the latest developments in the coronavirus crisis.

Covid-19
Covid-19 globe

The pandemic has killed at least 585,750 people worldwide since it surfaced in China late last year and more than 13,660,780 have been infected, according to an AFP tally at 1900 GMT on Thursday based on official sources.

The United States is the worst-hit country with 137,897 deaths. It is followed by Brazil with 75,366, Britain with 45,119, Mexico with 36,906, and Italy with 35,017 fatalities.

- India locks down millions -

More than 125 million people in Bihar, one of India's poorest states, are put under a new lockdown to last 15 days.

All schools, clubs, temples and non-essential businesses are ordered to close, but construction and agricultural activity are allowed to continue. Public transport is shut down, though private vehicles are permitted to operate.

- Alert on Serbia, Montenegro -

European Union members remove Montenegro and Serbia from a list of countries deemed to have the outbreak under relative control, effectively reintroducing a travel ban.

- Spain honours virus victims -

Badly-hit Spain honours its more than 28,000 virus dead at a solemn state ceremony joined by bereaved families and top EU and World Health Organization figures.

- Germany prepares for outbreaks -

Germany's federal and regional governments agree on tougher, more targeted lockdown measures to contain local outbreaks, with new rules that allow for a ban on travel "in and out of the affected areas" to limit the spread of the virus.

- EU virus package -

European Central Bank chief Christine Lagarde urges EU leaders to do their bit and "quickly" agree on a huge recovery plan for the eurozone economy.

European Union leaders will meet in Brussels on July 17-18 to discuss a 750-billion-euro fund to help the hardest-hit member states weather the crisis.

- France masks up -

Wearing face masks will be compulsory in indoor public spaces in France from next week, the government says, as officials note signs of an uptick in the virus cases in the country.

- Zimbabwe doctors walk out? -

Senior doctors in Zimbabwe's public health service threaten to walk out over low pay and lack of virus protective gear, while the number of infections in the country are rising rapidly.

- Airline realism -

Emirates airline says it is unrealistic to establish social distancing on aircraft by leaving seats empty to curb the spread of virus, as the cost would be too high to bear.

"The economy of the aircraft is built on filling it, filling the seats," says Boutros Boutros, Emirates' head of corporate communications. 

"What we wish for is one thing, but the reality is another."

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