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  • Israel’s coronavirus death toll rises to 126 as patients rise to 12,200

    The country’s death toll stands at 126 people. Officials considering third lockdown for Memorial and Independence days

    AP

    Israelis are entering the final days of Passover under coronavirus restrictions similar to Seder night that require the public to stay in their homes and celebrate only with their nuclear families.

    The government unanimously approved that until 5 a.m. on Thursday, Israelis will not be permitted to leave their towns and cities. In Jerusalem, movement will be restricted within pre-defined neighborhoods.

    Moreover, to prevent crowding following the conclusion of Passover on Wednesday evening, bakeries and supermarket bread departments will not reopen until Thursday morning.
    As Passover ends, the government, the National Security Council and the Health and Defense ministries are supposed to hold a series of meetings to decide on the first phase of the country’s exit strategy.

    However, even if the economy is opened more in general, it was reported that a Passover-like lockdown is likely to be implemented for Memorial Day through the end of Israeli Independence Day, the Hebrew website N12 reported.

    Memorial Day, Yom Hazikaron in Hebrew, starts April 27 at night and Independence Day ends April 29 at sundown.

    The purpose of the expected move is to prevent people from attending memorial ceremonies en masse, holding large gatherings in cemeteries or throwing barbeques and other parties in large groups and in public spaces, as is common on Independence Day.

    The decision to implement restrictions will be based in part on how well the public does or does not adhere to the Passover restrictions and whether the number of people infected with coronavirus per day continues at its current rate or decreases or increases.

    The country’s death toll rose to 126 people Wednesday morning, as Soroka Medical Center reported an elderly patient had died from the disease.

    A total of 12,200 cases of the coronavirus have been confirmed by the Health Ministry, including 176 patients in serious condition, 132 requiring ventilation. Some 2,309 individuals have recovered from the virus.

    Wolfson Medical Center in Holon confirmed that among those infected is an eight-day-old baby, who was born at Hadassah Medical Center on Mount Scopus in Jerusalem. The baby was brought to Wolfson because he had a high fever, but he is currently in good medical condition. His mother shows no sign of coronavirus.
    A total of 7,680 tests were carried out between Sunday and Monday morning, the Health Ministry said, up from less than 6,000 a few days before. The ministry said it is targeting 10,000 daily tests during the Passover holiday.

    The concern is that if there is not a near-full closure on Memorial and Independence days, then social distancing and other restrictions will be difficult to enforce.

    All state ceremonies are already planned to be held without audiences and with limited participation.

  • Two brothers’ escape from Quarantine Centre brought back by police in Shopian

    Shopian: Two brothers escaped from a coronavirus quarantine centre in South Kashmir’s Shopian district but were brought back to the facility and booked by the police, officials said.

    Officials told KNT that two brothers Anayat Ahmed Khanday and Muhammad Ashraf Khanday, residents Malikbugh Shopian fled from the quarantine centre on late Tuesday evening. On being informed about the incident a police team immediately swung into action, traced them and brought him back the same evening, they said.

    Both these brothers having travel history were lodged at a Guest House. The officials said that they were found in their home by police.

    Official said that despite knowing that the COVID-19 disease can be fatal, they negligently and deliberately left the quarantine centre increasing the risk of spreading the disease.

    A case has been registered against them, they said. (KNT)

  • COVID-19: Industries operating outside city limits allowed to reopen from April 20

    Wearing masks in public places mandatory, spitting a punishable offence, says Home Ministry

    PTI

    All industries operating in rural areas, outside city limits, will be allowed to reopen from April 20, provided they follow social distancing norms and other safeguards against COVID-19 infection, according to a new set of lockdown directives issued by the Ministry of Home Affairs on Wednesday.

    Also, the “wearing of face covers and masks is compulsory in public places and work places.” Spitting is a punishable offence and sale of liquor, gutkha and tobacco should be strictly prohibited.

    The revised guidelines permit relaxations in several sectors, to be implemented at the discretion of State and district authorities, in areas that have not been identified as infection hotspots.

    Apart from rural industries, the guidelines permit construction of roads, irrigation projects, buildings and industrial projects in rural areas. Construction of renewable energy projects will also be allowed. In urban areas, only in situ construction projects will be allowed, if workers are available on site. Brick kilns in rural areas can also resume work.

    Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) work will also be allowed with strict implementation of social distancing and face masks, with priority given to irrigation and water conservation works. Services provided by electricians, plumbers, IT repairs, motor mechanics and carpenters shall also be allowed.

    IT firms

    Manufacturing and other industrial activities in Special Economic Zones, Export Oriented Units and other industrial estates and townships can reopen, as long as arrangements are made for workers to stay within premises or in adjacent buildings. IT hardware manufacturing, food processing in rural areas and jute industries are among the other new exemptions to the lockdown. IT and IT-enabled services will also be permitted to function with 50% strength. Factories and office establishments that will be allowed to operate during the lockdown period must mandatorily provide medical insurance for workers, say the guidelines.

    The revised guidelines issued by MHA said that travel by air, rail, metro, public buses, taxis, cab aggregators will remain suspended. Cinema halls and malls to remain shut. All social /religious gatherings are prohibited till May 3 and all industrial and commercial units, unless exempted, will remain shut.

    The order issued by Union Home Secretary Ajay Bhalla said that States will decide the additional public activities to be allowed from April 20. MHA said the additional facilities will have to be based on strict compliance to the existing guidelines on lockdown measures.

    In another letter to States, the Union Home Secretary emphasised that the guidelines will be withdrawn immediately if any of the lockdown measures are violated risking the spread of COVID-19, asserting that restrictions cannot be diluted under any circumstances.

    The lockdown was extended till May 3 in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, and to “mitigate hardships” faced by people during the extended lockdown, certain additional activities are to be allowed from April 20.

    The first set of such guidelines to be followed by States for “containment of COVID-19 epidemic” in the country was issued on March 24 under the Disaster Management Act, 2005, invoked for the first time in the country.

  • Authorities tracing contacts after milkman tests positive in North Kashmir

    Positive Case of Naidkhai, Bandipora not an active milkman: DC Bandipora


    Srinagar: Authorities are conducting door-to-door operation to locate those people especially females who have come into contact with a milkman, tested positive for Covid-19 in Naidkhai area of North Kashmir’s Bandipora district.

    Yesterday, two positive cases surfaced in Bandipora among them one was a milkman reportedly hailing from Shallpora Naidkhai.

    Sources told KNT that authorities are busy in tracing the contacts of that milkman. There are apprehensions that many woman may have come into contact with this milkman. Deputy Commissioner Bandipora, Shahbaz Mirza said that contacts will be traced, quarantined and tested. He added that situation is under control and there are no reports of community transmission of this lethal virus. He said that milkman who was tested positive had come into contact with a positive patient.

    Bandipora has witnessed 53 Covid-19 positive cases among which Gund Jahangeer hamlet alone has 26 patients. Meanwhile, in Shangus area of Nowgam, Anantnag, a 41 year old man working at a bakers shop was also tested positive. Authorities have put the owner of the shop his family members and the family members of the patients in quarantine as well. (KNT)

  • Tablighi Jamaat meet: 46 foreigners jailed for violation of visa norms

    When their quarantine ended on Monday, they were arrested in the respective districts for violation of Foreigners Act 1946 and produced before local courts which sent them to judicial custody for 14 days on Tuesday

    PTI

    As many as 46 foreign nationals from Malaysia, Kyrgyzstan, Bangladesh, Indonesia and Kazakhstan have been arrested from three districts of Bihar and sent to jail for violation of visa norms.

    According to police officials 18 foreign nationals were arrested from Araria district, 17 from Patna, and 11 from Buxar district.

    Among them, 20 are from Malaysia, nine each from Bangladesh and Kyrgyzstan, seven from Indonesia and one from Kazakhstan.

    “All had come to Bihar after attending the Tablighi Jamaat congregation at Nizamuddin in New Delhi recently,” said a police official.

    Earlier, they all were kept in quarantine for two weeks after they were picked up by the police on the complaints lodged by local residents. However, their test results for novel coronavirus were found negative.

    When their quarantine ended on Monday, they were arrested in the respective districts for violation of Foreigners Act 1946 and produced before local courts which sent them to judicial custody for 14 days on Tuesday.

    “They are kept in separate wards of jail in Patna, Araria and Buxar jails,” the official said.

    “All of them had come in India on tourist visa but indulged in promoting religious activities in violation of the Foreigners Act 1946,” he added.

    Passport, visa seized

    The police have seized their visa, passport and other related documents.

    The Superintendents of Police in Patna, Araria and Buxar districts said “they were arrested under Section 14(B) of Foreigners Act 1946”.

    “All 17 foreign nations were earlier picked up from Kurji area of Patna on March 23 and kept in quarantine…we’re also tracing people who had invited them to Patna,” said Patna SSP Upendra Sharma.

    The arrested foreigners may be sentenced to five-year jail term if found guilty under the provisions of Foreigners Act 1946 and convicted by the competent court.

  • France becomes fourth country to register over 15,000 deaths from COVID-19 infections

    But the number of people in intensive care units fell to 6,730 from 6,821 over 24 hours – declining for a sixth consecutive day, suggesting the national lockdown put in place on March 17 is having some success in containing the disease.

    Reuters

    France said its total death toll from COVID-19 infections rose above 15,000 on Tuesday, becoming the fourth country to exceed that threshold after Italy, Spain and the United States, while the rate of increase in cases and fatalities is re-accelerating.

    But the number of people in intensive care units fell to 6,730 from 6,821 over 24 hours – declining for a sixth consecutive day, suggesting the national lockdown put in place on March 17 is having some success in containing the disease.

    On Monday, President Emmanuel Macron announced a second extension of this lockdown until May 11, saying that progress had been made but also that the country had not been sufficiently prepared early on to surmount the challenges posed by the outbreak of the new coronavirus.

    Jerome Salomon, head of the public health authority, told a news conference that the number of COVID-19 deaths in French hospitals and nursing homes had risen by 5% in a day to a cumulative total of 15,729, versus 4% on Monday and Sunday.

    He added that the total number of confirmed infections had climbed by 5.3% to 103,573, compared to a rate of increase of 2.8% on Monday and of 1.7% on Sunday.

    There were also 26,680 suspected coronavirus cases in nursing homes, taking the total to more than 130,000 confirmed and possible cases, the fifth highest in the world.

    According to various running simulations, Mr. Salomon said that, depending on calculations for different regions, 5%-10% of the French population had probably contracted the disease.

  • Stranded foreign students in USA facing economic hardships can apply for off-campus work authorisation

    Such an announcement from the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) is seen as a major relief to hundreds and thousands of international students, including those from India, who have been facing a tough situation for the past several weeks now.

    PTI

    Washington Stranded international students in the US facing economic hardships due to the coronavirus pandemic can apply for off-campus work authorisation, a federal agency said on Tuesday.

    Such an announcement from the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) is seen as a major relief to hundreds and thousands of international students, including those from India, who have been facing a tough situation for the past several weeks now.

    “If you experience severe economic hardship because of unforeseen circumstances beyond your control, you may request employment authorisation to work off-campus (if you meet certain regulatory requirements),” the USCIS said in a statement.

    All applications are subject to approval in a case-by-case basis, it said.

    Examples of unforeseen circumstances include, but are not limited to, loss of financial aid or on-campus employment through no fault of their own; substantial fluctuations in currency value or exchange rate; and inordinate increases in tuition or living costs.

    Unexpected changes in the financial condition of the source of support; and medical bills have also been listed by the USCIS as unforeseen circumstances.

    A large number of international students, including those from India, have been left stranded and in many cases are facing financial distress after their education institutions were shut down after the announcement of social mitigation measures by the White House on March 13.

    The students were also asked to vacate their dorms for the rest of the academic session. The academic session only begins in late August.

    There are an estimated 250,000 Indian students in the US.

    Many of them were able to get back home before India shut down its airspace on March 22. However, hundreds of Indian students, many with meager resources, have been left stranded.

    Indian-American hotel owners have come to their rescue by offering them free accommodation and free meals in many cases.

    The USCIS said that their off-campus work authorisation application, which would allow them to work anywhere in the US, must be signed by their educational institution.

    Under normal circumstances, international students are allowed to work within the university campus and that too for a limited number of hours per month.

    Your Form I-20 (application) must include the employment page completed by your Designated School Official, certifying your eligibility for off-campus employment due to severe economic hardships caused by unforeseen circumstances beyond your control.

    If your request is approved, you may be able to work off-campus in one-year intervals up to the expected date of completion of your current course of study, the USCIS said.

    It said that Special Student Relief is the suspension of certain regulatory requirements by the secretary of Homeland Security for F 1 students from parts of the world that are experiencing emergent circumstances.

    Examples of emergent circumstances include natural catastrophe, war and military conflicts, and national or international financial crises.

  • Trump halts WHO funding over handling of coronavirus

    The President said the group had promoted China’s “disinformation” about the virus that likely led to a wider outbreak of the virus than otherwise would have occurred.

    Reuters

    President Donald Trump said on Tuesday he has instructed his administration to halt funding to the World Health Organization (WHO) over its handling of the coronavirus pandemic while his administration reviews its response to the global crisis.

    Trump, at a White House news conference, said the WHO had ”failed in its basic duty and it must be held accountable.” He said the group had promoted China’s “disinformation” about the virus that likely led to a wider outbreak of the virus than otherwise would have occurred.

    The United States is the biggest overall donor to the Geneva-based WHO, contributing more than $400 million in 2019, roughly 15% of its budget.

    The hold on funding was expected. Trump has been increasingly critical of the organization as the global health crisis has continued, and he has reacted angrily to criticism of his administration’s response.

    The decision drew immediate condemnation. American Medical Association President Dr. Patrice Harris called it “a dangerous step in the wrong direction that will not make defeating COVID-19 easier” and urged Trump to reconsider.

    The Republican president has accused the WHO of being too lenient with China in the earliest days of the pandemic, causing unnecessary deaths by failing to impose a travel ban on China.

    “The WHO failed in this basic duty and must be held accountable,” Trump said.

    The U.S. death toll from COVID-19, the highly contagious respiratory illness caused by the virus, topped 25,700 on Tuesday, out of more than 600,000 known U.S. infections, according to a running Reuters tally.

    Millions of Americans have lost their jobs, and the U.S. economy has been crippled as citizens have stayed home and businesses were ordered to close, casting a shadow over Trump’s hopes of being re-elected in November.

    WHO needs more resources

    The World Health Organization is a U.N. specialized agency – an independent international body that works with the United Nations. A spokesman for U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Trumps announcement.

    The WHO has been appealing for more than $1 billion to fund operations against the pandemic. The agency needs more resources than ever as it leads the global response against the disease.

    Trump said Washington would discuss with global health partners what it will do with the millions of dollars that would normally go to the WHO and said the United States would continue to engage with the organization.

    Trump has long questioned the value of the United Nations and scorned the importance of multilateralism as he focuses on an “America First” agenda.

    Since Trump took office, he has quit the U.N. Human Rights Council, the U.N. cultural agency UNESCO, a global accord to tackle climate change and the Iran nuclear deal and opposed a U.N. migration pact.

    The Trump administration cut funding in 2017 for the U.N. Population Fund (UNFPA), the U.N. agency that helps Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) in 2018 and put on hold its contribution to the U.N.’s aviation agency last year.

    Under the WHO’s 2018-19 biennium budget, the United States was required to pay $237 million – known as an assessed contribution, which is appropriated by Congress – and also made some $656 million in voluntary contributions that were tied to specific programs.

    According to the WHO website, China’s contribution for 2018-2019 was almost $76 million in assessed contributions and some $10 million in voluntary funding.

  • COVID-19: U.S. registers record one-day death toll of 2,129

    As of Tuesday, more than 6,05,000 Americans had tested positive for the novel coronavirus

    PTI

    The coronavirus death toll in the United States crossed 25,000 on Tuesday with the country witnessing the highest single-day tally of 2,129.

    As of Tuesday, more than 6,05,000 Americans had tested positive for the novel coronavirus — more than the other top three countries taken together — according to Johns Hopkins University.

    A record number of 2,129 of Americans died in one single day, the previous highest being 2,074 on April 10. New York has become the epicentre of the country’s outbreak with 2,03,020 confirmed cases and 10,842 deaths so far.

    In total, 25,981 Americans have died due to the deadly virus, Johns Hopkins University said.

    “The United States is continuing to make substantial progress in our war against the virus. We grieve at every precious life that has been lost to the invisible enemy, but through the darkness, we can see the rays of light, U.S. President Donald Trump told reporters during his daily White House news conference on the pandemic.

    “We see that tunnel, and at the end of that tunnel, we see light. We are starting to see it more than ever before. We have held our numbers, everything we have done we have been very, very strong on it and very powerful on it, he said.

    Mr. Trump said the United States has far more ICU beds per capita than any other nation. We have 34.7 ICU beds per 100,000 people, which is the best there is compared with roughly 12.5 beds per 100,000 in Italy, 11.6 beds in France, 9.7 beds in Spain, he said.

    There are more than 16,000 ventilators at hospitals and other healthcare facilities that are not in use at this moment, he said referring to the steps he has taken to fight coronavirus in the country.

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration, he said, has now authorised the first test developed by researchers from Rutgers University that can use saliva from patients.

    It is the first one. These test can be self-administered by patients in healthcare settings, which will reduce exposure for medical workers and save personal protective equipment. Rutgers will begin processing 10,000 test daily, he added.

  • MHA new guidelines on lockdown

    The Ministry of Home Affairs has issued a set of detailed guidelines for state governments and general public to follow during the lockdown till May 3.

    PTI

    State/UT govts shall not dilute lockdown guidelines in any manner; may impose stricter measures as per local requirements.

    Exemptions given from April 20 will not be applicable in COVID-19 hotspots or containment zones.

    Services provided by self-employed electricians, IT repairs, plumbers, motor mechanics, carpenters to be allowed from April 20.

    Grocery stores, fruit, vegetables shops or carts, milk booths, poultry, meat and fish shops to remain open during lockdown.
    Wearing of masks compulsory in public places across country in wake of COVID-19 situation.

    Highway ‘dhabas’, truck repairing shops, call centres for govt activities to remain open from April 20: MHA guidelines

    Manufacturing units of pharmaceuticals, medical devices, construction of medical infrastructure to remain open from Apr 20.

    Shops of farm machinery, its spare parts, supply chain, repairs, ‘Custom Hiring Centres’ related to machinery to remain open from Apr 20.

    From April 20 activities permitted include agricultural, horticultural, farming, procurement of agri products, ‘mandis’.

    All social, political, sports, religious functions, religious places, places of worship shall be closed for public till May 3.

    Cinema halls, malls, shopping complexes, gymnasiums, sports complexes, swimming pools, bars to remain closed till May 3.

    Educational institutions, coaching centres, domestic, international air travel, train services to remain suspended till May 3.

    Inter-state, inter-district movement of people, metro, bus services continue to be prohibited till May 3.

    Industries operating in rural areas to be permitted to run from April 30 with strict social distancing norms