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Thursday, March 28, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

Hundreds of Millions of Measles Vaccinations Postponed

The U.N. health agency is warning that more than 117 million children in more than three dozen countries could miss out on measles vaccines as countries suspend immunizations and other services to fight the coronavirus outbreak.

GENEVA — The U.N. health agency is warning that more than 117 million children in more than three dozen countries could miss out on measles vaccines as countries suspend immunizations and other services to fight the coronavirus outbreak.

The World Health Organization says 24 countries have already postponed measles vaccination campaigns to avert further spread of Covid-19 disease, and another 13 are expected to do so by the end of the year.

"If the difficult choice to pause vaccination is made due to the spread of Covid-19, we urge leaders to intensify efforts to track unvaccinated children, so that the most vulnerable populations can be provided with measles vaccines as soon as it becomes possible to do so," WHO said in a statement Tuesday.

WHO and partners say they support a "pause of mass campaigns" in their measles and rubella initiative to protect communities and health workers, but "this should not mean that children permanently miss out.”

86 Virus Infections at a Single Russian Elderly Home

MOSCOW — Russian officials say that scores of patients at a nursing home in western Russia have been infected with the new coronavirus.

The city of Vyazma 130 miles west of Moscow has been shut after contagion was found over the weekend in the local home for the elderly. Officials said one of the medics there has tested positive for Covid-19 and 86 patients have been infected.

Russia has registered 21,102 coronavirus cases and 170 deaths as of Tuesday. Russian President Vladimir Putin has ordered most Russians to stay off work until the end of April as part of a partial economic shutdown to stymie the spread of the coronavirus.

On Monday, Putin ordered officials to prepare for "any possible scenarios, including the most difficult and extraordinary." He warned regional governors that they would face charges of criminal negligence if they fail to mobilize all available resources to combat the outbreak.

Austria and Poland Cautiously Reopen

BERLIN — Austria is beginning to relax its strict coronavirus lockdown measures by allowing small retailers and do-it-yourself and gardening supply stores to reopen Tuesday.

All customers will be required to wear mouth and nose covers that help reduce the risk of infection for others, and keep a distance of at least 1 meter from each other. There will also be a limit on the number of people allowed into stores.

Austria closed almost all stores apart from supermarkets in mid-March in an effort to curb the spread of the virus and has so far managed to keep the number of infections and deaths relatively low compared to other countries.

Austrian authorities have said they plan to let all stores reopen on May 2, followed by restaurants in mid-May, provided the pandemic remains under control.

Poland too will start to gradually lift restrictions imposed on businesses and daily life in the fight against coronavirus spread.

Health Minister Lukasz Szumowski said Monday that starting the "defreeze of the economy" should be "good news, if we look at the costs of the isolation" that was initiated March 13.

Government spokesman Piotr Mueller said the details will be decided later this week as data of new infections comes in and can be assessed. Poland’s reopening is slated to begin Sunday. Mueller said the number of clients allowed into shops is expected to be raised and some restrictions on open air activity will be lifted, like a ban on entering woods, parks and other public spaces.

Szumowski said he does not expect the virus to vanish under hot summer weather and that fight with the epidemic in Poland will take a year.

The nation of 38 million has reported almost 7,050 cases of infection, including 251 deaths.

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CEO Says Britain Undercounts Elderly Deaths From Virus

LONDON — The boss of one of Britain's biggest elderly home operators says the number of reported coronavirus deaths among elderly residents is much higher than has been officially reported.

The government says outbreaks of Covid-19 have been reported in one in eight U.K. care homes.

But David Behan, chairman of home operator HC-One, said cases of the new coronavirus had been reported in 232 of the firm's homes — two-thirds of the total. He says 311 residents have died with confirmed or suspected Covid-19.

Ros Altmann, a former government minister who campaigns for older people, said frail elderly people were being overlooked in the pandemic. “We must not forget that the mark of a civilized society must reflect how it treats its most vulnerable and oldest citizens,” she said.

The U.K.'s official daily tally of Covid-19 deaths, which stands at more than 11,000, includes only people who have died in hospitals. Deaths in other settings are reported separately once a week. Figures were due later Tuesday.

Germany Tries to Standardize Tech Tracing

BERLIN — Germany's foreign minister is calling for a single smartphone app to be used across the European Union to help countries coordinate when and how to relax their pandemic lockdown measures.

Heiko Maas said in an interview published Tuesday that "It's important we don't end up with a patchwork of 27 corona(virus) apps and 27 data protection regimes, but coordinate as best as possible."

Maas told Germany's Funke media group that this would help roll back travel restrictions and border closures imposed across the bloc in recent weeks to stop the spread of the new coronavirus.

He said a contract tracing app already being jointly developed by several countries showed that the EU "doesn't have to copy the Big Brother methods of authoritarian states" but can safeguard personal privacy.

People shop at a roadside market with few customers in Lagos, Nigeria, Monday, April 13, 2020. With some governments saying they're unable to offer direct support, the fate of Africa's large informal sector as a result of the new coronavirus could be a powerful example of what experts predict will be unprecedented damage to economies in the developing world. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)

Nigeria Extends Lockdown Against Virus

JOHANNESBURG — Africa's most populous country, Nigeria, has extended its coronavirus lockdown of the continent's biggest city, Lagos, and the capital, Abuja, for another two weeks.

President Muhammadu Buhari in a national address Monday night said the measures severely disrupt livelihoods but have given authorities time for advances including the raising of testing capacity to 1,500 per day. Nigeria has nearly 350 cases, of which are from local spread.

"The repercussions of any premature end to the lockdown are unimaginable," Buhari said.

The lockdown also affects Ogun state.

Turkey to Release 90,000 Prisoners — but Not Activists

ANKARA, Turkey — Turkey's parliament has approved legislation that will free some 90,000 prisoners to ease overcrowding in prisons amid the coronavirus pandemic.

However, that does not include journalists and activists, who will remain behind bars.

The legislation, approved early Tuesday, reduces some sentences and places 45,000 convicts who are serving terms in open prisons under temporary house arrest.

Prisoners convicted of drug-related charges, sexual abuse, murder, domestic abuse and terrorism, however, were kept out of the scope of the measure designed to reduce the country's more than 280,000-strong prison population. Dozens of journalists, activists opposition politicians and others will remain incarcerated because many of them have been imprisoned on terror-related charges.

Opposition parties and human rights groups have criticized the measure that was passed with the votes of the ruling party and its nationalist allies.

"Those convicted in unfair trials under Turkey's overly broad antiterrorism laws are ... now condemned to face the prospect of infection from this deadly disease," said Amnesty International's Turkey Campaigner, Milena Buyum.

As well as reducing some prison terms, the legislation releases women with young children, the sick and prisoners older than 65.

The prison releases were expected to begin this week.

On Monday, the justice minister announced that 17 prisoners in open prisons were infected and three of them died.

New Zealand May Have Turned the Corner

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says the country appears to be over the worst of its coronavirus outbreak but it is no time to let up on strict lockdown measures.

The country recorded just 17 new cases of the virus on Tuesday, bringing the total to 1,366. There were also four new deaths, the worst day yet on that measure, bringing the total number of deaths to nine.

New Zealand lawmakers will decide early next week what will happen after an initial four-week lockdown ends on April 22.

As the economic effects of the coronavirus outbreak hit New Zealand, the operators of the country's Burger King restaurants have been placed into bankruptcy proceedings.

Also, one of the country's largest media companies has announced plans to lay off 200 employees.

New Zealand has been in a strict lockdown for nearly three weeks and all restaurants, including those serving fast food, have been closed. Company receivers KordaMentha said Tuesday they hope to sell dozens of Burger King restaurants to a new franchise owner and get them reopened after the lockdown ends.

NZME, which runs a number of radio stations and newspapers, announced to the New Zealand stock market it is reducing its workforce by 15% through layoffs and by not filling vacant positions. NZME stock is down by more than 60% in the past year.

German company Bauer Media announced this month it was closing its New Zealand operation and would no longer publish many of the country's weekly magazines.

Singapore Deaths Concentrated on Immigrant Workers

SINGAPORE — Singapore has reported 386 new coronavirus cases, its biggest daily jump, to raise its tally to 2,918.

Most of the new cases are linked to foreign workers living in crowded dormitories, that have become a headache for the government. Health authorities also reported a ninth death late Monday.

The tiny state of nearly 6 million people has tightened precautions with a four-week "circuit breaker," shutting down nonessential businesses and schools until May 4.

It has quarantined tens of thousands of foreign workers in their dorms and moved some to alternative sites to reduce crowding. More 200,000 Asian immigrant workers live in 43 registered dormitories that house up to 20 men per room, with shared toilets, cooking and other facilities.

Environment and Water Resources Minister Masagos Zulkifli wrote on Facebook late Monday that the remaining three weeks of partial lockdown will form "a critical window that will determine if we can successfully flatten the curve, prevent large-scale community spread, and save our loved ones."

Categories / Health, International

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