BEIJING – New cases of community-transmitted coronavirus in China fell to a figure on Wednesday, while Hong Kong recorded 33 cases of infection.
The National Health Commission said the nine new cases had been discovered in the northwestern region of Xinjiang, whose capital, Urumqi, was in the midst of China’s last primary outbreak. Another 25 cases were brought through Chinese travelers who arrived from abroad.
China has largely contained the local spread of the pandemic that would have originated in the central city of Wuhan overdue last year before spreading around the world.
The government recorded 4,634 DEATHS from COVID-19 in 84,737 cases. Hong Kong, a densely populated semi-autonomous city in southern China, also recorded six other deaths, bringing the total to 58 out of 4181 cases.
The government ordered the use of a mask in public places, restrictions on indoor food and other measures of social estrangement to involve its new epidemic. These measures appear to have succeeded in cutting the number of more than one hundred new cases reported by the end of last month.
___
HERE’S WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE VIRUS OUTBREAK:
– Georgia quarantines 800 students
– Florida reports 5,800 viruses, 276 deaths consistent with the day
– Russia allows vaccine against the virus despite clinical skepticism
– Public transport systems around the world require passengers to wear a mask and inspire others to move away socially. Experts say coronavirus is transmitted through droplets when other people communicate or cough, so prevention is a mask and stay 6 feet away.
– Children give their opinion on the option to return to school in user or online. Enroll for parents, teachers, public fitness experts and President Donald Trump, who have released on the issue.
___
Track the AP pandemic in http://apnews.com/VirusOutbreak and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak
___
HERE’S THE MOST THAT’S HAPPENING:
SYDNEY, Australia – The Australian state of Victoria reported on Wednesday a record 21 deaths from viruses and 410 new cases due to an outbreak in the city of Melbourne, which led the government to impose a strict blockade.
State Minister Daniel Andrews said 16 of the deaths were similar to nursing homes.
The number of new in Victoria has declined from the peak, giving the government hope that the epidemic will subside.
Meanwhile, 3 Melbourne vloggers have been fined more than $1,000 after posting a video on Chinese social media that shows them in violation of curfew regulations at night for a McDonald’s race, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation reported.
The five-minute video, which has since been removed, showed foreign academics walking down the alleys, dodging police officers and dancing at a McDonald’s restaurant at 2:30 a.m. on Sunday, ABC reported. Victoria police showed that each student was fined A$1,652 ($1,178).
___
SEOUL, South Korea – South Korea has reported 54 recent cases of COVID-19 as government paintings of fitness to stop transmissions of higher social and recreational activities.
The figures announced Wednesday through the South Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention raised the number of national bodies to 14,714 infections, 305 deaths.
The KCDC said that 35 of the new instances were local transmissions, all 3 reported in the densely populated Seoul metropolitan domain, which has been in the midst of a resurgence of the virus since last May.
The 19 cases were similar to foreign arrivals. The health government has declared that imported instances are less threatening because they require testing and impose two-week quarantines on all people arriving from abroad.
___
MEXICO CITY – Mexico reported a record of nearly 926 COVID-19 deaths on Tuesday, bringing the country’s cumulative total to 53,929.
The Ministry of Health reported 6,686 new coronavirus infections, bringing the total number of cases shown in the country to date to 492,522.
At this rate, Mexico will soon succeed in the one million cases shown, however, given the incredibly low rate of testing (less than 1.1 million tests in a country of approximately 130 million more people), the number would be a much lower count. For the most part, only others with significant symptoms are tested in Mexico.
___
RALEIGH, N.C. – North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper won another legal victory by protecting his COVID-19 executive orders, this time when a ruling was issued about Deputy Governor Dan Forest’s rejected request to block them saying that his lawsuit is unlikely to succeed.
Judge Jim Gale on Tuesday Forest’s request for an initial court order.
The Republican vice-governor sued Cooper last month, claiming that the Democrat ordinances restricting business activities and mass gatherings and the application of masks were illegal because, in the first place, he had not won that of the State Council. The 10-member board includes Attorney General Josh Stein and other elected state officials.
Cooper’s state attorney argued that the governor had acted well in certain parts of the Emergency Management Act that required the board’s consent.
Cooper and Forest are for governor this fall.
Forest said in a press release that since the ruling ruled that “Cooper has a 100 percent force a declared emergency,” the governor also “has a hundred percent responsibility” for the results, adding permanent business closures.
Cooper said Forest’s demands, if successful, can worsen the number of cases and hospitalizations that have stabilized or improved recently.
“Governor Cooper has taken decisive steps in fitness and life-saving protection,” spokeswoman Dory MacMillan wrote in an email.
___
PHILADELPHIA – Philadelphia Health Commissioner Dr. Thomas Farley said he planned to tell a U.S. Department of Health and Human Services visitor organization. That the long delays in obtaining the effects of coronavirus control were “very problematic” and pressure them to establish a strategy to implement a vaccine. once it’s available.
Long waits across the country for the effects of coronavirus control make them virtually dead to involve the spread of the virus, according to public fitness officials.
The organization will travel on-site to Philadelphia until Thursday, as part of an excursion to a handful of cities across the country, Farley said.
Farley said he saw it as a way to show what the city had done in terms of prevention, contact seeking and social estrangement efforts.
___
JACKSON, Mississippi – Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves said school football was “essential” Tuesday, a day after President Donald Trump tweeted schools to advance the football season as planned amid the coronavirus pandemic.
“What do the war parties think of football, those children will end up in a bubble without it? You can get COVID anywhere,” Reeves tweeted Tuesday afternoon. “There are forces that want to cancel everything to threaten all the prices of society. It’s stupid. We want to balance threats and prices.”
Two of the five strength meetings in school football, Big Ten and Pac-12, announced Tuesday that the groups will play football this fall due to considerations on COVID-19. Reeves lamented the decision and said that in Mississippi, officials have worked with football elementary schools like the state of Mississippi and the University of Mississippi to design a season that compromises the protection of players or fans.
“Personally, I think we can play school football, I don’t think you can do it in a stadium with a hundred thousand more people, it doesn’t make sense,” he said at a press conference.
President Trump has categorically stated that he supports football seasons as planned. On Monday, he tweeted, “Play school football.”
Reeves said many of those players had been for months over the summer and had built a football career. Some have college athletics scholarships.
“There is a lifelong threat. There are things we can do to manage it and destroy society,” he said.
___
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Governor Ron DeSantis needs school football to be played in Florida this fall despite the coronavirus outbreak.
Speaking Tuesday at the Florida state educational facilities, DeSantis said the game can be played safely. Players are evaluated weekly and told to socialize with strangers.
He said if the season was canceled, players would not have this field and were most likely to get the virus. Its increase came shortly after the state announced 277 more deaths from the virus. This is a one-day record, but probably includes weekend and previous deaths and is not a natural total for 24 hours.
DeSantis’ football boom came hours before the Big 10, the first primary convention to postpone its season in the spring, which had already made the smaller Mid-American and Mountain West meetings. The Pac-12 has also postponed its season, but the two main encounters in the south, the southeast coast and the Atlantic coast, plan to play.
___
SAN DIEGO – California’s second-largest school district announced stricter reopening rules than the state’s, and officials say it will be months before students can return to campus.
The San Diego Union-Tribune reported that the San Diego Unified School District will not reopen until there are fewer than seven epidemics in the network for a week consistent with the period. This requirement is in addition to the state of California’s measure, which requires counties to have a case rate of one hundred or less consistent with one hundred and 000 citizens for two weeks before authorizing the reopening of public schools or consistent with private schools.
San Diego County recorded 105 cases consisting of 100,000 citizens on Tuesday and 24 network outbreaks during the week.
___
MIAMI – The Pan American Health Organization has expressed reservations about reports that establishments in the region are negotiating to manufacture and distribute a new COVID-19 vaccine announced by Russia that has not yet been the subject of comprehensive evidence of protection and effectiveness.
The organization’s deputy director, Jarbas Barbosa, said Tuesday at an online news convention from Washington that any vaccine deserves to be thoroughly evaluated to make sure the product is effective.
In Brazil, the government of the state of Paraná said it is negotiating with the Russian embassy to help expand a COVID-19 vaccine and that it would hold a technical assembly on Wednesday with the Russian ambassador.
Nicaragua previously announced its goal of producing a Russian vaccine and on Monday, Vice President Rosario Murillo, wife of President Daniel Ortega, again said that the country is in contact with Russian establishments to produce and even export a COVID-19 vaccine.
Barbosa said the vaccine had not yet passed all the mandatory steps to go through the World Health Organization or the Pan American Health Organization. He said global fitness officials were in talks with Russian officials to review their knowledge and clinical trials.
“It is only after this review, with transparency to this knowledge and all the information, that we will take a position,” he said.
___
CONCORD, N.H. – New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu issued an executive order demanding that a mask be wearing at scheduled meetings of more than a hundred people.
Sununu, a Republican, had resisted calls to impose the use of a mask to prevent the spread of the new coronavirus. With Tuesday’s order, the six New England states have some kind of mask mandate.
In general, they are much more restrictive than New Hampshire and require that a mask be wearing in public when social estrangement is possible.
The order will be tested later this month at annual Laconia Motorcycle Week, which regularly attracts thousands of people to the state. Sununu recently formed an organization of protection runners at the event, which will take place from 22 to 30 August.
___
OKLAHOMA CITY – Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt, the first governor of the country to test for coronavirus, said he donated plasma to other recovering patients with the virus.
Stitt says he recently made a donation to an Oklahoma Blood Institute center in Enid. Convalescence plasma is being investigated as a possible remedy for the virus lately. Tulsa County commissioner Karen Keith was inflamed with the virus and says she donated plasma.
Oklahoma reported 44728 shown coronavirus and 618 deaths.
___
ROSEMONT, Ill. – The Big Ten Conference will play football this fall due to considerations about COVID-19.
The conference made the announcement on Tuesday. The convention includes older systems such as Ohio State, Michigan, Nebraska and Penn State.
Six days ago, he released a revised schedule for the convention only that he hoped to sail an autumn season with possible COVID-19 interruptions.
___
JUNEAU, Alaska – A member of the Alaska state ferry team did a coronavirus test, prompting the cancellation of service in southeast Alaska.
The Alaska Marine Highway formula says the planned direction of the M/V LeConte ferry to the Lynn Canal near Juneau was canceled Sunday after the diagnosis was obtained. The ferry formula indicates that the team member recently returned home after a two-week rotation at LeConte.
The rest of LeConte’s team was unable to do so until Early Sunday, leading to the resolution of postponing navigation to Haines and Skagway until Wednesday.
__
IOWA CITY, Iowa – Three of the 8 coronavirus driving sites in Iowa broke during Monday’s wind storm and are temporarily closed.
Gov. Kim Reynolds said the closure of the Cedar Rapids, Marshalltown, and Davenport sites was temporarily reduced to testing in the same spaces as academics and teachers prepare to return to public schools.
Reynolds says six elderly patients with coronavirus from a nursing home in central Iowa were evacuated by the storm.
She said the state hoped to temporarily reopen Test Iowa sites, and those who want to verify can also look for other options. The governor says she doesn’t believe any signs of control have been destroyed by the storm.
There are more than 49,200 shown coronavirus and 939 deaths in Iowa.
___
ATLANTA – A Georgia school district has quarantined more than 800 academics for imaginable exposure to coronavirus since he resumed face-to-face training last week.
Updated data Tuesday through the outdoor Cherokee County School District in Atlanta also shows that it has quarantined 42 employees since the beginning of the year on August 3. The district serves more than 42,000 students.
A district spokeswoman said the district expected the option of positive testing among academics and established a formula to temporarily touch the follow-up and impose quarantines. Other school districts in the Atlanta domain have abandoned face-to-face learning amid an increase in COVID-19 cases in Georgia.
___
DOVER, Del. – Delaware officials have $40 million in the federal aid budget for the coronavirus to help others who are suffering to pay off their rent or loan due to the pandemic.
Authorities announced Monday the reopening of the Delaware Housing Assistance Program, which provides monetary assistance to affected tenants through COVID-19. The show originally was introduced in March, but was suspended in April due to an impressive number of applications.
Under the revised program, up to $5,000 will be earned for Americans with a maximum household income after the pandemic of 60% or less than the area’s median. Applications must now be submitted through landowners or landowners on behalf of tenants, and invoices will be sent directly to landlords.
The Delaware State Ho Authority also offers up to $5,000 in emergency assistance to homeowners affected by the COVID-19 pandemic through the Delaware Emergency Loan Assistance Program, which was implemented several years ago. Investment in assistance is similarly shared between the state and the federal government’s earned New Castle County coronavirus support budget.