Latest on the spread of coronavirus around the world

US

(Reuters) – Hundreds of millions of people faced a world turned upside down on Wednesday by unprecedented emergency measures against the coronavirus pandemic that is killing the old and vulnerable and threatening prolonged economic misery.

DEATHS, INFECTIONS

– The virus has infected more than 212,000 people across the world and the death toll has exceeded 8,700 in 164 nations.

– For interactive graphic tracking global spread: open tmsnrt.rs/3aIRuz7 in an external browser

AMERICAS

– All 50 states in the United States have reported cases and the total number of known U.S. infections closing in on 8,000. The U.S. death toll has climbed to at least 151. – The United States and Canada closed their shared border to “non-essential traffic” on Wednesday to curb transmission of the coronavirus.- More than 60,000 homeless people could become ill with the coronavirus in California over the next eight weeks, badly straining the healthcare system.

– Mexico registered its first death from coronavirus on Wednesday.

– Canada has decided to provide an $18.6 billion aid package directly to affected families and businesses.

– Chile declared a 90-day state of catastrophe on Wednesday.

– Brazilian retail, transport and manufacturing were hammered, and the government stopped accepting Venezuelan refugees at the border.

– Peru’s President Martin Vizcarra restricted overnight movement across the country.

– Venezuela is concerned the coronavirus could spread like a fast-moving fire through the country’s notoriously overcrowded and unsanitary prisons.

EUROPE- Italy reported 475 new deaths on Wednesday, the largest increase in numerical terms since the outbreak first came to light on Feb. 21. The total number of confirmed cases grew by 4,207 to 35,713.

– French health authorities reported 89 new deaths from coronavirus on Wednesday, taking the total to 264 or an increase of almost 51%.

– Russian media have deployed a “significant disinformation campaign” to sow panic in the West, according to a European Union document seen by Reuters.

– Poland will receive more than 10,000 test kits and tens of thousands of other protective items from China.

– Belgium imposed a lockdown from midday (1100 GMT) on Wednesday until April 5.

– Switzerland has extended border controls and suspended the issue of Schengen and national visas for three months.

– Ukraine, where a lawmaker tested positive, has imposed a state of emergency in the region around the capital Kiev.

– Croatia will close cinemas, restaurants and bars and shops but will allow food stores, pharmacies and petrol stations to function.

– President Tayyip Erdogan advised Turks on Wednesday not to leave home unless necessary for three weeks and to minimise social contact until the threat of the coronavirus recedes, but did not tell them to stay away from work.

ASIA – Beijing recorded 21 new cases of infections from abroad on Wednesday, mostly people travelling from Spain and Britain. The Beijing infections accounted for the bulk of the 34 new imported cases in mainland China.- The total number of confirmed cases in mainland China stands at 80,928, with the overall death toll at 3,245 as of the end of Wednesday, up by eight from the previous day. In Hubei, there were eight new deaths, with Wuhan accounting for six of them.

– The Hubei province will transfer all arrivals from abroad to a central quarantine facility for 14 days.

– Taiwan said it would ban entry for most foreigners as its tally rose by 23 to 100 on Wednesday, most of them imported.

– Thousands of Muslim pilgrims from across Asia gathered at Gowa in Indonesia, just two weeks after a similar event in Malaysia caused more than 500 infections.- Indonesia needs to immediately widen its testing for coronavirus to ensure detection of more infections, President Joko Widodo said on Thursday. On Wednesday, the Southeast Asian nation saw its biggest daily jump of 55 infections, for a total of 227 cases.

– Indonesia’s death toll jumped on Wednesday from five to 19 and Malaysia warned of “a tsunami” of cases if people did not follow new restrictions as infections surged across Southeast Asia.

– Vietnam’s capital, Hanoi, has advised its residents to self-isolate at home until at least the end of March. The country has confirmed 76 cases of the virus, ten of which emerged on Wednesday.- In India, where 147 cases of the coronavirus have been confirmed, authorities on Tuesday cancelled nearly two dozen long distance train services. A total of 276 Indians have tested positive for coronavirus overseas and 255 of them are currently in Iran.

– Bangladesh confirmed its first fatality from the disease on Wednesday, while its total tally of confirmed cases rose to 14.

– Pakistan on Wednesday confirmed its first two deaths from coronavirus as the total number of infected patients in the country climbed to 260.- Sri Lanka, which has recorded 51 coronavirus cases, said it would ban all incoming flights for two weeks from Wednesday.- Australia said on Thursday all non-citizens and non-residents would be banned from entering the country from 9 pm (1000 GMT) Friday. The country has recorded around 600 coronavirus infections and six deaths.- New Zealand closed its borders to all foreigners from midnight on Thursday. It has confirmed 28 cases of the coronavirus so far.

MIDDLE EAST AND AFRICA

– The World Health Organization said the Middle East states need urgently to offer more information about cases.

– Iran’s death toll from the coronavirus climbed to 1,135 on Wednesday with 147 new deaths in the past 24 hours, while the total number of infected people across the country has reached 17,361.

– The United Arab Emirates said it would bar foreign visitors while Saudi Arabia suspended most work in its private sector.

– Djibouti and Zambia confirmed their first cases on Wednesday.

– Morocco asked its citizens not to leave their homes except to buy essential goods, seek medical treatment or go to work.

ECONOMIC FALLOUT

– The dollar surged and everything else was blown away on Thursday as emergency central bank measures in Europe, the United States and Australia failed to halt a fresh wave of panic selling. [MKTS/GLOB]

– Crude oil traders from West Africa to the U.S. Gulf Coast are offering cargoes at deep discounts, desperately trying to attract buyers as global supplies swell and demand plunges. – Australia’s central bank and government announced support packages on Thursday that will pump around A$100 billion ($56 billion) into the economy.

– The coronavirus pandemic could destroy up to 25 million jobs around the world if governments do not act fast, the International Labour Organization said.

– Ford, General Motors and Fiat Chrysler will shut down their U.S. plants, bowing to pressure from the union representing about 150,000 hourly workers at those facilities, industry officials said.

– Nigeria’s central bank will inject 1 trillion naira ($3.27 billion) into local manufacturing and import substitution to stimulate the economy.

– The Mexican central bank said it would carry out a currency auction worth $2 billion later in the day, after the peso reached historic lows.

– Colombia will spend 14.8 trillion pesos ($3.65 billion) on emergency measures, but will not take on debt to finance the spending.

– Italy is preparing to defend strategically important companies from foreign takeovers at a time when buyers could take advantage of collapsing share prices.

– Banks borrowed more than $15 billion from the Bank of England’s U.S. dollar repo operations on Wednesday, the largest sum since the financial crisis.

– South Korean President Moon Jae-in on Thursday pledged 50 trillion won ($39 billion) in emergency financing for small businesses and other stimulus measures.

EVENTS

– The Eurovision song contest, one of the world’s largest television events, will not take place this year.

FILE PHOTO: A coronavirus patient arrives on a stretcher at the Columbus Covid Hospital, which has been assigned as one of the new coronavirus treatment hospitals in Rome, after being transferred by medical workers in protective white suits from the Gemelli Hospital, in Rome, Italy, March 16, 2020. Picture taken March 16, 2020. Policlinico Gemelli/Handout via REUTERS

– Britain’s Glastonbury Festival, the largest greenfield music festival in the world, has been cancelled.

– Formula One teams must close for three weeks by the end of April, in a move that will allow races to be rescheduled during the European summer.

– Doubts are mounting around the world that the Olympics can proceed as planned amid the coronavirus pandemic, but Tokyo Games and Japanese government officials insist the event will go ahead as scheduled.

Compiled by Amy Caren Daniel and Ramakrishnan M.; Editing by Arun Koyyur and Anil D’Silva

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