World

2.97 million people infected by coronavirus worldwide; 205,948 die

2.97 million people infected by coronavirus worldwide; 205,948 die

By Reuters

Members of Madrid's Emergency Service (SUMMA) wearing protective equipment transfer a patient suffering from coronavirus disease (COVID-19) to another hospital amid the coronavirus disease outbreak in Madrid, Spain, April 20, 2020. Photo: Reuters

More than 2.97 million people have been reported to be infected by the novel coronavirus globally and 205,948 have died, according to a Reuters tally, as of Monday. DEATHS AND INFECTIONS EUROPE -  Italy reported 260 more deaths on Sunday, the smallest daily tally since March 14, and said it plans to allow factories and building sites to reopen from May 4 and permit limited family visits. -  British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is expected to announce plans for easing a month-old lockdown as early as this week after he returned to Downing Street on Sunday night, the Telegraph reported. -  Death toll in France increased by 242 to 22,856. -  A group of 25 Dutch high school students arrived back in the Netherlands in a two-mast schooner on Sunday, as airline restrictions forced them to sail it home from the Caribbean. -  Total cases in Turkey rose by 2,357 in the past 24 hours, and 99 more people have died. AMERICAS -  Total infections in the United States were more than 970,000 and the death toll stood at 54,822, according to a Reuters tally as of 0200 GMT on Monday. -  Colorado, Mississippi, Minnesota, Montana and Tennessee were set to join other states in reopening businesses, while Oklahoma governor called on US President Donald Trump to declare the pandemic an 'act of God'. -  The US government notified lenders on Sunday that it will cap how much each bank can lend under the emergency loan program. -  Argentina will extend a mandatory nationwide quarantine period until May 10, while Honduras will extend the blanket curfew by one week until 2100 GMT on May 3. -  Mexico reported 835 new cases and 46 additional fatalities. It also returned most occupants in government migrant centres to their countries of origin. -  Confirmed cases in Panama reached 5,779 on Sunday, a rise of 241 from the previous day, and deaths climbed by six to 165. ASIA-PACIFIC -  China reported three new cases on April 26, down from 11 a day earlier, while there were 25 new asymptomatic cases on April 26. Total cases in mainland China stand at 82,830. -  Japan's Osaka Prefecture said it will name and shame more pachinko parlour gambling outlets that are defying coronavirus lockdown requests. -  Prime Minister Narendra Modi urged Indians to comply with a nationwide lockdown and social distancing measures on Sunday, a day after some of the world's toughest restrictions were eased slightly while cases of COVID-19 continued to mount. -  More than a million Australians rushed to download an app designed to help authorities trace close contacts of COVID-19 patients. MIDDLE EAST AND AFRICA -  Egypt has asked the International Monetary Fund for financial support and will begin talks with it within days. -  Iran plans to reopen mosques in parts of the country that have been consistently free of the outbreak. -  Saudi Arabia eased curfews across the country, while keeping 24-hour curfews in Mecca and in neighbourhoods previously put in isolation. -  Israel permitted some businesses to reopen and said it would consider allowing children back to school. -  South Africa is seeking 95 billion rand ($4.99 billion) from multilateral lenders to help it fight the COVID-19 pandemic. ECONOMIC FALLOUT -  Asian shares bounced as the Bank of Japan (BOJ) announced more stimulus steps, while oil took another spill as the world ran short of space to store it all. -  National Australia Bank Ltd asked investors for A$3.5 billion ($2.2 billion) and cut its dividend. -  The Bank of Japan ramped up risky asset purchases and pledged to buy unlimited amounts of government bonds.