Germany's Angela Merkel in quarantine, 1 billion in lockdown due to coronavirus

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has gone into quarantine after being informed that a doctor who administered a vaccine to her has tested positive for the new coronavirus. (Reuters)
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Updated 23 March 2020
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Germany's Angela Merkel in quarantine, 1 billion in lockdown due to coronavirus

  • A doctor who vaccinated Merkel tested positive for the new coronavirus

BERLIN: More than a billion people worldwide were confined to their homes on Sunday as the global death toll from the COVID-19 pandemic passed 13,000 and more than 300,000 people were infected.

Italy, Spain and France were in virtual lockdown and several South American nations took similar measures to curb the contagion.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, 65, went into voluntary quarantine after a doctor who vaccinated her tested positive for the new coronavirus, which causes COVID-19. She will undergo tests.

Italy banned internal travel on Sunday in another attempt to slow the spread of the virus. Its death toll of 5,476 is the highest in the world.

The number of coronavirus cases in the UK rose from 5,018 on Saturday to 5,683 on Sunday, a more rapid rise than in either China or Italy at the same stage

Britain may need to impose curfews and travel restrictions if people do not heed the government’s advice on social distancing, Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned.

In the US — with more than 29,000 infected and at least 385 dead — New York mayor Bill de Blasio called for the army to be deployed.

“This is going to be the greatest crisis domestically since the Great Depression,” de Blasio said. “This is why we need a full-scale mobilization of the American military.”

Nearly 80 million Americans were ordered to shelter at home as New York, California, Illinois, Connecticut and New Jersey instituted statewide lockdowns.


End of US-Russia nuclear pact a ‘grave moment’: UN chief

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End of US-Russia nuclear pact a ‘grave moment’: UN chief

  • Guterres urged Washington and Moscow “to return to the negotiating table without delay and to agree upon a successor framework”

UNITED NATIONS, United States: UN chief Antonio Guterres on Wednesday urged the United States and Russia to quickly sign a new nuclear deal, as the existing treaty was set to expire in a “grave moment for international peace and security.”
The New START agreement will end Thursday, formally releasing both Moscow and Washington from a raft of restrictions on their nuclear arsenals.
“For the first time in more than half a century, we face a world without any binding limits on the strategic nuclear arsenals of the Russian Federation and the United States of America,” Guterres said in a statement.
The UN secretary-general added that New START and other arms control treaties had “drastically improved the security of all peoples.”
“This dissolution of decades of achievement could not come at a worse time — the risk of a nuclear weapon being used is the highest in decades,” he said, without giving more details.
Guterres urged Washington and Moscow “to return to the negotiating table without delay and to agree upon a successor framework.”
Russia and the United States together control more than 80 percent of the world’s nuclear warheads but arms agreements have been withering away.
New START, first signed in 2010, limited each side’s nuclear arsenal to 1,550 deployed strategic warheads — a reduction of nearly 30 percent from the previous limit set in 2002.
It also allowed each side to conduct on-site inspections of the other’s nuclear arsenal, although these were suspended during the Covid-19 pandemic and have not resumed since.