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.


UN expert decries detention of Pakistan ex-PM Khan’s wife

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UN expert decries detention of Pakistan ex-PM Khan’s wife

  • “The state has an obligation to protect Mrs. Khan’s health and ensure conditions of detention compatible with human dignity,” Edwards said in a statement

GENEVA: The wife of Pakistan’s former prime minister Imran Khan is being held in conditions that could pose a serious risk to her physical and mental health, a UN expert warned Wednesday.
Alice Jill Edwards, the United Nations’ special rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, urged the Pakistani authorities to take immediate action to address the situation.
Khan and his wife Bushra Bibi were convicted of graft in January, and they were sentenced to 14 years and seven years in prison, respectively.
And on Saturday, a Pakistani court sentenced them to 17 years for corruption involving gifts the jailed ex-premier received while in office.
Both Khan and Bibi were handed a 10-year prison sentence on criminal breach of trust, and seven years on corruption charges in a case alleging the underpricing of state gifts.
“The state has an obligation to protect Mrs. Khan’s health and ensure conditions of detention compatible with human dignity,” Edwards said in a statement.
Bibi is reportedly confined to a small and dirty cell which is often dark due to power cuts, said Edwards.
“Such conditions fall far below minimum international standards,” said Edwards.
“No detainee should be exposed to extreme heat, contaminated food or water, or conditions that aggravate existing medical conditions.”
Reports also indicate that she is often in near-total isolation for more than 22 hours a day.
“The authorities must ensure Mrs. Khan has the possibility to communicate with her lawyers and receive visits from family members, and have meaningful human contact throughout her detention,” Edwards said.
The special rapporteur has formally raised Bibi’s situation with the government in Islamabad.
UN special rapporteurs are independent experts mandated by the Human Rights Council. They do not speak for the United Nations itself.
Earlier this month, Edwards said Khan was being held in conditions that could amount to torture and other inhuman or degrading treatment.
She urged the Pakistani authorities to ensure that the 73-year-old’s conditions of detention fully complied with international norms.
Khan, who captained Pakistan to victory in the 1992 Cricket World Cup, upended Pakistani politics by becoming the prime minister in 2018.
He was ousted in 2022 by a no-confidence vote after losing favor with the military.
The former cricket star has been held in custody since August 2023, charged in dozens of cases that he claims are politically motivated.