Senin, 11 Mei 2020

Coronavirus: French arrivals exempt from UK quarantine plans - BBC News

Coronavirus: French arrivals exempt from UK quarantine plans - BBC News
UK border sign in an airport Image copyright Getty Images

Passengers arriving from France will be exempt from forthcoming UK coronavirus quarantine measures.

Boris Johnson said on Sunday the rules would be imposed on people coming into the UK, to prevent Covid-19 being brought in from overseas.

As yet, no start or end date for the measures has been announced.

The government has already indicated that people arriving from the Republic of Ireland will not be made to go into quarantine.

However, the measures will apply to UK holidaymakers returning from other destinations.

Travel industry analysts said that meant a one-week or two-week holiday abroad would be followed by another two weeks in self-isolation.

The World Travel and Tourism Council expressed concern about the new measures, saying they would damage confidence among would-be travellers.

Joint statement

In his address to the nation on Sunday, the prime minister said: "I am serving notice that it will soon be the time - with transmission significantly lower - to impose quarantine on people coming into this country by air."

The government later clarified that the rules would apply not just to air passengers, but also those arriving by other means of travel.

UK airlines previously said they had been told that any quarantine period would last for 14 days, and that people might be expected to provide an address when they arrive at the border.

Following Mr Johnson's speech, No 10 confirmed a reciprocal deal with the government in Paris meant restrictions would not apply to passengers from France.

In a joint statement, the UK and French governments said they had agreed to "work together in taking forward appropriate border measures", adding: "This co-operation is particularly necessary for the management of our common border."

The statement added: "No quarantine measures would apply to travellers coming from France at this stage; any measures on either side would be taken in a concerted and reciprocal manner.

"A working group between the two governments will be set up to ensure this consultation throughout the coming weeks."

Blow to confidence

Willie Walsh, chief executive of British Airways owner IAG, said it was more bad news for the travel industry.

"There's nothing positive in anything I heard the Prime Minister say yesterday," he told MPs on parliament's Transport Select Committee.

When asked why travellers from France will not be quarantined over, for example, Germany, he said: "That's the bit I don't understand.

"We will have to wait and see the final details of what the Prime Minister intends to do."

He added that the quarantine measures will mean his company will have to review its plan to return to 50% capacity by July,

Virginia Messina, managing director of the World Travel and Tourism Council, told the BBC's Today programme she was "concerned" about the government's new policy.

"Quarantines work when implemented early, so it should have probably been applied much earlier in the UK," she said.

"We believe this is going to highly damage the confidence of people who are wishing to travel or at least make some plans in the near future."

Ms Messina pointed out that some airports in other countries were testing passengers for the virus on arrival and exempting them from quarantine if they tested negative.

'New normal'

Airline and airport bosses spoke to the aviation minister on Sunday about the new measures.

However, they told the BBC that they were still in the dark over basic details such as when they would come into force, when they would end and whether they would be continuously reviewed.

Airlines are calling for additional government support after the prime minister confirmed a quarantine period will come into force.

Airlines UK chief executive Tim Alderslade said: "We all, including government, need to adapt to the new normal, but closing off air travel in this way is not the way to achieve this."

Presentational grey line
Analysis box by Tom Burridge, transport correspondent

The government faces a two-pronged attack over its travel quarantine, even though the detail on the policy is still sparse.

The pandemic is already causing acute damage to the UK's aviation sector, and airline and airport bosses believe the quarantine will make things a whole lot worse.

They did not receive the reassurances they wanted during a call with the aviation minister earlier on Sunday.

Opposition MPs are also wading in with the question: "If now, why not before?"

It's estimated that about 100,000 people have arrived in the UK since 23 March, when the lockdown was brought in.

Many people coming home in recent weeks have been left confused over whether they were supposed to self-isolate.

Government advice that people arriving from China and Italy who didn't have symptoms should stay at home for two weeks was withdrawn on 13 March.

Presentational grey line

Heathrow airport said it supported the government's aim of avoiding a second wave of infection, even though a 14-day quarantine plan amounted to a temporary closure of borders.

However, the airport's chief executive, John Holland-Kaye, said the government "urgently" needed to lay out a roadmap for how it would reopen borders once the disease had been beaten.

Air travel has ground to a halt because of the global coronavirus pandemic, prompting steep job cuts by the industry.

Ryanair has said it plans to axe 3,000 workers and has asked remaining staff to take a pay cut.

BA has said it will cut 12,000 of its workforce and has warned that it might not reopen at Gatwick Airport once the pandemic passes.

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2020-05-11 09:30:00Z
52780775022196

China's Wuhan reports first coronavirus cluster since lockdown was lifted - Daily Mail

Wuhan reports first coronavirus cluster since lockdown was lifted amid fears of a resurgence of the disease

  • Wuhan today reported five new cases, all of whom live in the same complex
  • They were previously classified as asymptomatic who showed no symptoms
  • The cluster infections come as China begins to reopen recreational venues 
  • Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19

Wuhan, the epicentre of the novel coronavirus outbreak in China, reported on Monday its first cluster of infections since a lockdown on the central Chinese city was lifted a month ago, stoking concerns of a wider resurgence of the disease.

The new infections sounded a note of caution amid efforts to ease coronavirus-related restrictions across China as businesses restart and individuals go back to work.

Wuhan reported five new confirmed cases, all of whom live in the same residential compound. One of them was the wife of an 89-year-old male patient reported a day earlier in the first confirmed case in the city in more than a month.

Wuhan reported five new confirmed cases, all of whom live in the same residential compound. Pictured, a woman wears a face shield as she walks along a street in Wuhan on Monday

Wuhan reported five new confirmed cases, all of whom live in the same residential compound. Pictured, a woman wears a face shield as she walks along a street in Wuhan on Monday

'At present, the task of epidemic prevention and control in the city is still very heavy,' said the Wuhan health authority in a statement. 'We must resolutely contain the risk of a rebound.'

All of the latest confirmed cases were previously classified as asymptomatic, people who test positive for the virus and are capable of infecting others but do not show clinical signs such as a fever.

The number of asymptomatic cases in China is not known, as they only appear on the radar of health officials when they show up positive during tests conducted as part of contact tracing and health checks.

China does not include asymptomatic cases in its overall tally of confirmed cases, currently at 82,918, until they exhibit signs of infection. Mainland China has reported 4,633 deaths.

All of the new infections were previously classified as asymptomatic, people who test positive for the virus and are capable of infecting others but do not show clinical signs such as a fever. Pictured, a medic takes a swab sample from a man being tested for COVID-19 in Wuhan in April

All of the new infections were previously classified as asymptomatic, people who test positive for the virus and are capable of infecting others but do not show clinical signs such as a fever. Pictured, a medic takes a swab sample from a man being tested for COVID-19 in Wuhan in April

Hundreds of asymptomatic cases in Wuhan, which was released on April 8 from a months-long lockdown, are currently being monitored, according to the city's health authority.

The number of new cases reported in China since April have been small compared with the thousands confirmed each day in February, thanks to a nationwide regime of screening, testing and quarantine.

The government said on Friday that China will gradually reopen cinemas, museums and other recreational venues, though restrictions including mandatory reservations and a limit on numbers will be in place.

The number of new cases reported in China since April have been small compared with the thousands confirmed each day in February, thanks to a nationwide regime of screening, testing and quarantine. A vendor is seen selling vegetables on a street of Wuhan on April 23

The number of new cases reported in China since April have been small compared with the thousands confirmed each day in February, thanks to a nationwide regime of screening, testing and quarantine. A vendor is seen selling vegetables on a street of Wuhan on April 23

Shanghai has already reopened some night entertainment venues such as discotheques. Walt Disney on Monday reopened its Shanghai Disneyland park to a reduced number of visitors.

New outbreaks in China in the past two months have mainly developed in residential compounds or at hospitals.

South Korea is also battling a wave of new cases, although there the most recent outbreaks started in nightclubs and bars.

Shanghai Disneyland has become the first Disney resort to re-open after closing to stop the spread of coronavirus. Pictured, a visitor dressed as a Disney character takes a selfie Monday

Shanghai Disneyland has become the first Disney resort to re-open after closing to stop the spread of coronavirus. Pictured, a visitor dressed as a Disney character takes a selfie Monday

The Wuhan cases helped push the overall new COVID-19 infections confirmed on May 10 to 17, the highest daily increase since April 28.

Northeastern Jilin province, which on Saturday reported a cluster of infections in one of its cities, Shulan, reported three additional local cases.

Shulan has been marked a high-risk area, the only place in China currently with that designation.

'We're now in a "war-time" mode,' said Jin Hua, mayor of Shulan, which until the weekend had reported no local cases for more than 70 days.

In the city of Shulan in north-eastern China's Jilin Province, thousands of residents are currently on lockdown after a cluster of infections had been detected. Pictured, a student wearing a face mask arrives at Changchun University Of Chinese Medicine in Jilin on May 7

In the city of Shulan in north-eastern China's Jilin Province, thousands of residents are currently on lockdown after a cluster of infections had been detected. Pictured, a student wearing a face mask arrives at Changchun University Of Chinese Medicine in Jilin on May 7

Shulan has imposed a lockdown on its 600,000 residents since the weekend, with just one member of a household being allowed out each day to buy necessities.

One of the three cases confirmed in the Jilin province on May 10 was from Shulan.

The other two were from the city of Jilin uncovered through contact tracing of people who were in contact with earlier Shulan cases.

Nearby Liaoning and Heilongjiang provinces each reported one case, adding to worries about a resurgence of the outbreak in the region.

The province of Heilongjiang is also on high alert for a virus comeback. The picture shows a man keeping watch at a checkpoint in the border city of Suifenhe, Heilongjiang, on April 21

The province of Heilongjiang is also on high alert for a virus comeback. The picture shows a man keeping watch at a checkpoint in the border city of Suifenhe, Heilongjiang, on April 21

A 70-year-old patient in Harbin, capital of Heilongjiang, had tested negative seven times before results turned positive.

Of the new cases, seven were so-called imported cases in the northern Chinese region of Inner Mongolia involving travellers from overseas.

Across China, the number of new asymptomatic COVID-19 cases fell to 12 on May 10 compared with 20 reported a day earlier.

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2020-05-11 09:00:45Z
52780777703922

China's Wuhan reports first coronavirus cluster since lockdown was lifted - Daily Mail

Wuhan reports first coronavirus cluster since lockdown was lifted amid fears of a resurgence of the disease

  • Wuhan today reported five new cases, all of whom live in the same complex
  • They were previously classified as asymptomatic who showed no symptoms
  • The cluster infections come as China begins to reopen recreational venues 
  • Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19

Wuhan, the epicentre of the novel coronavirus outbreak in China, reported on Monday its first cluster of infections since a lockdown on the central Chinese city was lifted a month ago, stoking concerns of a wider resurgence of the disease.

The new infections sounded a note of caution amid efforts to ease coronavirus-related restrictions across China as businesses restart and individuals go back to work.

Wuhan reported five new confirmed cases, all of whom live in the same residential compound. One of them was the wife of an 89-year-old male patient reported a day earlier in the first confirmed case in the city in more than a month.

Wuhan reported five new confirmed cases, all of whom live in the same residential compound. Pictured, a woman wears a face shield as she walks along a street in Wuhan on Monday

Wuhan reported five new confirmed cases, all of whom live in the same residential compound. Pictured, a woman wears a face shield as she walks along a street in Wuhan on Monday

'At present, the task of epidemic prevention and control in the city is still very heavy,' said the Wuhan health authority in a statement. 'We must resolutely contain the risk of a rebound.'

All of the latest confirmed cases were previously classified as asymptomatic, people who test positive for the virus and are capable of infecting others but do not show clinical signs such as a fever.

The number of asymptomatic cases in China is not known, as they only appear on the radar of health officials when they show up positive during tests conducted as part of contact tracing and health checks.

China does not include asymptomatic cases in its overall tally of confirmed cases, currently at 82,918, until they exhibit signs of infection. Mainland China has reported 4,633 deaths.

All of the new infections were previously classified as asymptomatic, people who test positive for the virus and are capable of infecting others but do not show clinical signs such as a fever. Pictured, a medic takes a swab sample from a man being tested for COVID-19 in Wuhan in April

All of the new infections were previously classified as asymptomatic, people who test positive for the virus and are capable of infecting others but do not show clinical signs such as a fever. Pictured, a medic takes a swab sample from a man being tested for COVID-19 in Wuhan in April

Hundreds of asymptomatic cases in Wuhan, which was released on April 8 from a months-long lockdown, are currently being monitored, according to the city's health authority.

The number of new cases reported in China since April have been small compared with the thousands confirmed each day in February, thanks to a nationwide regime of screening, testing and quarantine.

The government said on Friday that China will gradually reopen cinemas, museums and other recreational venues, though restrictions including mandatory reservations and a limit on numbers will be in place.

The number of new cases reported in China since April have been small compared with the thousands confirmed each day in February, thanks to a nationwide regime of screening, testing and quarantine. A vendor is seen selling vegetables on a street of Wuhan on April 23

The number of new cases reported in China since April have been small compared with the thousands confirmed each day in February, thanks to a nationwide regime of screening, testing and quarantine. A vendor is seen selling vegetables on a street of Wuhan on April 23

Shanghai has already reopened some night entertainment venues such as discotheques. Walt Disney on Monday reopened its Shanghai Disneyland park to a reduced number of visitors.

New outbreaks in China in the past two months have mainly developed in residential compounds or at hospitals.

South Korea is also battling a wave of new cases, although there the most recent outbreaks started in nightclubs and bars.

Shanghai Disneyland has become the first Disney resort to re-open after closing to stop the spread of coronavirus. Pictured, a visitor dressed as a Disney character takes a selfie Monday

Shanghai Disneyland has become the first Disney resort to re-open after closing to stop the spread of coronavirus. Pictured, a visitor dressed as a Disney character takes a selfie Monday

The Wuhan cases helped push the overall new COVID-19 infections confirmed on May 10 to 17, the highest daily increase since April 28.

Northeastern Jilin province, which on Saturday reported a cluster of infections in one of its cities, Shulan, reported three additional local cases.

Shulan has been marked a high-risk area, the only place in China currently with that designation.

'We're now in a "war-time" mode,' said Jin Hua, mayor of Shulan, which until the weekend had reported no local cases for more than 70 days.

In the city of Shulan in north-eastern China's Jilin Province, thousands of residents are currently on lockdown after a cluster of infections had been detected. Pictured, a student wearing a face mask arrives at Changchun University Of Chinese Medicine in Jilin on May 7

In the city of Shulan in north-eastern China's Jilin Province, thousands of residents are currently on lockdown after a cluster of infections had been detected. Pictured, a student wearing a face mask arrives at Changchun University Of Chinese Medicine in Jilin on May 7

Shulan has imposed a lockdown on its 600,000 residents since the weekend, with just one member of a household being allowed out each day to buy necessities.

One of the three cases confirmed in the Jilin province on May 10 was from Shulan.

The other two were from the city of Jilin uncovered through contact tracing of people who were in contact with earlier Shulan cases.

Nearby Liaoning and Heilongjiang provinces each reported one case, adding to worries about a resurgence of the outbreak in the region.

The province of Heilongjiang is also on high alert for a virus comeback. The picture shows a man keeping watch at a checkpoint in the border city of Suifenhe, Heilongjiang, on April 21

The province of Heilongjiang is also on high alert for a virus comeback. The picture shows a man keeping watch at a checkpoint in the border city of Suifenhe, Heilongjiang, on April 21

A 70-year-old patient in Harbin, capital of Heilongjiang, had tested negative seven times before results turned positive.

Of the new cases, seven were so-called imported cases in the northern Chinese region of Inner Mongolia involving travellers from overseas.

Across China, the number of new asymptomatic COVID-19 cases fell to 12 on May 10 compared with 20 reported a day earlier.

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2020-05-11 08:12:08Z
52780777703922

Iran missile 'accidentally' strikes own ship, kills 19 sailors - Al Jazeera English

At least 19 sailors have been killed and 15 wounded after an Iranian missile fired during a training exercise in the Gulf of Oman struck a support vessel near its target, Iran's army said.

The friendly fire incident happened on Sunday near the port of Jask, about 1,270km (790 miles) southeast of Tehran on the Gulf of Oman, a statement on the army's website said on Monday.

More:

"On Sunday afternoon, during an exercise by a number of the navy's vessels in Jask and Chabahar waters, the Konarak light support vessel had an accident," said a statement on the army's website.

"The number of this accident's martyrs is 19 and 15 have also been injured," it added, saying the vessel had been towed ashore.

The missile struck the Konarak, a Hendijan-class support ship, which was taking part in the exercise.

State television described the incident as an accident, saying the Konarak, a Hendijan-class support ship which was struck by the missile, had been putting targets out in the water for other ships to fire on and had stayed too close to a target.

"Iran's Moudge-class frigate Jamaran accidentally hit the Konarak ship with a missile during the exercise," Iran's semi-official Tasnim news agency reported.

Iranian media said the Konarak had been overhauled in 2018 and was able to launch sea missiles.

The Dutch-made, 47-metre (155-foot) vessel had been in service since 1988.

It was not immediately clear how many crew members were on board the warship at the time of the accident.

Turkey's Anadolu Agency said at least 20 people had been killed and that there were as many as 40 crew members on board the Konarak.

Anadolu said the incident had been deemed "human error", citing sources in Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps.

Iran regularly holds exercises in the Gulf of Oman, which is closed to the strategic Strait of Hormuz, the narrow mouth of the Gulf, through which 20 percent of the world's oil passes.

Iranian media rarely report on mishaps during its exercises, signalling the severity of the incident.

US-Iran

The incident also comes at a time of heightened tensions between Iran and the United States.

Relations between the two foes have deteriorated sharply since 2018, when US President Donald Trump withdrew his country from a 2015 nuclear deal between major powers and Iran.

Washington then re-imposed sanctions on Tehran, crippling its economy.

The animosity deepened in early January, when the US assassinated top Iranian military commander Qassem Soleimani in Baghdad, the capital of Iraq.

Iran retaliated on January 8 by firing missiles at bases in Iraq where US troops were stationed.

On the same day, Iran's armed forces shot down a Kyiv-bound Boeing 737 passenger jet over Tehran, killing all 176 people aboard.

The military admitted to the catastrophic error, saying it came as Iran's air defences were on high alert after firing the barrage of missiles at US targets in Iraq. 

SOURCE: Al Jazeera and news agencies

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2020-05-11 07:58:54Z
52780778422870

Minggu, 10 Mei 2020

Coronavirus updates: More European nations begin easing restrictions - BBC News

Copyright: AFP

While the United States might have the highest number of confirmed infections with 1.3 million, Europe as a whole exceeds that tally.

Here's an overview in numbers. The UK tops the list in terms of deaths, Spain in terms of infections.

Spain (224,350 cases, 26,621 deaths)

UK (220,449 cases, 31,930 deaths)

Italy (219,070 cases, 30,560 deaths)

Russia (209,688 cases, 1,915 deaths)

France (177,094 cases, 26,383 deaths)

Germany (171,879 cases, 7,569 deaths)

Belgium (53,081 cases, 8,656 deaths)

Netherlands (42,826 cases, 5,459 deaths)

These are only the confirmed cases and deaths - with different countries having different testing and recording guidelines.

The data is from the Johns Hopkins University and might differ slightly from official national tallies.

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2020-05-11 04:57:53Z
52780777200994

Iranian navy ship Konarak 'sunk by friendly fire' from frigate - BBC News

An Iranian navy "friendly fire" incident in which a ship was sunk has killed dozens of sailors, unofficial reports say.

Local journalists said the frigate Jamaran was testing a new anti-ship missile which locked onto and hit Konarak, a logistical ship.

Semi-official Iranian news agency Fars said one sailor was killed and several others injured in a "naval exercise".

It described the incident on Sunday near the Strait of Hormuz as a "crash".

According to the unofficial reports, Jamaran - operated by Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) - fired the missile prematurely before Konarak had time to sail away from a floating target it had towed to a designated position.

Videos posted on social media show what are said to be injured sailors being transferred to ambulances.

In January, the IRGC mistakenly shot down a Ukrainian passenger plane near the Iranian capital, Tehran, killing all 176 people on board.

The incident came at a time of heightened tension with the US. Shortly before, Iran had launched a missile strike on an Iraqi base hosting US forces after an American drone strike killed IRGC commander Qasem Soleimani in the Iraqi capital Baghdad.

These tensions have continued to rise in recent months. The US has accused Iran of "harassing" its naval ships in the Persian Gulf.

Iran said said it had increased patrols in the Gulf after the US Navy blocked the path of an Iranian vessel.

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2020-05-11 03:12:19Z
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Boris Johnson’s three phase plan to exit the lockdown revealed - The Sun

BORIS Johnson has set out a three-phase plan to end lockdown restrictions in Britain without allowing coronavirus to rip through the nation. 

The PM said last night as each measure was slowly unlocked, the Government's scientists would be watching closely to see if they could release the next part of the plan.

⚠️ Read our coronavirus live blog for the latest news & updates

 Boris Johnson set out the plan to ease lockdown
Boris Johnson set out the plan to ease lockdownCredit: Crown Copyright

2

What has the Prime Minister said?

The Prime Minister said the country had been suffering terribly since drastic lockdown measures were introduced on March 16 but now was not the time to end the lockdown.

He said: "We have by no means fulfilled all of (the five requirements needed to end lockdown).

"And so no, this is not the time simply to end the lockdown this week.

"We must also recognise that this campaign against the virus has come at colossal cost to our way of life.

"We can see it all around us in the shuttered shops and abandoned businesses and darkened pubs and restaurants."

Brits have been cooped up in their homes for almost two months with little promise of being released.

But Mr Johnson set out three phases which will allow people to get back to normal life.

He said: "We have a route, and we have a plan, and everyone in government has the all-consuming pressure and challenge to save lives, restore livelihoods and gradually restore the freedoms that we need.

"But in the end this is a plan that everyone must make work."

What will happen this week?

The reopening of the nation will be done very slowly so that experts can monitor the rate of transmission - known as the R rate - of coronavirus and watch the impact of any relaxed measures on new cases numbers in the UK.

The first thing that will happen is Brits will be allowed some more freedom to spend leisure time outside from Wednesday - including sunbathing and picnics with their own household.

Mr Johnson said: "From this Wednesday, we want to encourage people to take more and even unlimited amounts of outdoor exercise.

"You can sit in the sun in your local park, you can drive to other destinations, you can even play sports but only with members of your own household.

"You must obey the rules on social distancing and to enforce those rules we will increase the fines for the small minority who break them.

"And so every day, with ever increasing data, we will be monitoring the R and the number of new infections, and the progress we are making, and if we as a nation begin to fulfil the conditions I have set out, then in the next few weeks and months we may be able to go further."

It means that people who are unable to work from home - especially those in the construction and manufacturing sectors - will be urged to get started again to help the economy come back to life.

 A slide from Mr Johnson's speech shows how the three phases will unfold

2

A slide from Mr Johnson's speech shows how the three phases will unfold

Return to classrooms

Phase two of the plan to ease lockdown will be to get kids back in classrooms.

Primary school children will be the first allowed to resume their learning - as early as June 1.

The PM said: "In step two – at the earliest by June 1 – after half term – we believe we may be in a position to begin the phased reopening of shops and to get primary pupils back into schools, in stages, beginning with reception, Year 1 and Year 6.

"Our ambition is that secondary pupils facing exams next year will get at least some time with their teachers before the holidays. And we will shortly be setting out detailed guidance on how to make it work in schools and shops and on transport.

A new normal

The final phase of the plan to end lockdown will be to allow part of the hospitality sector to open up.

But pubs, cinemas and mass gathering could have to stay closed until Autumn, because they are seen as a risk to spreading coronavirus.

Restaurants and cafes with outdoor seating where diners can be kept two metres apart could be allowed to open up in July.

Mr Johnson said: "And step three - at the earliest by July - and subject to all these conditions and further scientific advice

"If and only if the numbers support it, we will hope to re-open at least some of the hospitality industry and other public places, provided they are safe and enforce social distancing.

"Throughout this period of the next two months we will be driven not by mere hope or economic necessity.
"We are going to be driven by the science, the data and public health."

"And I must stress again that all of this is conditional, it all depends on a series of big Ifs.
It depends on all of us – the entire country – to follow the advice, to observe social distancing, and to keep that R down."

"And to prevent re-infection from abroad, I am serving notice that it will soon be the time – with transmission significantly lower – to impose quarantine on people coming into this country by air.
"And it is because of your efforts to get the R down and the number of infections down here, that this measure will now be effective."

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiT2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnRoZXN1bi5jby51ay9uZXdzLzExNTkxMDA3L3RocmVlLXBoYXNlLXBsYW4tZXhpdC1sb2NrZG93bi1yZXZlYWxlZC_SAVNodHRwczovL3d3dy50aGVzdW4uY28udWsvbmV3cy8xMTU5MTAwNy90aHJlZS1waGFzZS1wbGFuLWV4aXQtbG9ja2Rvd24tcmV2ZWFsZWQvYW1wLw?oc=5

2020-05-11 01:50:58Z
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