Rabu, 16 Desember 2020

Germany begins its Christmas coronavirus lockdown - Daily Mail

Germany sees record number of Covid-19 deaths on first day of new lockdown, with schools and shops closed for a month

  • The new measures replace a 'lockdown light' which failed to stem second wave 
  • Schools and shops are closed while social gatherings are limited to five people 
  • Wednesday's record death toll of 952 comes alongside a rising infection rate  

Germany's daily death toll from coronavirus surged to a record 952 today as the country entered its toughest lockdown since the early weeks of the pandemic.   

The new 'hard lockdown', replacing a six-week 'lockdown light' which failed to bring the second wave under control, will see shops and schools closed until January while social gatherings will be severely limited over the Christmas holidays. 

Alcohol is banned in public places - putting a halt to traditional mulled wine stands at Christmas markets - while hairdressers and salons are also shutting down.  

It comes with the infection rate rising to its highest levels yet, with nearly 28,000 new cases announced on Wednesday compared to 21,000 a week ago. 

The record death toll - smashing the previous record of 598, although thought to include some delayed figures from Tuesday - takes the overall figure to 23,427. 

Germany's infection rate has yet to be brought under control in the second wave, with a new surge in the last two weeks following a temporary stabilisation

Germany's infection rate has yet to be brought under control in the second wave, with a new surge in the last two weeks following a temporary stabilisation 

The death rate has also continued to rise, far exceeding the numbers during the spring which were significantly lower than in the other major countries of Western Europe

The death rate has also continued to rise, far exceeding the numbers during the spring which were significantly lower than in the other major countries of Western Europe 

A security guard closes the iron gate at Berlin's famous KaDeWe department store last night as it closes its doors during Germany's second national lockdown

A security guard closes the iron gate at Berlin's famous KaDeWe department store last night as it closes its doors during Germany's second national lockdown 

Angela Merkel agreed the tough restrictions with state leaders on Sunday and has repeatedly sounded the alarm about the high infection rate. 

Under Germany's federal system, the states have the final say, and some are adopting even tougher measures - with Saxony imposing a 10pm curfew and Bavaria enacting stay-at-home rules similar to those in other countries. 

Schools stayed open during the 'lockdown light', but are moving to distance learning from Wednesday until at least January 10.  

Companies in Europe's largest economy are also being encouraged to allow their employees to work from home during the month-long shutdown. 

'That would help to implement the principle 'we're staying at home',' according to the policy paper agreed by Merkel and state premiers. 

Social gatherings are restricted to five people from two households, although children aged under 14 are not counted towards the limit. 

The rules are being slightly relaxed from December 24-26, when any one household can meet four other people - meaning the total number can rise above five.

However, there is no relaxation over the New Year, and traditional firework displays have been banned in public places.  

A pedestrian walks across an empty square in Frankfurt on Wednesday morning, as Germany enters its toughest lockdown since the first weeks of the pandemic

A pedestrian walks across an empty square in Frankfurt on Wednesday morning, as Germany enters its toughest lockdown since the first weeks of the pandemic 

A nearly deserted mall in Berlin early today on the first day of the month-long 'hard lockdown' intended to finally bring the second wave under control

A nearly deserted mall in Berlin early today on the first day of the month-long 'hard lockdown' intended to finally bring the second wave under control 

Shops are also closing down for the first time since the spring, with only essential stores such as supermarkets allowed to remain open. 

The typically cautious Merkel last week made an unusually impassioned appeal for Germans to keep their discipline over the Christmas period. 

'If we have too many contacts before Christmas and it ends up being the last Christmas with the grandparents, then we'd really have failed,' she said. 

While Merkel remains largely popular, Germany's long-admired pandemic response has come under greater scrutiny as the death toll continues to climb. 

Many European countries saw their infection rates fall after imposing new measures in October and November, but Germany has yet to see a significant drop. 

After stabilising for a a few weeks, infections started to rise again at the start of December and the last week has seen a record of more than 160,000 cases. 

Some parts of Germany, especially in the former East, which had escaped the first wave of the pandemic relatively lightly are now seeing a massive spread of Covid-19. 

The death toll, which only once rose above 300 per day during the spring, is now at an average of almost 500. 

Pariser Platz, the square in front of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, was deserted early this morning as the lockdown got underway

Pariser Platz, the square in front of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, was deserted early this morning as the lockdown got underway 

And while the German health system has generally handled the crisis well, the number of patients in intensive care is now at an all-time record of 4,735.  

Merkel's economy minister Peter Altmaier and Bavarian state premier Markus Soeder have both described the virus situation as 'out of control' in Germany. 

Soeder, seen as a possible contender for Merkel's job when she leaves office next year, warned this week that Germany could become the 'problem child' of Europe.   

The one ray of hope for Germany was a prediction by health minister Jens Spahn that vaccinations could still begin before Christmas.  

Spahn told German television that jabs with the Pfizer/BioNtech vaccine could begin within two to four days of an approval by the European Medicines Agency.

The jab has already been approved in Britain, but Spahn has voiced impatience with EU regulators in recent days, finally receiving assurances that the EMA will finalise the approval process by December 23. 

Germany has set up some 440 vaccination centres, has 10,000 doctors and medical staff ready and is ready to start mass vaccinations immediately, Spahn says.   

'Our goal is an approval before Christmas,' Spahn said. 'We want to still start vaccinating this year.' 

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2020-12-16 08:36:00Z
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Australia takes China to WTO over barley tariffs - Financial Times

Canberra is referring China to the World Trade Organization over Beijing’s imposition of punitive tariffs on Australian barley imports, escalating a bitter diplomatic and trade dispute.

Simon Birmingham, Australia’s trade minister, said on Wednesday that Canberra reserved the right to appeal several other Chinese trade sanctions levied against Australian coal, beef, timber and lobsters in recent months to the WTO.

In May, Beijing imposed tariffs of 80 per cent on Australian barley, alleging imports were sold below cost in China and that Canberra had subsidised growers in contravention of WTO rules. Canberra rejects the claims and warns the tariffs risk crippling a A$2bn ($1.5bn) a year industry.

“This is the logical and appropriate next step for Australia to take. We have been a longstanding defender of the international rules-based system, of the importance of multilateral co-operation and engagement,” said Mr Birmingham.

“In doing so it is appropriate that, when we argue for there to be international rules and an independent international umpire to resolve disputes, that when we find ourselves in the case of having such disputes we call in the umpire.”

However, Canberra has acknowledged that the WTO process could take years to resolve and noted that Beijing had refused to engage with it over the expanding range of trade disputes.

China is Australia’s largest trade partner, with two-way trade totalling A$252bn in 2019. But over the past two years, relations have soured as Canberra has resisted Beijing’s more aggressive foreign policy.

A memo leaked to Australian media last month by a Chinese diplomat cited Canberra’s ban on Huawei from the country’s 5G network and “disinformation” about China’s handling of coronavirus as among the reasons for the sharp deterioration in diplomatic ties.

Beijing has already imposed sanctions on barley, beef and wine imports following Canberra’s call for an inquiry into the origins of the Covid-19 pandemic that first surfaced Wuhan.

This week, Chinese state media reported authorities had banned Australian coal imports, targeting a sector that generated A$55bn in exports earnings in 2019. Dozens of Australian ships carrying coal remain stranded off the Chinese coast because of informal restrictions, according to the Australian coal industry.

Analysts said there was growing evidence that Beijing was using economic coercion to pressure Australia and send a warning to other nations in the region about the risks of publicly criticising the Chinese government.

On Tuesday, Beijing said it was not aware of any formal ban issued on Australian coal and defended recent measures taken against Australian imports as “in line with China's laws and regulations and international practices”. 

“They are responsible steps to safeguard the interests of domestic industries and consumers,” said a foreign ministry spokesperson.

“Recently we've seen many reports in which Australia dresses up as a victim, pointing an accusing finger at China, directly or by insinuation. This move is meant to confound the public and we will never accept it.”

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2020-12-16 05:49:00Z
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Ex Brexit MEP fumes over 'bonkers' EU vaccine approval delay - 'We are standing gawping!' - Daily Express

Michael Heaver, a former Brexit Party MEP, has pointed to the fact Germans are waiting for a vaccine developed by German scientists. He quoted an editorial by tabloid Bild criticising the EU's slow pace, writing: "Britain, Canada and the USA have started vaccinating — and we are standing and gawping."

 Mr Heaver wrote on Twitter: “Germans waiting for a vaccine that was developed by two German scientists because it hasn’t had EU approval yet.

"Bonkers.”

Jens Spahn, the nation's health minister, has warned the EU could lose trust of its citizens if it causes too great a delay.

The EU ruling on the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine, approved by the UK on December 2, has been scheduled for December 21, the European Medicines Agency (EMA) announced.

BioNTech is a German company based in Mainz. The EMA evaluates drugs and vaccines for the 27 EU nations.

It was originally due on December 29 but the date was brought forward following the backlash.

Mr Spahn has said Germany should start giving coronavirus shots 24 to 72 hours after the BioNTech/Pfizer vaccine gets European Union regulatory approval - and could begin as soon as Christmas.

Thousands of people in Britain, Canada and the United States, have received the vaccine so far.

Brit Margaret Keenan, now 91, became the first person in the world to receive the jab as a part of a mass immunisation programme.

“Our goal is an approval before Christmas,” Mr Spahn told Associated Press reporters in Berlin on Tuesday.

READ MORE: Is the vaccine safe, can it alter your DNA, is it tested?

The period will span December 16 to January 10, with an easing over Christmas entitling one household to host up to four close relatives.

The Netherlands has also entered a five-week lockdown, meaning non-essential shops, theatres and gyms have all closed.

Restaurants, hotels and indoor sports venues in the Czech Republic will also close from Friday - a fortnight after reopening.

Italy could be placed in a nationwide lockdown, from Christmas Eve until at least January 2, to tackle a potential surge in infections, local media has reported.

Great British Bake Off judge Prue Leith, 80, is among the latest UK residents to receive the vaccine.

The UK government is aiming to inoculate tens of millions of residents within months, starting with those in the high risk category.

A booster jab at 21 days follows the first dose.

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2020-12-16 05:11:00Z
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Selasa, 15 Desember 2020

Kayleigh McEnany refuses to follow McConnell admitting Trump election defeat - Guardian News

حولالصحافةحقوق الطبع والنشرالتواصل معنامنشئو المحتوىالإعلانمطوّرو البرامجالأحكامالخصوصيةالسياسة والأمانآلية عمل YouTubeتجربة الميزات الجديدة

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2020-12-15 22:06:55Z
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US election 2020: Top Republican Mitch McConnell accepts Joe Biden is US president-elect in blow to Donald Trump - Sky News

The Senate majority leader has congratulated Joe Biden on becoming US president-elect - in a significant blow to Donald Trump.

Top Republican Mitch McConnell said the Electoral College - a group of people who voted to formally confirm the result of last month's election - "had spoken".

"Many of us had hoped the presidential election would yield a different result," he admitted on Tuesday.

Joe Biden has said he hopes Donald Trump is more 'enlightened' before the inauguration
Image: Joe Biden is due to be sworn in on 20 January

"But our system of government has the processes to determine who will be sworn in on 20 January."

Mr McConnell described Democrat Mr Biden, who was vice president under Barack Obama and also a former senator himself, as someone "who has devoted himself to public service for many years".

Kamala Harris says the Democrats won the US election
Image: Kamala Harris will be the first woman vice-president of the US

He also congratulated vice president-elect Kamala Harris, saying "all Americans can take pride that our nation has a female vice president-elect for the very first time".

Before those remarks, he poured praise on Mr Trump's "endless" accomplishments during the last four years.

More from Donald Trump

US President Donald Trump looks on after delivering an update on "Operation Warp Speed" in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, DC on November 13, 2020. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP) (Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)
Image: Donald Trump is still refusing to accept he lost the election

The admission marks a crucial abandonment by one of the most senior GOP figures of the incumbent president's position, which is to refuse to accept the election result.

Mr Trump has claimed - without evidence that has stood up to legal scrutiny - that the vote was rigged against him.

Republican Senator Roy Blunt, the chairman of the inaugural committee, also said on Tuesday the panel will "deal with" Mr Biden "as the president-elect".

Just last week, the Republicans on the same committee had declined to publicly do so.

Mr Trump will become the first one-term president since 1992 when he leaves the Oval Office next month.

He will be replaced by Mr Biden, after the Democrat challenger managed to flip key red states blue - like Arizona, Georgia and Nevada.

His gain of Pennsylvania four days after polls closed gave him enough Electoral College votes to put him past the halfway line, and he eventually collected 306 to Mr Trump's 232.

Mr Biden's inauguration ceremony will be very different from the usual ceremonies used to induct new presidents into office, given the coronavirus pandemic.

The committee organising it said they wanted to ensure it "honours and resembles sacred American traditions while keeping Americans safe and preventing the spread of COVID-19".

"Vigorous health and safety protocols" will be followed and "the ceremony's footprint will be extremely limited, and the parade that follows will be re-imagined", they clarified.

US residents are also being urged not to travel to attend the ceremony at the Capitol in Washington DC and instead watch from home.

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2020-12-15 20:23:46Z
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Yanis Varoufakis hits out at ‘state of eurozone’ in blistering attack on Brussels 'misery' - Daily Express

In a furious attack, Mr Varoufakis tweeted: "Our PM is on the podium now waxing lyrical about the fact that Italy's GDP fell more than Greece's. This is the state of the today. Comparing notes on relative misery and finding solace in having escaped coming first!"

It comes as bond yields across southern EU states have fallen to record lows due to the financial crisis brought on by the coronavirus pandemic.

Ten-year bond yields from Greece fell to below record levels.

However, Italy's ten-year bond yield fell as low as 0.48 percent.

Greece faired slightly better, the nation's ten-year bond yield fell to 0.562 percent.

A report from October also found Italy's GDP in 2020 was predicted shrink back to the same level as 23 years ago.

The nation's GDP was expected to contract by 10 percent in 2020.

The report by the General Confederation of Italian Industry, Confindustria, reported the country's GDP would shrink and the employment rate fall by 1.8 percent, meaning the loss of 419,000 jobs.

However, Italy’s public debt is still behind Greece's, which is proportionally the highest in the eurozone.

READ MORE: Britons warn EU 'we won't be bullied around' as no deal Brexit likely

Nikos Magginas, chief economist at the National Bank of Greece said this was because of a "decline in tourism by about 75 percent".

The news comes as Spain's per capita income has fallen to 30 percent below the EU's average.

However, official data published last week by Eurostat said the bloc's GDP surged upward at its fastest rate.

This surge in the third quarter of 2020 was also due to the lifting of coronavirus restrictions across Europe during the summer.

The data also showed employment grew at the fastest rate since 1995.

Data on GDP and employment first started being recorded in the eurozone in 1995.

Across the bloc, employment grew by one percent between August and October.

Eurostat said: “While the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on employment in persons was mitigated by government support schemes, the changes in hours worked were much more pronounced".

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2020-12-15 20:38:00Z
CBMidWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmV4cHJlc3MuY28udWsvbmV3cy93b3JsZC8xMzcyOTc3L2V1LW5ld3MtbGF0ZXN0LWJyZXhpdC1ZYW5pcy1WYXJvdWZha2lzLWV1cm96b25lLWVjb25vbXktaXRhbHktZ3JlZWNlLWdkcNIBeWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmV4cHJlc3MuY28udWsvbmV3cy93b3JsZC8xMzcyOTc3L2V1LW5ld3MtbGF0ZXN0LWJyZXhpdC1ZYW5pcy1WYXJvdWZha2lzLWV1cm96b25lLWVjb25vbXktaXRhbHktZ3JlZWNlLWdkcC9hbXA

Kayleigh McEnany STILL won't call President-elect Joe Biden the winner due to 'ongoing litigation' - Daily Mail

Kayleigh McEnany STILL won't call Joe Biden president-elect because Donald Trump is pursuing 'ongoing litigation' and terms Electoral College result just 'one more step' in the process

  • Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell called Biden 'president-elect' and acknowledged his victory for the first time publicly Tuesday
  • McEnany cited 'ongoing litigation' and would not do the same
  • Had no update on if Trump would concede
  • Electoral College met; Biden won 306 to 232 votes
  • Congress counts the vote Jan. 6 and inauguration is set for Jan. 20th 

White House press secretary briefed reporters Tuesday following the Electoral College meeting to make Joe Biden's win official – but still wouldn't call him 'president-elect' and gave no indication President Trump would concede.

She called the meeting of the Electoral College, where Biden won 306 electoral votes to Trump's 232, 'one step in the constitutional process.'

She cited 'ongoing litigation' – a reference to the Trump campaing an allies filing dozens of lawsuits that have suffered more than 50 losses in court. 

'Ongoing litigation': White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany would not call Joe Biden president-elect or indicate President Trump was ready to concede despite the meeting of the Electoral College

'Ongoing litigation': White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany would not call Joe Biden president-elect or indicate President Trump was ready to concede despite the meeting of the Electoral College

'The president is still involved in ongoing litigation related to the election. Yesterday's vote was one step in the constitutional process. I will leave that to him and refer you to the campaign for more on that litigation,' she said - dodging a direct question about whether Trump planned to invite Biden to the White House and acknowledged him as president-elect.

She repeated a version of that answer in response to multiple questions.

She said she wasn't sure whether Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell had called Trump to give a head's up before McConnell for the first time congratulated Biden Tuesday morning and called him president-elect.

'I haven’t gotten the president’s reaction to that but the president again is pursuing ongoing litigation,' she said. 

President-elect Joe Biden called Mitch McConnell to 'thank him for the congratulations' Tuesday

President-elect Joe Biden called Mitch McConnell to 'thank him for the congratulations' Tuesday

McEnany made long comments criticizing media coverage but declined to say Trump would invite his successor to the White House

McEnany made long comments criticizing media coverage but declined to say Trump would invite his successor to the White House

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell called Biden 'president-elect' and acknowledged his victory for the first time publicly Tuesday

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell called Biden 'president-elect' and acknowledged his victory for the first time publicly Tuesday

She directed questions about what possible legal recourse Trump has to the campaign, where she also has served as a spokesperson when not doing her taxpayer-funded job at the White House. 

The Supreme Court on Friday refused to take up a case filed by the Republican Texas attorney general seeking to throw out the result in four states.

Biden ripped the president in a prime-time speech Monday for refusing to accept the results after Biden bested him by 7 million votes in the popular vote and matched Trump's own 2016 306 electoral vote total.

'Respecting the will of the people is at the heart of our democracy, even if we find those results hard to accept,' said Biden on the day the Electoral College met in state capitals across the nation

'Respecting the will of the people is at the heart of our democracy, even if we find those results hard to accept,' said Biden on the day the Electoral College met in state capitals across the nation

'Pursuing legitimate litigation through the judicial system is in no way assaulting democracy,' she said. 

She then pivoted to the Mueller probe and called the investigations of Trump throughout his term an 'assault on democracy.' 

Biden said in his Monday night speech: 'In America, when questions are raised about the legitimacy of any election, those questions are resolved through a legal process. And that is precisely what happened here. The Trump campaign brought dozens and dozens and dozens of legal challenges to test the results. They were heard. And they were found to be without merit,' said Biden. 

'Respecting the will of the people is at the heart of our democracy, even if we find those results hard to accept,' said Biden – alluding to Trump's refusal to concede or accept the results. 

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2020-12-15 18:58:00Z
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