Coronavirus forces election delay in New Zealand
Wellington: New Zealand on Monday postponed its election to focus on fighting a second wave of the coronavirus as Europe tightened restrictions to curb fresh outbreaks of the disease.
Japan has become the latest country to reveal the huge financial fallout from the global pandemic reporting that its economy -- like many others -- had endured a historic contraction. With more than 21.5 million cases worldwide, a second wave of infections is threatening further disruption as nations from Europe to Asia look to reimpose restrictions.
The disease has killed more than 766,000 people globally since it first emerged in China late last year. The number of deaths has hit 50,000 in India, which is still battling its first wave with 2.5 million infections -- the third-highest in the world.
The postponement of New Zealand’s election to October 17 came after the shock discovery of Covid-19 in Auckland last week, ending the nation’s 102-day streak without community transmission.
“This decision gives all parties time over the next nine weeks to campaign and the Electoral Commission enough time to ensure an election can go ahead,” Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said. She said the return of the virus -- which sent New Zealand’s largest city into lockdown -- had rattled Kiwis and could have discouraged some from voting in a September election.
In South Korea, another country that had brought its initial outbreak largely under control, thousands of Protestant Church members were asked to quarantine as authorities battled outbreaks linked to religious groups.
The largest cluster is centred on the Sarang Jeil Church in Seoul, headed by pastor Jun Kwang-hun who faces allegations of deliberately hindering efforts to contain the virus. In Europe, where strict lockdowns appeared to bring the virus largely under control earlier this year, several countries have reported a surge in new infections.
Growing numbers of cases have forced governments to weigh renewed health restrictions against public frustration and the need to spur economies already battered by a first round of lockdowns.
Regions across Spain have begun to enforce 11 measures the government unveiled on Friday to curb one of the fastest virus growth rates in Europe.
They include the closure of all discos, night clubs and dance halls while restaurants and bars are required to close by 01:00 am, with no new guests allowed in from midnight. Italy -- once the global epicentre of the coronavirus -- has also ordered the three-week closure of all dance venues after a pick-up in infections over the weekend blamed in part on young partygoers.
Wearing a face mask is also mandatory in public areas from 06:00 pm to 06:00 am. “The contagion is on the rise but we’re dancing,” proclaimed the Corriere Della Sera newspaper, which slammed Sardinia’s clubs as being “joyful contagion machines”. Britain has also removed France, the Netherlands, Malta and three other countries from its list of places exempt from self-isolation rules because of the continent’s second virus wave. But attempts to curb the spread of the virus have been met by scepticism and protests in several parts of Europe.
“They are forcing us to use a mask, they want us to stay home practically locked up,” said Pilar Martin, 58, at a rally in Madrid that drew a variety of people, many promoting widely debunked conspiracy theories about the coronavirus being a hoax. European nations have already reported disastrous damage to their economies in the second quarter of the year.
-
Meghan Markle 'terrified' Over Possible UK Return -
Did Opiate Restrictions Lead To Blake Garrett's Death? -
Royal Expert Reflects On Princess Eugenie, Beatrice 'priorities' Amid Strained Relationship With Sarah, Andrew -
Prince William's 'concerning' Statement About Andrew Is Not Enough? -
50 Cent Gets Called Out Over Using Slur For Cardi B -
Scientists Discover Rare Form Of 'magnets' That Might Surprise You -
Nancy Guthrie’s Kidnapper Will Be Caught Soon: Here’s Why -
AI Innovation Could Make Trade Secrets More Valuable Than Patents, Says Billionaire Investor -
King Charles Heckling: Calls For 10 BAFTAs And A Knighthood For Sign Language Interpreter -
Kim Kardashian Leaves Meghan Markle 'upset' With Latest 'cheap Shot' -
Royal Expert On Andrew, Sarah Ferguson’s ‘entitled’ Behaviour Since Marriage -
Instagram And YouTube Accused Of Engineering Addiction In Children’s Brains -
Trump Reached Out To Police Chief Investigating Epstein In 2006, Records Show -
Keke Palmer Praises Actor Who Inspired 'The Burbs' Role -
Humans May Have 33 Senses, Not 5: New Study Challenges Long-held Science -
Kim Kardashian Prepared To Have Child With Lewis Hamilton: 'Baby Using A Surrogate'