Europe

Forecasts: COVID-19 peak death rate in Europe to occur in late April

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New COVID-19 estimates find that the peak daily death rate from the pandemic will occur during the third week of April among European countries.

The new forecasts, released on Tuesday by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the University of Washington’s School of Medicine, finds that

approximately 151,680 people will die during what researchers are calling the “first wave” of the pandemic.

By comparison, the United States is expected to face 81,766 deaths, according to forecasts released on Sunday by IHME.

“We are expecting a foreboding few weeks for people in many parts of Europe,” said IHME Director Dr. Christopher Murray. “It seems likely the number of deaths will exceed our projections for the United States.”

The death toll in many countries is compounded by the demand for hospital resources well in excess of what is available.

For example, peak demand in the UK is expected to total 102,794 hospital beds needed compared to 17,765 available, 24,544 ICU beds compared to 799 ICU beds available, according to the research.

The announcement on Europe finds that most regions of Italy and Spain have passed their peaks in the number of deaths.

Countries that are about to peak or are quickly approaching peak in this wave of the epidemic include the Netherlands, Ireland, Austria, and Luxembourg. The Czech Republic and Romania are midway through their expected trajectories. Other nations including the United Kingdom, Germany, Norway, and Greece are still early in their trajectories and face fast-rising death tolls through their peaks in the second and third weeks of April.

Murray cautioned that easing these precautions too soon during “the first wave” of the pandemic could lead to new rounds of infections, hospitalizations, and deaths.

“To decrease the risk of a second wave in places where the first wave is controlled by robust social distancing, governments would need to consider mass testing, contact tracing, and quarantines for those infected until vaccination is available, mass-produced, and distributed widely,” Murray said.

IHME said that it started making projections of the pandemic’s impact in the United States state-by-state on March 26.

Tuesday’s announcement is the first set of predictions for European nations and is based on modeling the peak in death rates and hospital usage in Wuhan City in China, as well as data from seven European locations that have peaked, including Madrid, Spain; Castile-La Mancha, Spain; Tuscany, Italy; Emilia-Romagna, Italy; Liguria, Italy; Piedmont, Italy; and Lombardy, Italy. Of these eight locations that have reached the peak regarding daily deaths, only one, Wuhan, has currently brought new cases to nearly zero.

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The ten deadliest pandemics that changed the world forever

Spanish flue, pandemic, USA, disease

In the history of humanity, almost every century had an epidemic which took millions of people into graves. In many cases, the number of deaths is still unknown because of the sudden and incredibly quick spread of these epidemics. 

Portfolio reported that many worry about the health consequences of the current coronavirus epidemic and started to compare the virus to other ones and major outbreaks that happened in the world. Luckily, due to modern medicine and medical methods, these epidemics do not take as many lives as the ones occurred in the previous centuries where disinfectants and information technology did not exist. 

Plague of Antonine (165–180)

This was history’s first significant pandemic mentioned in remained written documents historians found. The disease was brought into the Roman Empire by soldiers returning from the Middle-East and was named after the family name of Emperor Marcus Aurelius. In the empire, approximately 5–10 million people died of the plague. According to storytellers, the disease disappeared for a short time but reappeared again taking even more lives. 

Plague of Rome, Antonine, disease, Europe
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Wellcome Collection Gallery)

Plague of Justinian (541–542)

It was a pandemic that afflicted the Byzantine (Eastern Roman) Empire and especially its capital, Constantinople, as well as the Sasanian Empire and port cities around the entire Mediterranean Sea. Until the Black Death, historians referred to this epidemic as the deadliest one; it took away the lives of 25–100 million people. Back in that day, it meant half of the European continent’s residents. 

Plague of Justinian, Europe, disease, pandemic
Photo: Wikimedia Commons by Josse Lieferinxe

The Black Death (1331–1353)

With 75–200 million deaths the Black Death, also known as the Pestilence, the Great Bubonic Plague, the Great Plague or the Plague, or less commonly the Great Mortality or the Black Plague is still the deadliest pandemic that ever happened in history in Europe, the Middle-East, Central Asia and North Africa. Approximately 30–60% of Europe’s residents died because of the epidemic. The disease was caused by a certain oriental rat flea which carried the Yersinia pestis bacteria in from Central Asia. Europe needed 150 years to recover from losing 20 million people. The Black Death entered Hungary around 1349. 

Black Death, plague doctor, Europe, disease, pandemic
Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Black Death, disease, pandemic, Europe
Photo: Wikimedia Commons by Pieter Bruegel

Cocoliztli epidemic (1545–1548)

The cocoliztli outbreak, or, the great pestilence is a term given to millions of deaths in the territory of New Spain in present-day Mexico in the 16th century attributed to one or more illnesses collectively called cocoliztli, a mysterious disease characterised by high fevers and bleeding. Mexico lost 5–15 million people; approximately 80% of its residents in the 16th century. 

Cocolitzli, epidemic, disease
Photo: Wikimedia Commons by Bernardino de Sahagún

Persian plague (1772–1773)

The Persian bubonic plague epidemic took 2 million people away in less than one year. The outbreak of the disease was the first one since the major Black Death disappeared and was also the first case when quarantine measurements were introduced in the world. Quarantine eventually helped to stop the epidemic in 1773. 

Third Plague Pandemic (1855–1860)

The third bubonic plague pandemic broke out in Yunnan, China, and spread across every country under Chinese territory. In five years, the disease killed 12 million people in China and India; 10 million only in India. According to the WHO, the pandemic was active until the 1960s when the daily number of infected people decreased to under 200.

Third Plague, pandemic, disease
Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Spanish Flu (1918–1920)

The pandemic, caused by the A-type influenza virus, was the first one in history that spread across every continent. In the first year of the outbreak, the number of deaths was more than in World War I, and nearly 500 million people were infected worldwide. In the two years, 17–50 million people died, but other estimations even mention 100 million. This makes the Spanish Flu the second deadliest pandemic after the Black Death. In the autumn of 1918, the fatal disease arrived at Budapest. The virus infected approximately 22,000 people, most of them aged 20-40, and thousands died. 

Spanish Flu, Europe, disease, pandemic
Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Asian flu (1957–1958)

The disease was spread by wild ducks that carried the Chinese type-A influenza virus but not every scientist shares this thought. Nevertheless, the disease spread quickly and reached the United States of America and killed 70 thousand people, and in the world 1–4 million altogether. The vaccine was produced in 1957. 

Asian flu, disease, Europe
Photo: Wikimedia Commons by Skanpix

Smallpox (1877–1977)

The disease was caused by the Poxvirus variola, which is the most dangerous virus ever existed to humankind. The cruellest and scariest disease killed 500 million people in 100 years; most of them were only babies. Those who got infected but survived became blind. The only possible method for stopping the epidemic was infecting healthy people directly (artificial infection) while it was less risky and gave lifetime protection to healed individuals. WHO reported that the last natural infection had been diagnosed in 197,7 and three years later, the disease completely disappeared. 

Smallpox, disease, pandemic
Photo: Wikimedia Commons

HIV/AIDS (1960– )

Until 2018, nearly 38 million people died because of AIDS; the most in 1997, approximately 3.3 million. Until 2005, 2.6 million people were registered each year with the infection. 61% of AIDS-infected people are from African countries.  

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Featured image: Wikimedia Commons by Armed Forces Institute of Pathology/National Museum of Health and Medicine

COVID-19 updates: Spain sees continued fall in deaths, global cases top 1.2 million

coronavirus chinese commemoration

The world is now in a battle against COVID-19, a disease caused by a previously unknown coronavirus that has spread to over 200 countries and regions.

The following are the updates on the contagious disease.

MADRID

The number of new COVID-19 cases continued to fall on Sunday in Spain and the number of deaths in a 24 hour period fell for the third consecutive day, according to the Spanish Ministry for Health, Consumer Affairs and Social Services.
The number of confirmed cases increased by 6,023 on Sunday, bringing the total to 130,759, which is fewer than an increase of 7,026 cases in the previous 24 hours.

DHAKA

Bangladesh has announced a stimulus package of 727.50 billion taka (about 8.57 billion U.S. dollars) to help cushion the economic blow from the COVID-19 pandemic.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina made the announcement of the support package in a televised speech in capital Dhaka on Sunday.

BEIRUT

Lebanon’s Prime Minister Hassan Diab said Sunday that his cabinet is taking tough measures regarding returnees to Lebanon from COVID-19-hit countries, LBCI local TV channel reported.

“We will deal with this issue step by step by dividing returnees into groups in a bid to guarantee their safety and the safety of residents,” Diab was quoted as saying during his visit to the airport prior to the arrival of the first plane coming to Lebanon from affected countries.

LOS ANGELES

California Governor Gavin Newsom said Saturday that the state has launched an official website to deal with the shortage of medical supplies and help combat rampant fraud amid the spread of COVID-19.

The website would allow individuals and companies to donate, sell and offer to manufacture essential medical supplies including N95 masks and testing materials, which are badly needed by local hospitals, Newsom said at a daily briefing.

TEHRAN

Iran’s novel coronavirus cases rose by 2,483 on Sunday to a total of 58,226, state TV reported.

The death toll rose by 151 in the past 24 hours to reach 3,603, the report quoted Kianush Jahanpur, head of Public Relations and Information Center of Ministry of Health and Medical Education, as saying.

JERUSALEM

The number of the novel coronavirus cases in Israel has risen to 8,018, the Israeli Ministry of Health said Sunday.

The ministry reported three new death cases from the novel coronavirus, bringing the death toll to 46.

China-Europe trains play bigger role amid epidemic

corona pexels train Anna Shvets

The spread of the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has incurred global traffic restrictions, leaving tonnes of goods confined to their origins and unable to reach the destinations.

However, the China-Europe cargo trains have remained a reliable transportation channel across the continents, displaying its strategic value of ensuring the international supply chain amid the epidemic.

Initiated in 2011, the China-Europe rail service is considered a significant part of the Belt and Road Initiative to boost trade between China and countries along the routes. A new report by the China Container Industry Association showed that China-Europe trains made 1,132 trips from 63 Chinese cities in the first two months of 2020, up 6 percent year on year.

Train service from central and western China in particular, registered strong growth, with departures from the city of Chengdu, southwest China’s Sichuan Province, rose 88 percent year on year to 267, while trains leaving from Hunan Province surged by 175 percent in the first two months.

But the sudden hit of the novel coronavirus outbreak did cast a shadow on trains running on the routes.

In the eastern Chinese city of Yiwu, China’s small commodity hub, regular Europe-bound rail service after the Spring Festival, the biggest holiday season in China, resumed more than two weeks later than usual.

From the start of the year to March 24, the Yiwu railway station saw departures of 67 China-Europe freight trains carrying 5,474 TEUs (20-foot containers), up 40.8 percent year on year.

However, between Feb. 10 and March 20, only 10 freight trains left Yiwu for Europe. Together they carried 828 TEUs of goods, down 43.4 percent from a year ago. Meanwhile, no cargos were shipped back.

“The biggest change is that the entire company was left with not much to do after the Spring Festival. In previous years, the peak period of shipment was 10 days after the opening of the market after the Lunar New Year, but it took one month to resume normal operation this year,” said Feng Xubin, chairman of the operating company of the China-Europe cargo service in Yiwu.

Now as the coronavirus pandemic continued to infect more population globally, many countries have further tightened control of air and sea transportation.

“The soaring price of air freight has led to further decline in goods shipped by air,” said Guo Liming, general manager of a Henan-based supply chain management company.

The China-Europe freight service has therefore become an important channel to transport medical supplies out of China, a major manufacturer of such products.

A freight train carrying donated face masks and other anti-coronavirus supplies departed Yiwu on March 21 for Madrid, Spain.

The donation included 110,000 surgical masks and 766 protective suits. It was the first China-Europe freight train to carry anti-epidemic supplies to Europe, which will arrive in Madrid in about two weeks.

There will be no transportation charges for any institutions, groups or individuals that donate anti-epidemic supplies to Spain. The train from Yiwu to Madrid will increase frequency from one trip a week to two trips per week, said Feng.

The China-Europe train service even resumed in Wuhan, the former epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak in China, on March 28, soon after the city loosened traffic control following a two-month lockdown.

Carrying medical supplies and other goods with a total value of 22 million yuan (3.1 million U.S. dollars), the train will arrive in the German city of Duisburg in about 15 days and the goods will be transported to countries including France, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Poland.

“The goods and the train have been thoroughly disinfected and we’re closely monitoring the physical condition of the driver,” said Gao Ruorui with Wuhan Asia-Europe Logistics.

“We believe that the stable services we provided during the epidemic will deepen people’s understanding of the China-Europe rail service,” said Kang Yan, vice-general manager of Zhengzhou International Hub Development and Construction Co., Ltd., operator of the China-Europe trains in Zhengzhou. “Railway is the most reliable transportation channel during the epidemic.”

“We hope that more countries can fully recognize the role of the China-Europe freight trains and make greater use of them, especially when transportation is strictly restricted at harbors and airports,” said Guo.

Lipizzan horse-breeding to become part of World Heritage?

lipicai ló lipizzan horse

Together, Austria, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Hungary, Italy, Slovakia, Slovenia and Romania requested Lipizzan horse-breeding to be added to UNESCO’S Intangible Cultural Heritage list at the end of 2017.

UNESCO is to decide about adding it to the list at their World Heritage Committee’s annual congress, in December of 2020, reported Sokszínű Vidék. The Slovenian government handed in the official application to UNESCO’s Parisian office.

The traditional breeding of Lipizzan horses is part of the Croatian cultural heritage in Baranya (Hungary), Slavonia and Syrmia (Croatia). Lipica horses are still bred in all the countries taking part in the joint application for World Heritage status.

Archduke Charles II created the breeding ground in 1580, in Lipike – Lipica today –, a part of the then-Habsburg Empire. The noble horses became famous in the Habsburg Imperial courtyard.

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History of the Hungarian Koháry family and their influence on royal blood all over Europe

Koháry Ferenc József

If you are asking for the most venerable Hungarian aristocratic families, you will most likely get answers like Esterházy, Pálffy, Zichy or Nádasdy. However, there is a Hungarian family whose descendants enrich the history of currently reigning noble dynasties. One of these ancestors was even involved in the events of history in the 21st century as a Prime Minister, 24 writes.

The story of the Koháry family goes back a long time, some of their forefathers were heroic generals fighting during the Turkish occupation of Hungary, some of them were judges and some, poets. However, it is best to start with Ferenc József, Prince Koháry (1767-1826), whose titles are many and respectable: Hungarian royal chamberlain, Privy Councillor, member of the Order of the Golden Fleece, chief cupbearer, Sheriff of Hont county and in his highest position, the former Lord Chancellor of the Royal Chancellery of Hungary (1820-1826). The royal court appreciated his service during the Napoleonic Wars so much so that he received the rank of Prince Imperial. At the age of 25, in 1792, he married Countess Antonia von Waldstein zu Wartenberg (1771-1854), by whom she had two children. Their first-born son died as a young child, and the family history was passed on by their daughter, Countess Mária Antónia Koháry (1797-1862), quite successfully.

Mária Antónia Koháry
Princess Mária Antónia von Koháry
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Enormous wealth

Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor chose Prince Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (1785-1851) as her spouse, a prominent hero of the Napoleonic Wars. Not only did the prince lead a well-rounded, handsome and educated lady to the altar, but through her, he inherited a wealth of immense magnitude. In 1826 Ferenc József, Prince Koháry – and the last male descendant of the family – died.

His daughter could not inherit, so the fortune of Koháry, the estates and the titles returned to the king. The wealth was almost immeasurable: it constituted the third-largest estate of the Monarchy.

The Emperor did not hesitate to donate the former Koháry wealth to Prince Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, and at the same time raised the prince into the ranks of the Hungarian nobility. There was one stipulation: the name of the family had to include the name of Koháry – due to this, for a while, the almanacks referred to the prince with the name of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha-Koháry.

King of Portugal

The princely couple had four children, and the eldest son, Prince Ferdinand August Franz Anton (1816-1885) married Maria II of Portugal (da Gloria). Ferdinand, after the birth of the prospective ruler Peter V, in 1837, received the title of King of Portugal under the name Ferdinand II, but the true ruler practically remained his wife. After receiving the royal title, his brother August Viktor Ludwig (1818-1881) renounced the grand Koháry fortune, and Ferdinand and his descendants bore the Saxon-Coburg-Gotha-Koháry name until the 20th century.

After the death of Maria, Ferdinand II became the regent of his young son, Peter V between 1853 and 1855 to public satisfaction. In 1869 he was offered the Spanish throne, but Ferdinand did not accept it.

Ferdinand II King of Portugal
Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, later Ferdinand II King of Portugal
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Empress of Brazil

August Viktor Ludwig married well as in 1843 he married Princess Clémentine of Orléans (1817-1907), daughter of Louis-Philippe I. They were caring parents of five and got them all married to noble families. Their second-born son, Ludwig August Maria Eudes (1845-1907) married to Princess Leopoldina of Brazil, the daughter of Peter II. Brazilian Emperor and was named Dom Luís Augusto by the father-in-law and was made Admiral of the Imperial Brazilian Navy.

On the Bulgarian throne as a Prime Minister

The eldest daughter of Mária Antónia Koháry and Ferdinand, Victoria Franziska Antonia (1822-1857), married Louis d’Orléans, son of King Louis Philippe I. Although he did not sit upon the throne, his descendants of the still reigning Belgian royal family inherited Koháry genes through Mária Antónia.

Among the grandchildren of the dynasty’s founder couple, the most successful was Ferdinand Maximilian Karl Leopold (1861-1948), who, in 1887, became Prince Ferdinand I of Bulgaria.

Following the tradition of his country, he and his family converted to the Orthodox faith, and after Bulgaria officially proclaimed its independence on September 22, 1908, he took on the title of Tsar used by medieval Bulgarian rulers. Bulgaria is known to have joined the central powers in the First World War, and after the defeat, Ferdinand I was forced to resign. His successor was his son, born in 1894. He became Boris III. The Tsar passed away in 1943 under unclear circumstances. The exiled Ferdinand I died in 1948 in Coburg, Germany, the city in his family name.

Ferdinand Maximilian Karl Leopold Boris III Tzar of Bulgaria
Ferdinand Maximilian Karl Leopold, later Ferdinand I of Bulgaria
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Boris’ six-year-old son, Simeon II became Tsar only nominally, under the control of the governing council, until 1946, when the country under Soviet control dissolved the institution of the monarchy. The family emigrated, and Simeon lived in Egypt for a while where he graduated from the British Military College. He then moved to Spain, and when he came to age, he proclaimed himself Tsar of Bulgaria. His monarchist past did not prevent him from joining the new Bulgarian democracy after the change of regime. Resigning all his rights and titles, Simeon Borisov entered public life under the name of Szakszkoburgotskki, and he was the Prime Minister of the Republic of Bulgaria between 2001 and 2005.

Here you can read a little bit more about Hungarian history:

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Could the coronavirus outbreak undermine Hungarian democracy?

PM Orbán

Early last year, Daniel Ziblatt coauthored a The New York Times op-ed titled “Why Autocrats Love Emergencies”. His thesis now has great relevance in the time of the coronavirus. “Crises offer … would-be authoritarians an escape from constitutional shackles,” Ziblatt argued with fellow Harvard professor Steven Levitsky (with whom he wrote the influential book How Democracies Die), says The Philadelphia Inquirer.

Think of the autocrat wannabes among today’s democratic leaders who have shown great impatience with checks on their power, such as Donald Trump, Israel’s Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu, and Hungary’s Viktor Orban. With emergency measures in place, it is easy to imagine their temptation to expand personal power at the top.

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Hungary is a simple case – one of several countries in central and southeastern Europe that have yet to fully adopt democratic norms. Foremost among their leaders, Orban, has taken control of courts, the parliament, and the media. Now, he is pushing through a draft law that will give the executive branch dictatorial powers for an unlimited period. It would be known as the “law to protect against the coronavirus”. Other troubled democracies could follow suit.

And yet, a few months into the crisis, the issue is far more complicated. Rather than veering toward authoritarianism, many Western leaders — including Trump — have been surprisingly passive. Others like Netanyahu and Orban have used the virus as an excuse to continue their longtime assault on democratic norms.

The story is not over, especially if the health crisis gets worse. While COVID-19 exacerbates existing problems in democracies, it does not provide the formula for a takeover — provided the public and the system push back. It seems that democracy will prevail.

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Visegrád Four are among the best in Europe in the number of hospital beds

coronavirus-Hungary-hospital

A recent study, conducted by NimbleFins, is rating European countries on the basis of their hospitals’ capacity, using some of the latest data. The study highlights which European countries might have the best healthcare infrastructure to deal with the rapidly growing number of COVID-19 patients, Kafkadesk reports.

Hospital beds per capita

The study first compares the number of hospital beds in European countries. It might be surprising, but Visegrád Group countries (Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland, and Hungary) are all ranked high among the most well-prepared countries to face the rapidly growing number of people that need serious care.

Germany has the most hospital beds per capita in Europe, with 8 beds per 1,000 people. Austria follows right after, with 7.27 beds per 1,000 people, but the Visegrád countries put up a good fight against them. Hungary is placed 3rd, not much behind Austria, with 7.02 beds. The Czech Republic (6.63) and Poland (6.62) come right after, but Slovakia only placed 8th in this category. This means that 3 out of the Visegrád Four are in the top 5 countries with the highest number of hospital beds per 1,000 inhabitants. Surprisingly, the other end of the spectrum includes the UK (2.54), Denmark (2.5), and Sweden (2.22) as the worst three countries in this category.

Hospital beds per 1,000 people aged 70 or older

The second category of the study ranks countries who are better equipped to care for their elderly population in particular. What they found is that Central European countries are better equipped to cater to their elderly than many other leading European countries. This is very important because older people are more prone to the severe symptoms of COVID-19.

Visegrád Group countries dominate this category even more than the previous one. As the chart shows, all of them are in the top 5. Only Austria was able to get a place among them as the 4th country with the most hospital beds per 1,000 people aged 70 or older. Hungary (54.9) placed 3rd this time as well.

It is interesting to note that Hungary’s elderly population constitutes 12.78% of the country’s current total population. The Visegrád Group countries are taking the prize everywhere, as they are in the top 5 countries with the lowest number of elderly people in their respective countries. To be exact, Hungary and the Czech Republic are tied for 5th place.

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Number of COVID-19 cases worldwide has exceeded 600,000

coronavirus check airport

The world is now in a battle against COVID-19, a disease caused by a previously unknown coronavirus that has spread to over 200 countries and regions.

The following are the updates on the contagious illness.

The number of COVID-19 cases worldwide has exceeded 600,000, according to the latest data from Johns Hopkins University’s Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE).

As of 05:00 Eastern Time (0900 GMT), there have been 601,478 confirmed cases globally, with 27,862 deaths, while more than 130,000 people have recovered from the disease, an interactive map maintained by the CSSE showed.

The United States has the most COVID-19 cases, exceeding 104,000, while Italy has reported over 9,100 deaths, the highest among all nations and regions, according to the update.

WASHINGTON

U.S. medical devices company Abbott Laboratories said late Friday it has received emergency use authorization from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the fastest available point-of-care test for COVID-19.

The test could deliver positive results in as little as five minutes and negative results in 13 minutes, the company said in a statement, adding that it expects to deliver 50,000 tests per day, beginning next week.

LILONGWE

Malawi is expected to suspend all international flights from April 1 in efforts to prevent the spread of the COVID-19 though the country has not reported a single confirmed case.

The Department of Civil Aviation Aeronautical Information Services announced this in a statement Friday in line with the declaration of Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) by the World Health Organization (WHO).

SINGAPORE

It would be “a significant challenge” to hold the Shangri-La Dialogue (SLD) in early June in view of the COVID-19 outbreak, Singapore Defense Minister Ng Eng Hen said in a Facebook post Saturday.

The annual SLD was held in Singapore in late May or early June by the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS). The think tank has announced earlier that it would call off this year’s SLD scheduled for June 5-7.

Looking at the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, with epicenters now in Europe, Britain and the United States, and travel restrictions imposed by many countries, it would be a significant challenge to hold SLD as scheduled in early June, Ng said.

CANBERRA

With the number of cases nationwide continuing to grow by approximately 20 percent every day, governments across the country are introducing stricter measures to slow the spread.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Friday that from Sunday the Australian Defence Force (ADF) will begin assisting state and territory governments in undertaking quarantine compliance checks of those who are required to be in mandatory isolation after returning from overseas.

South Australia Police on Friday night announced a ban on gatherings of more than 10 people.

UN launches 2-bln-USD anti-COVID-19 plan, seeks halt of hostilities

coronavirus

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres launched a 2-billion-U.S.-dollar Humanitarian Response Plan on Wednesday aimed at fighting the coronavirus in the poorest and most vulnerable countries.

“The world faces an unprecedented threat,” Guterres said in a tele-news conference. “COVID-19 is menacing the whole of humanity – and so the whole of humanity must fight back.”

“The world is only as strong as our weakest health system,” said the UN chief.

With proper funding, the plan will save many lives and arm humanitarian agencies and non-governmental organizations with laboratory supplies for testing and with medical equipment to treat the sick while protecting health care workers.

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the World Health Organization (WHO) director-general; Henrietta Fore, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) executive director; and Mark Lowcock, undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs, joined Guterres in the virtual conference.

Earlier this week, Guterres appealed for a world-wide halt in hostilities amid the fight against COVID-19. Now he is pinpointing conflicts.

“The secretary-general calls today (Wednesday) on those fighting in Yemen to immediately cease hostilities, focus on reaching a negotiated political settlement and do everything possible to counter a potential outbreak of COVID-19,” said his spokesman, Stephane Dujarric, in a statement.

“More than five years of conflict have devastated the lives of tens of millions of Yemenis,” the statement said.

The UN chief also recalled the need to concentrate on fighting the coronavirus when he sent his condolences to Chad following a Boko Haram attack on an army post in Boma in Lac Province which resulted in “a significant number of deaths.”

He appealed for “an immediate and global ceasefire in all corners of the world – including in the Lake Chad Basin and the Sahel – at this very moment when humanity is confronted with the COVID-19 pandemic,” Dujarric told reporters in his daily briefing.

Likewise, Mankeur Ndiaye, the head of the UN peacekeeping mission in the Central African Republic, urged all signatories to the peace agreement to abide by their commitment to immediately cease violence and therefore, contribute to efforts to protect the country from COVID-19 and its harmful consequences.

In the struggle to contain the COVID-19 pandemic, many of the impacts are hitting women hardest, said UN Women’s Deputy Executive Director Anita Bhatia.

“While the economic and social impacts on all are severe, they are more so for women,” she said. “Many of the industries in the formal economy directly affected by quarantines and lockdowns — travel, tourism, restaurants, food production — have very high female labor force participation.”

Women also constitute a large percentage of the informal economy in informal markets and agriculture around the world, Bhatia said. “In both developed and developing economies, many informal sector jobs – domestic workers, caregivers – are mostly done by women who typically lack health insurance and have no social safety net to fall back on.”

She added that women typically shoulder a greater burden of care, on average doing three times as much unpaid care work as men at home before COVID-19.

Secretary-General Mukhisa Kituyi of the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) called on all governments to keep maritime trade moving by allowing commercial ships continued access to ports worldwide as the world addresses the COVID-19 pandemic, Dujarric said.

“Amidst the current COVID-19 outbreak, seafarers have come under increased checks and scrutiny in various ports,” the spokesman said. Restrictions on trade and cross-border transport may interrupt essential aid and technical support, as well as disrupting businesses and having negative social and economic impacts in affected countries.

UNCTAD statistics show that around 80 percent of global trade is facilitated by commercial shipping, which carries the world’s food, energy and raw materials, as well as manufactured goods and components, Dujarric said.

WHO said the COVID-19 pandemic is testing the resilience of robust health systems around the world, stressing the critical importance of sustaining efforts to prevent, detect and treat malaria, which exacts a heavy toll on vulnerable people in sub-Saharan Africa.

“As COVID-19 continues its rapid spread, WHO would like to send a clear message to malaria-affected countries in Africa,” said Pedro Alonso, director of the WHO Global Malaria Programme. “Do not scale back your planned malaria prevention, diagnostic and treatment activities. If someone living in a place with malaria develops a fever, he or she should seek diagnosis and care as soon as possible.”

Any interventions must consider the importance of both lowering malaria-related mortality and ensuring the safety of communities and health workers, he said. WHO will guide countries to safely maintain essential health services during the COVID-19 crisis.

The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet, has called on governments to take urgent action to protect the health and safety of people in detention and other closed facilities, as part of overall efforts to contain the COVID-19 pandemic, the spokesman said.

She warned that “COVID-19 has begun to strike prisons, jails and immigration detention centers, as well as residential care homes and psychiatric hospitals, and risks rampaging through such institutions’ extremely vulnerable populations.”

Bachelet urged governments to not forget those behind bars and to reduce the number of people in detention, examining ways to release those particularly vulnerable to COVID-19.

The UN Human Rights Office and WHO are due this week to issue an interim guidance paper – COVID 19: Focus on persons deprived of their liberty – which will contain key messages and actions, Dujarric said.

Global death toll from COVID-19 tops 10,000: WHO

coronavirus mask

The pandemic of COVID-19 has killed 11,184 people worldwide as of midnight Friday, as the cumulative number of cases rose to 266,073, according to the situation dashboard released by the World Health Organization (WHO).

The dashboard also showed the virus has spread to 182 countries and regions as of 23:59 CET Friday.

Outside China, the number of confirmed cases has risen to 184,657.

Italy, Spain, Iran, Germany, the United States and France are the most affected countries, all with more than 10,000 cases. And these countries have registered more than 130,000 infections in total.

The number of COVID-19 cases worldwide topped 300,000 as of 5 p.m. local time on Saturday (2100 GMT), according to the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at Johns Hopkins University.

The fresh figure reached 303,001 cases with 12,944 deaths, the CSSE said.

Daily COVID-19 updates on March 21

coronavirus check-up

As Italy saw the biggest day-to-day spike in fatalities on Friday and global COVID-19 cases continued to rise, the whole world has been toughening the implementation of anti-virus measures.

The European region reported 17,506 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours as of midnight Thursday, bringing the total number of confirmed cases there to 104,591, according to the daily situation report released by the World Health Organization (WHO) on late Friday.

COVID-19 seems to reach a new and tragic milestone every day, as more than 210,000 cases, including over 9,000 deaths, have been reported globally, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Friday at a press conference.

“Every loss of life is a tragedy,” Tedros said, calling it “motivation” to double down and do everything to stop transmission of the virus and save lives.

In Italy, 627 patients died of COVID-19 in a 24-hour span on Friday, the highest single-day deaths, bringing the country’s COVID-19 death toll to 4,032, according to official data. In the previous 24-hour span, the country saw 427 deaths.

The hard-hit country announced on Friday that it would call up the military to help enforce the national coronavirus lockdown in the hardest-hit parts of the country.

Spain also recorded a steep rise in both death toll and infections on Friday. According to its health ministry, 1,002 people had succumbed to COVID-19 by midday Friday, an increase of 235 deaths from a day ago.

The Spanish government introduced strict controls on roads leading out of the country’s main cities in order to keep people at home during the lockdown.

In London, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said that cafes, bars, pubs and restaurants must close from Friday night across Britain in a bid to contain the spread of the virus.

Iran, the hardest-hit country in the Middle East, said Friday that 1,433 people have died from COVID-19, which has infected a total of 19,644 people, 6,745 of whom have recovered.

The latest number of COVID-19 cases in the United States has topped 19,285 with 249 deaths, according to the Center for Systems Science and Engineering at Johns Hopkins University.

The Brazilian Senate on Friday approved a request made by Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro to declare a state of emergency. The country reported the most infected people in Latin America with its caseload rising to 793 with 11 fatalities.

Besides, the WHO report showed six additional countries and regions reported their first confirmed cases, while 96 countries and regions have seen local transmission of COVID-19.

Daily COVID-19 updates on March 20

As the number of COVID-19 infections continues to rise worldwide, more regions and countries announced state of emergencies and called for supplies of personal protective equipment and diagnostic kits.

World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Thursday in Geneva that a list of agreed suppliers in China is available now, but “the shortages will continue to be a challenge.”

As of Thursday evening, over 100,000 people across Europe had tested positive for the novel coronavirus. More than 40 European countries were hit by the disease.

In Italy, a total of 427 COVID-19 patients had died in 24 hours, taking the country’s death toll to 3,405, according to the country’s Civil Protection Department.

The cumulative number of coronavirus cases reached 41,035, making Italy the hardest-hit country outside China.

Spain recorded the second most cases in Europe after Italy, with its number of COVID-19 infections rose to 17,147 on Thursday, with 767 deaths from the virus.

In the Middle East, Iran is the worst hit with 149 new deaths from COVID-19 reported on Thursday. The death toll rose to 1,284 while its COVID-19 caseload climbed to 18,407.

In Latin America, Brazil reported the most infected people with its caseload rising from 428 to 621 with six fatalities, followed by Ecuador rising to 260 and Peru’s climbed to 234 nationwide.

Several Asia-Pacific countries, including Australia, New Zealand, Cambodia and Myanmar, have closed their borders on Thursday to contain the spread of COVID-19.

South Korea reported 152 more cases of the COVID-19 compared to 24 hours ago as of midnight Thursday local time, raising the total number of infections to 8,565.

Japanese authorities said the number of COVID-19 infections nationwide had risen to 936 cases as of 6:30 p.m. local time (0930 GMT) Thursday.

The U.S. State Department on Thursday raised travel advisory to Level 4, which instructs its citizens to avoid all international travel amid the global outbreak of the coronavirus.

According to the latest update on Thursday by Johns Hopkins University, the United States registered 13,680 confirmed cases of the COVID-19 with 200 deaths.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Thursday that after consultation with its neighbor, the U.S.-Canada border is expected to close, effective overnight on Friday.

Foreign minister urges new EU-Turkey migration deal

migration turkey eu

Until the European Union and Turkey reach a new deal to stem migrant flows, Turkey cannot be expected to halt the flow of migrants towards the bloc’s external borders, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said on Thursday.

Migration pressure on the Greek-Turkish border is unlikely to ease until Brussels begins taking Turkey’s requests, needs and concerns seriously, Szijjártó told a press conference after a phone call with his Turkish counterpart, Mevlut Cavusoglu.

Szijjártó said migration pressure towards Turkey was on the rise, adding that some 1.5 million Syrian internally displaced refugees had set off for the country. He said that according to Cavusoglu, Turkey was also facing increased migration pressure from the directions of Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Szijjártó noted that Turkey stopped 455,000 migrants last year.

He said a new deal between Turkey and the EU was especially important given that uncontrolled mass migration presented serious health risks at a time when every government measure is aimed at minimising close contact between people.

Szijjártó also said the EU and Turkey were at odds over a 6 billion euro aid package promised to Turkey to help it cope with the refugee situation, with the two sides disagreeing on how much of that aid the bloc has paid out. “What’s certain is that it’s not 6 billion,” Szijjártó said, adding that it was time for Brussels to reach an agreement with Turkey that would “settle the matter once and for all”.

Concerning energy affairs, Szijjártó said there was a realistic chance that Hungary could start importing a significant amount of natural gas via Turkey, Bulgaria and Serbia from next year.

Regarding the coronavirus outbreak, Szijjártó said a Hungarian company had ordered eight tonnes of textiles from Turkey for the production of face masks. He said Cavusoglu had promised that Turkey would approve the order and ship it to Hungary before the end of the week.

Currently, 112 Hungarians are quarantined in 12 countries around the world, he said, 86 of whom are in Austria. Four of those in quarantine have tested positive for the virus, he added.

The minister added there are 4,500 Hungarian citizens who had registered for consular protection abroad.

Budapest Festival Orchestra launches Quarantine Soirees

As concert halls continue to close due to Coronavirus, live streaming of performances will provide welcome access for music lovers worldwide. In Hungary, the innovative composer and conductor, Maestro Ivan Fischer, has created a brilliant new concert series in response to this worldwide musical shutdown. The Maestro and his Budapest Festival Orchestra launched “Quarantine Soirees” on 16 March 2020 and the chamber music concerts will continue nightly online at 7:45 pm (Central European time). The chamber concerts are broadcast live and free to view online while COVID-19 forces music lovers to stay at home, reports Forbes.

It is no surprise that these special concerts were the idea of Maestro Fischer as he is well-known for bringing his music to audiences that are often excluded.  Every season, he and the orchestra organise two Community Weeks during which the orchestra’s chamber ensembles play in nursing homes, child-care institutions, schools, prisons, churches, and synagogues. And for the past five years, he and his orchestra have organised the extremely popular annual Dancing on the Square, where hundreds of children from underprivileged areas of Hungary dance together at a free, open-air event.

Last June, they danced to Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony, which Fischer says “was considered the music of freedom, especially because of the continuous, uplifting pulsation of the last movement.” The Maestro says that while we are at home during this difficult time, we “need music, especially chamber music because this is not the time for orchestra music concerts”. Every evening, members of the Budapest Festival Orchestra will give a concert from their rehearsal studio.

Read alsoThe Budapest Festival Orchestra is taking Heroes’ Square once again

The first night’s concert, presented live from the BFO’s rehearsal room, featured music by Saint-Saens and Villa-Lobos, plus Beethoven’s String Quartet No. 4 in C minor, Op.19, and traditional Hungarian folk music. Last night, the members of the orchestra performed Mozart’s Concert Rondeau in E-Flat Major and a clarinet quintet along with Schumann’s piano quintet in E-Flat Major.

These nightly concerts will continue while permitted. Other forthcoming evening concerts in the series will include pieces by Beethoven, Haydn, and Schubert, plus Hungarian contemporary composer Gyorgy Orban’s wonderful and uplifting “Ball Music”. In addition to founding the Budapest Festival Orchestra in 1983, Ivan Fischer has conducted with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic, the BBC Symphony, and the London Symphony Orchestra, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, and Washington’s National Symphony Orchestra, among others.

The Budapest Festival Orchestra is rated as one of the world’s top ten orchestras; in fact, The New York Times has said that they “might be the best orchestra in the world”. They perform regularly in the world’s top concert halls from Carnegie Hall and the Lincoln Center in New York to the Musikverein in Vienna and the Royal Albert Hall and Barbican Centre in London.

The concerts are free, but the BFO also hope that the public will be able to support musicians whose livelihoods are now at risk, and their website includes a link for voluntary donations.

Read alsoItalian virtuosity and fire with the Budapest Festival Orchestra

Quarantine theatre in Hungary streams post nuclear attack play

Hungarian theatre coronavirus actor

A group of actors have set up Hungary’s “first quarantine theatre”, streaming a play via Facebook about a man and a woman who find themselves in an underground nuclear fallout shelter and have to adapt to their new reality, and each other, reports WHBL.com

He said the idea came after theatres were closed. They work from a boat called TRIP, a once-popular cultural venue and theatre, anchored on the Danube river in Budapest, and which is now without an audience.

Dennis Kelly’s play “After the End” has an unsettling topicality and will hopefully help viewers to reflect on the new situation, the stage director, Laszlo Magacs said. The two-hander was streamed on Monday just hours before the Hungarian government closed borders to all foreigners, after shutting down schools nationwide in a bid to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

The two actors first acted the play about Louise, a popular office worker, who finds herself in the shelter with a colleague from another department, in 2008. Now, 12 years later, the play gets a new meaning in the current situation.

Széchenyi Baths
Read alsoCoronavirus: Hungary’s famous baths close one after the other

“What is art about? Art gives … examples to help lead our lives. This play, “After the End“, is about the interaction between two people in a closed space,” Magacs said.”It is about tolerance, paying attention to each other, about the frustrations stemming from being locked in a small space, and the psychological game between the two people when there is no way to let off steam.”

“This successful young woman finds herself …all of a sudden in a situation where she loses control,” said Annamaria Lang who plays Louise.

“This is about how we can adapt, how flexible we are, and how we can preserve our common sense.”

The theatre streamed the first act on Monday and is planning to stream the second act on Tuesday night after the government closed all cinemas, theatres and entertainment facilities. They are also planning to stage “The Plague“, a novel by Albert Camus, published in 1947, that tells the story of a plague sweeping a city in Algeria.

Magacs said they would always keep to the rules, and keep serving their audience as long as it is possible.

cinema city magyarország
Read alsoCoronavirus – Measures regarding events, theatres, cinemas, trains

Daily COVID-19 updates on March 19

corona mask pexels

Countries around the world have been beefing up measures to contain the COVID-19 spread, as more than 200,000 cases have been reported globally, with the tally of deaths exceeding 8,000.

Eighty percent of all the cases worldwide were reported in two regions, the Western Pacific region and the European region, World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Wednesday.

The number of cases outside China has risen to 112,878 as of Wednesday morning, according to the situation dashboard by WHO.

In Italy, the hardest-hit European country, the count of cases has reached 35,713 with 2,978 deaths, according to the latest data released by the Civil Protection Department.
Officials in the hard-hit region of Lombardy appealed to recently retired health workers to return to work to relieve over-worked colleagues.

In Spain, the number of cases has risen to 13,716 with 558 deaths as of Wednesday, according to the Spanish Ministry of Health, Consumer Affairs and Social Services. Spanish King Felipe VI sent an Institutional Message to his people on Wednesday, calling for unity in fighting the epidemic.

In France, which has entered a two-week lockdown since Tuesday, 9,134 cases and 264 deaths have been reported as of Wednesday, according to authorities.

“That same spirit of solidarity must be at the center of our efforts to defeat COVID-19,” said Tedros.

Tedros reiterated countries must isolate, test, treat every case and trace every contact to suppress and control the epidemic, warning that if those measures were not taken, the transmission could continue at a low level before resurging once physical distancing measures are lifted.

In Iran, the worst-hit country in the Middle East, the death toll from COVID-19 on Wednesday soared to 1,135, with the total number of cases surging to 17,361, said Iranian Ministry of Health and Medical Education.

The ministry urged Iranians to avoid unnecessary travels during the upcoming holiday of Nowruz, the Persian new year, which will start on Friday.

South Korea reported 93 more cases of COVID-19 compared to 24 hours ago as of midnight Wednesday local time, raising its total to 8,413. The country has raised its four-tier virus alert to the highest “red” level.

The number of COVID-19 cases in the United States reached 9,077 by 22:00 local time (0200 GMT) Wednesday, according to the Center for Systems Science and Engineering at Johns Hopkins University. A total of 145 deaths have been reported across the country.

U.S. President Donald Trump tweeted Wednesday that the country will temporarily close its border with Canada to “non-essential traffic,” days after the announcement of a travel ban that Washington imposed on some European nations.

DIYing a Sanitizer in times of shortage

Hospital Disease Infection Hand Sanitizers Cleaning

Coronavirus has taken a toll on a lot of things in our lives. Some of them we can’t control, but some little things can be easily solved. Maybe not quickly but since a lot of us are social distancing right now, this might help you pass some time and save you from the germs.

Now, that the aisles in pharmacies and the departmental stores are wiped clean of sanitisers, with not a single one in sight and restocks seeming like a distance away, the need to have a DIY method with easily accessible ingredients seems like the need of the hour. Hence, without further ado here are two ways to make your own sanitiser.

The Quick (Gel) Recipe

  • Isopropyl alcohol
  • Aloe Vera gel 
  • Tea tree oil 

Mix 3 parts isopropyl alcohol to 1 part Aloe Vera gel. Add a few drops of tea tree oil to give it a pleasant scent and to align your chakras.

Daily News Hungary
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The Better (Spray) Recipe

  • Isopropyl alcohol
  • Glycerol or glycerin
  • Hydrogen peroxide
  • Distilled water
  • Spray bottle

The aloe mixture gets the job done, but aloe also leaves your skin annoyingly sticky. So, here’s a recipe that’s less sticky and more potent, based on the mix recommended by the WHO.

Mix 1 ⅔ cups alcohol with 2 teaspoons of glycerol. You can buy jugs of glycerol online, and it’s an essential ingredient because it keeps the alcohol from drying out your hands. If you can’t find glycerol, proceed with the rest of the recipe anyway and just remember to moisturise your hands after applying the sanitiser.

Mix in 1 tablespoon of hydrogen peroxide, then another ¼ cup of distilled or boiled (then cooled) water. (If you’re working with a lower-concentration solution of rubbing alcohol, use far less water; remember, at least ⅔ of your final mixture has to be alcohol.)

Load the solution into spray bottles—this isn’t a gel, it’s a spray. You can wet a paper towel with it as well and use that as a wipe. If you must, you can add in a splash of essential oil to your concoction to make it smell nice. Just don’t use lavender. Everyone else uses lavender, and your sanitiser is superior.

A FEW THINGS TO KEEP IN MIND:

 Make sure that the tools you use for mixing are properly sanitised; otherwise, you could contaminate the whole thing. Also, the World Health Organization recommends letting your concoction sit for a minimum of 72 hours. That way the sanitiser has time to kill any bacteria that might have been introduced during the mixing process.

 According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, your sanitizer mix must be at least 60 percent alcohol to be effective. But it’s better to get way above that. A bottle of 99 percent isopropyl alcohol is the best thing to use. Your regular vodka and whiskey are too wimpy and won’t cut it.

 (Note: To reiterate, nothing beats washing your hands. Hand sanitiser —even the real, professionally made stuff — should always be a last resort.)

At last, stay safe out there. These are confusing times, and the best thing you can do is stay in as much as you can.

coronavirus quarantine vlog budapest
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