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Global Coronavirus Cases Near 5 Million: Live Coverage

Credit…Victor Moriyama for The New York Times

The number of daily new cases is higher than ever, but the rate of new deaths is falling.

As the total number of confirmed coronavirus cases inches steadily closer toward five million, the average number of daily new cases worldwide over the past week — more than 91,000 — is higher than it has ever been, according to data compiled by The New York Times.

The figures are driven by the growing number of cases in the United States, which has the largest number in the world, and ballooning cases in Russia and Brazil. But even as the global figure grows higher, the average weekly number of fatalities has been decreasing.

And as the fallout from the pandemic deepens — with millions of new jobless claims announced in the United States on Thursday and country after country announcing recessions — new studies are revealing how little the world understood the pandemic when it first began.

In Italy, new research shows that the outbreak there probably took hold weeks before the first confirmed cases, meaning that by the time the country imposed a nationwide lockdown in March, the virus might have already been widespread.

New estimates from disease modelers at Columbia University also show that if the United States had begun imposing social distancing measures one week earlier in March, about 36,000 fewer people would have died in the pandemic.

And if the country had begun locking down cities and limiting social contact on March 1, two weeks earlier than when most people started staying home, about 83 percent of the nation’s deaths would have been avoided, the researchers estimated.

As hindsight offers a clearer picture of the start of the outbreak, nations are taking steps to loosen restrictions and reinvigorate their economies. This week, all 50 U.S. states began reopening to some degree, much of the European Union began introducing measures to allow travel within the bloc to save the summer tourism season, and India restarted domestic flights.

But the restart is a balancing act, as new outbreaks in China attest. The authorities there have had to confront scattered outbreaks in the northeast and are resorting to the strict lockdown measures used in the city of Wuhan, where the pandemic began last year.

Cyclone Amphan: Death toll rises to at least 80 in India and Bangladesh.

Credit…Reuters

When Cyclone Amphan tore through eastern India and Bangladesh on Wednesday, it upended communities where people had been locked down amid rises in coronavirus infections, forcing a dilemma of whether to shelter in place or evacuate.

More than three million people were whisked from their homes, but many were apprehensive about rushing into packed emergency shelters, where they feared catching the virus. And hundreds of shelters were unavailable because they had been converted into quarantine centers. By Thursday, the death toll had risen to at least 80.

Yet even as the cyclone, Amphan, threatened to be one of the most dangerous storms in decades and hit amid a pandemic, the combination of a large evacuation effort and the storm weakening as it swirled onto land appears to have spared many lives.

In Bangladesh, many have been returning to their villages to assess the devastation caused by the winds.

Mohammed Salah Uddin, 42, said he and 10 others had returned to his village after crisscrossing uprooted trees and electricity wires on the streets. He said that the cyclone shelter he was in was overcrowded and that people did not maintain any social distance. Pictures from other shelters in Bangladesh showed huge crowds of people packed in and few people wearing masks.

“It looked scary,” Mr. Uddin said. “It is better to live in destroyed home than catch the diseases.”

As temperatures rise, Britons flock to beaches and parks, and officials worry about the fallout.

Credit…Will Oliver/EPA, via Shutterstock

The British government’s easing of coronavirus lockdown restrictions has coincided with the hottest week of the year, and crowds at beaches and parks across the country have led to concerns that they pose a threat to public health.

As temperatures soared above 80 degrees Fahrenheit, thousands who had been largely cooped up at home for nearly two months headed into outdoor spaces, often flouting social distancing rules — in a country that had over 250,000 confirmed coronavirus cases as of Thursday and more than 36,000 deaths, in one of the worst outbreaks in Europe.

Downing Street changed its coronavirus campaign slogan last week from “stay at home” to “stay alert.” It also modified lockdown rules in England to allow unlimited outdoor exercise and gave people in Britain the green light to go to the beach.

Steps taken by officials elsewhere in Europe reflected concerns that an abundance of day-trippers could lead to increased transmissions of the virus. In France, the authorities in Brittany shut down beaches in five municipalities, citing “unacceptable behavior” and a failure to abide by social distancing rules, and Dutch towns near the border with Germany urged their neighbors not to come.

Likewise in seaside towns across England, local communities have asked people to stay away because they cannot cope with high volumes of visitors. But the warnings went unheeded in many areas.

Parks across London were also brimming with people who gathered for picnics, sunbathing and exercise. Hyde Park, in central London, looked like a regular warm day midweek, with many people ignoring social distancing measures. The only visible difference was that several people were wearing masks.

China imposes a Wuhan-style quarantine in its northeast, as a political summit nears.

Credit…Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

As the Chinese authorities confront scattered coronavirus outbreaks in the country’s northeast, they are turning to many of the strict lockdown measures that they used this winter in the central city of Wuhan.

The measures take effect as China prepares for the biggest event on its political calendar, the annual session of the National People’s Congress — a tightly choreographed legislative pageant aimed at conveying the strength of the ruling Communist Party.

The latest outbreak is concentrated in Jilin, a northeastern province of 27 million people near China’s borders with Russia and North Korea. Jilin has reported a relatively small outbreak of about 130 cases and two deaths, and experts there have warned of a potential “big explosion.”

The response reflects fears among China’s leaders over the potential for a fresh wave of infections as factories, schools and restaurants reopen across much of the country.

President Xi Jinping has seized on the pandemic as a chance to redeem the party after early mistakes let infections slip out of control and to rally national pride in the face of international ire over those missteps. That theme is likely to underpin the National People’s Congress, an annual legislative meeting that opens on Friday after a monthslong delay.

Mr. Xi has largely succeeded in rewriting the narrative in China, in part because the disarray in other countries, especially the United States, has given him a reprieve from domestic political pressure.

But keeping up that narrative may be challenging. He must continue to push his agenda while China faces a diplomatic and economic climate as daunting as any since the Tiananmen Square crackdown in 1989.

“If you position yourself as a great helmsman uniquely capable of leading your country, that has a lot of domestic political risk if you fail to handle the job appropriately,” said Carl Minzner, a professor of Chinese law and politics at Fordham University.

In Istanbul under lockdown, baklava makers are essential workers.

Credit…Tara Todras-Whitehill for The New York Times

Carlotta Gall is The Times’s Istanbul bureau chief. She previously covered the aftershocks of the Arab Spring from Tunisia, reported from the Balkans during the war in Kosovo and Serbia, and covered Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Every weekend, for over a month now, Istanbul has been under a strict curfew because of the coronavirus. No one is allowed out, not for exercise or groceries, and the police impose fines. Sometimes, like last weekend and next, the street-emptying lockdown stretches for four days to take in public holidays.

Of course, Istanbul’s curfew could never be a total shutdown. Its residents have lived through multiple military coups, sieges, earthquakes, pestilence and other calamities, and know well that life must go on.

So bakers are exempt from the curfew, because fresh bread is so important for the Turkish table. They shout their wares on the empty street and sell bread from the back of their vans.

When Ramadan, the Muslim month of fasting, began last month, pastry shops also got an exemption. Turks, it seems, cannot do without their baklava, that heavenly, multilayered, flaky pastry, bound up with nuts and syrup, that is the nation’s favorite sweet.

Journalists were allowed out, too, so I went to visit Karakoy Gulluoglu, the most famous house of baklava, down near a ferry dock.

Murat Gullu, the general manager, whose great-grandfather founded the company in the 19th century, said he had asked the government to allow baklava makers to stay open.

“We eat baklava on all occasions,” he said, “especially in Ramadan, at celebrations and at funerals.”

A new study suggests that Italy’s outbreak may have begun earlier than first thought.

Credit…Alessandro Grassani for The New York Times

Italy became the first European country to face the coronavirus’s deadly toll when infections exploded near Milan in late February. And a new study indicates that by the time authorities were aware of the outbreak there, the virus was much more widespread than initially believed.

The study, from the Milan Polyclinic Hospital, found that one in 20 adult blood donors in the area already had the virus’s antibodies at the time, just days after Italy’s first coronavirus diagnosis on Feb. 20.

The finding suggests that the virus was spreading in Italy for at least two weeks before its detection. Similar evidence has emerged in France, where a sample taken from a patient on Dec. 27 recently tested positive for the coronavirus, and in California, where health officials discovered a coronavirus-linked death on Feb. 6.

In Italy, researchers conducted antibody tests on about 800 blood samples gathered in Milan from Feb. 24 to April 8. They found that 4.6 percent of asymptomatic people who donated their blood in the first week of that period — which coincided with the start of the outbreak — had coronavirus antibodies.

“Our impression,” said Luca Valenti, one of the researchers, “is that the infection started circulating by the end of 2019 and the beginning of 2020.”

Although the study does not shed new light on the nature of the virus, it does give a clearer picture of its arrival in Europe. And it could help explain the severity of the death toll in Italy, which is now more than 32,000.

New Zealand’s leader endorses a four-day workweek.

Credit…Pool photo by Mark Mitchell

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern of New Zealand, who has been widely praised for her coronavirus response, may have scored even more points this week when she suggested that employees could have a four-day week in order to move around the country more and bolster the tourism industry.

In a Facebook live post on Monday, Ms. Ardern said that the decision was ultimately between employers and employees, but that it would “certainly help tourism all around the country.”

She added that with many people working from home during the pandemic, the added productivity that can result had “encouraged people to think about, if they’re an employer and in a position to do so, to think about whether or not that is something that would work for their workplace.”

“The time has come,” Mike Farman, a Twitter user, wrote in a tweet on Thursday, although others questioned whether switching to a four-day workweek would mean reduced wages and productivity.

Lockdowns around the world have prompted companies, employees and lawmakers to think about work in a different way. Some have begun making temporary decisions more permanent, including Twitter, which has said that it will let employees work from home indefinitely if they want to.

Lockdowns take a toll on children, but there are ways to help them cope.

Credit…Samuel Aranda for The New York Times

When Spain imposed one of the most stringent lockdowns in Europe in mid-March, adults could still run essential errands and dogs were allowed regular walks. But children remained in confinement for six weeks, many in small apartments, and that has taken a psychological toll.

In a new study from Miguel Hernández University that examined the psychological effects of the confinement on children in Spain and Italy, about 90 percent of 431 Spanish parents surveyed described emotional and behavioral changes in their children, including difficulty concentrating, irritability and anxiety.

“I was really hopeful going outside would help things, but the first time we left our house, she was very nervous about being stopped by police,” one woman in Valencia said of her 7-year-old daughter. “Since then, she hasn’t been very interested in going outside.”

Experts worry about the pandemic’s potential long-term effects on children not just in Spain, but across the world, said Richard Meiser-Stedman, a trauma expert and professor of clinical psychology at the University of East Anglia in England.

But as the pandemic continues, he said, there are also simple and effective ways to help children cope.

Domestic flights will resume in India next week.

Credit…Rajat Gupta/EPA, via Shutterstock

India will resume domestic flights on Monday, two months after all passenger flights in the country were grounded to prevent the transmission of the coronavirus.

Under the new rules, each passenger must wear a surgical mask and a face shield.

Hardeep Singh Puri, the minister for civil aviation, announced the decision in a tweet on Wednesday. It surprised the domestic airline industry, which had been bracing for delays until at least May 31.

William Boulter, the chief commercial officer at the airline IndiGo, said that flights would initially resume at about a third of normal summer capacity.

“We’ve been talking with the authorities and the airports on how to maintain social distancing, and we look forward to providing an environment which will be safe for all our customers,” he said.

Before the lockdowns started, India had one of the world’s fastest-growing aviation markets. In 2018, over 204 million passengers flew in and out of the country’s airports, mostly on domestic flights.

Numerous airlines around the world have begun restarting routes, including the low-cost British operator EasyJet, which said it would resume flights in June. And as they do so, many are adding additional safety measures, including mandatory protective gear for all employees and empty seats between passengers.

A Tokyo official was caught violating a lockdown — by playing mahjong.

Credit…Kyodo News, via Getty Images

A top Japanese official who ignored the country’s voluntary lockdown to play mahjong with a group of reporters has resigned.

The official, Hiromu Kurokawa, headed Tokyo’s public prosecutor’s office and is believed to be a close ally of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. He was already in the nation’s bad graces after Mr. Abe tried to force a change in the retirement age for the prosecutor’s office, a move that was widely seen as an attempt to keep Mr. Kurokawa in power.

Mr. Kurokawa’s lockdown transgression was first reported by the Japanese magazine Shukan Bunshun.

While Japan has no legal mechanism for enforcing its lockdown, Mr. Kurokawa’s decision to ignore an national state of emergency provoked public anger. And it didn’t help that he and the reporters were playing mahjong for money — in a country where gambling is illegal.

Others in the region who have violated pandemic-related restrictions on movement:

China’s state media calls protest violence in Hong Kong a ‘tumor.’

Credit…Laurel Chor for The New York Times

State-run Chinese newspapers have ramped up their rhetoric against Hong Kong’s antigovernment protesters, calling violent tactics and the notion of independence “tumors” that must be eradicated ahead of an annual gathering of China’s top officials.

People’s Daily, the flagship newspaper of the Chinese Communist Party, said in a commentary on Thursday that the “malignant tumor” of violence must be rooted out and that the Hong Kong police must “not give the rioters any breathing room.”

The official state news agency, Xinhua, on Thursday called Hong Kong independence a “tumor on the body of the country” that must be “eradicated completely with determination.”

Critics and analysts have accused Beijing of taking advantage of the world’s diverted attention during the pandemic to crack down on the pro-democracy movement in the city, a semiautonomous Chinese territory, in the lead-up to legislative elections in September.

The anti-protester language mirrors that used by Chinese officials in internal documents to justify the mass detention of Muslims in Xinjiang, which included words like “virus,” “infected” and “eradicate.” A top police official in Hong Kong has also compared protest violence to “cancer cells” spreading across the city’s universities.

When the annual parliamentary meetings begin on Friday, Beijing is expected to discuss proposed national security legislation for Hong Kong. If enacted, the law would accelerate the erosion of the territory’s civil liberties.

Noma of Copenhagen, in a step toward reopening, becomes a burger joint.

Credit…Signe Birck for The New York Times

Denmark’s top chef, René Redzepi, made new Nordic cooking an international sensation, and for nearly two decades has caused surprise, outrage and delight with his rules-breaking kitchen at Noma in Copenhagen.

But his latest menu may be the most shocking of them all: a pared-down selection of just two burgers.

The coronavirus lockdown caused the closure of Noma two months ago, and on Thursday it is reinventing itself as a burger joint in the first step in a gradual return to business.

Chefs at Noma used to be sent foraging on beaches and roadsides, and ingredients from the bottom of the food hierarchy were turned into high-end plates like plankton mousse, live ants and cod head.

Noma has been selected as the “best restaurant in the world” four times and diners fly in from all corners of the world to experience its famed 20-course menus. In 2018, the Times restaurant critic Pete Wells described the servings as “put on the plate by a team of synchronized hummingbirds.”

The new menu is the shortest in the restaurant’s history, with just the two $ 18 burger options served in the restaurant’s garden. They come with a promise of lot’s of umami and “a little bit of magic from our fermentation cellar” the restaurant said in a statement.

And whereas at the old Noma, tables were sold out months in advance, now the hungry and the curious can “come as you are — there are no reservations.” The usual Noma is due to return to business later this year.

Models show that earlier lockdowns could have prevented thousands of U.S. deaths.

Total reported deaths in the

United States on May 3

Estimated deaths on May 3 if social distancing

started one week earlier than it did

New York City

17,581

65,307

29,410

New York City

2,838

Los Angeles

Los Angeles

1,223

451

Total reported deaths in the

United States on May 3

Estimated deaths on May 3 if social distancing

started one week earlier than it did

65,307

29,410

New York City

New York City

17,581

2,838

Los Angeles

Los Angeles

1,223

451

Total reported deaths in the

United States on May 3

65,307

New York City

17,581

Los Angeles

1,223

Estimated deaths on May 3 if social distancing

started one week earlier than it did

29,410

New York City

2,838

Los Angeles

451

Total reported deaths in the

United States on May 3

65,307

New York City

17,581

Los Angeles

1,223

Estimated deaths on May 3 if social distancing

started one week earlier than it did

29,410

New York City

2,838

Los Angeles

451

Estimated deaths on May 3 if social distancing

started one week earlier than it did

Total reported deaths in the

United States on May 3

New York City

17,581

65,307

29,410

New York City

2,838

Los Angeles

Los Angeles

1,223

451

By Lazaro Gamio·Source: “Differential Effects of Intervention Timing on COVID-19 Spread in the United States,” by Sen Pei, Sasikiran Kandula and Jeffrey Shaman, Columbia University

If the United States had begun imposing social distancing measures one week earlier in March, about 36,000 fewer people would have died in the pandemic, according to new estimates from Columbia University disease modelers.

And if the country had begun locking down cities and limiting social contact on March 1, two weeks earlier than when most people started staying home, a vast majority of the nation’s deaths — about 83 percent — would have been avoided, the researchers estimated.

“It’s a big, big difference,” said Jeffrey Shaman, an epidemiologist at Columbia who led the research team. “That small moment in time, catching it in that growth phase, is incredibly critical in reducing the number of deaths.”

How Earlier Control Measures Could Have Saved Lives

Number of reported

deaths by May 3

65,307

60,000 deaths

Estimated deaths if

social distancing

started …

40,000

… one week earlier

than it did in March

Range of

estimates

29,410

20,000

… two weeks earlier

11,253

0

March 1

April 1

May 3

Number of reported

deaths by May 3

65,307

60,000 deaths

Estimated deaths

if social distancing

started …

40,000

… one week earlier

than it did in March

Range of

estimates

29,410

20,000

… two weeks earlier

11,253

0

March 1

April 1

May 3

Number of reported

deaths by May 3

65,307

60,000 deaths

Estimated deaths

if social distancing

started …

40,000

… one week earlier

than it did in March

29,410

20,000

… two weeks earlier

11,253

0

March 1

April 1

May 3

Number of reported

deaths by May 3

65,307

60,000 deaths

Estimated deaths if

social distancing

started …

40,000

… one week earlier

than it did in March

29,410

20,000

… two weeks earlier

11,253

0

March 1

April 1

May 3

By Weiyi Cai·Source: “Differential Effects of Intervention Timing on COVID-19 Spread in the United States,” by Sen Pei, Sasikiran Kandula and Jeffrey Shaman, Columbia University

The cost of waiting to take action reflects the unforgiving dynamics of an outbreak that swept through U.S. cities in early March. Even small differences in timing would have prevented the worst exponential growth, which by April had subsumed New York City, New Orleans and other major cities, the researchers found.

Despite travel restrictions, a New Zealand woman will see her dying sister in Australia.

Credit…Cameron Spencer/Getty Images

After six tries, reams of paperwork and repeated rejections, a New Zealand woman will be reunited with her dying sister in Australia, receiving a rare exemption to strict travel bans.

Gail Baker, who lives north of Sydney, was diagnosed with incurable ovarian cancer in late March, when travel bans locked down borders across the world. She and her sister, Christine Archer, a nurse in New Zealand, have been trying to reconnect ever since.

“I just want to spend every minute I can with her,” Ms Archer told ABC News of Australia.

Both countries have been easing restrictions in recent weeks, but not on international travel.

Mr. Archer said she had bought a plane ticket and was relieved to have received the Australian government’s permission to go. But she said the process was more difficult than it needed to be, especially given that Australia and New Zealand have brought their coronavirus outbreaks to heel.

“It’s just been such a huge job,” she said. “I am sure there are so many other people in the same position as I have been in, and maybe now it will open the door for others to see their loved ones sooner rather than later.”

In a Bangkok shopping mall, robots enforce social distancing.

Credit…Anusak Laowilas/NurPhoto, via Getty Images

Hannah Beech is The Times’s Southeast Asia bureau chief. She lives in Bangkok, Thailand’s capital.

I wandered past the shop selling premium salmon skin with salted egg yolk, past vials of perfumes I could not sniff because of my mask, past the Japanese soufflé pancake place where, I must admit, I bought a box full of pillowy deliciousness.

After 30 minutes of meandering through Siam Paragon, one of Bangkok’s many malls that have reopened since the city’s coronavirus lockdown began to ease, I finally found my quarry.

Just past Cartier and not quite to Bottega Veneta, the robot was wheeling its way past a gaggle of Thais in floral-patterned masks. I stepped in front of it and the robot politely veered to my left.

In front of Louis Vuitton, the robot, about the size of a leprechaun, came upon a foreign woman in short shorts and a mouth painted with lipstick.

The robot’s camera whirred. Something inside clicked. “Please wear masks,” the robot said in both Thai and English.

If robots could look admonishing, this machine was delivering a very stern gaze.

The woman giggled, then looked a bit nervous. Security guards in black suits and face shields showed her the exit.

After weeks of recording few new coronavirus cases, Thailand is opening up again. But the deluge of shoppers — one Ikea was overwhelmed by a line of hundreds of people — has public health experts worried. Incoming commercial flights have been banned until at least the end of June.

To get into Siam Paragon, I snapped a QR code with my phone, stepped through a mist of disinfectant and waited for my temperature to be taken.

The reading appeared to indicate that I was a lizard. The guard waved me through anyway.

Reporting was contributed by Iliana Magra, Azam Ahmed, Lorraine Allen, Hannah Beech, Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, Emma Bubola, Chris Buckley, Damien Cave, Ben Dooley, Carlotta Gall, Jeffrey Gettleman, Russell Goldman, Jenny Gross, Jason Gutierrez, Javier C. Hernández, Mike Ives, Hari Kumar, Claire Moses, Steven Lee Myers, Jin Qu, Austin Ramzy, Kai Schultz, Martin Selsoe Sorensen, Megan Specia, Shalini Venugopal Bhagat, Jin Wu, Sameer Yasir, Ceylan Yeginsu and Elaine Yu.

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