NEW
YORK (AP) — U.S. deaths from the coronavirus pandemic topped 1,000 in
another grim milestone for a global outbreak that is taking lives and
wreaking havoc on economies and the established routines of ordinary
life.
In a
recognition of the scale of the threat, the U.S. Senate late Wednesday
passed an unparalleled $2.2 trillion economic rescue package steering
aid to businesses, workers and health care systems.
The
unanimous vote came despite misgivings on both sides about whether it
goes too far or not far enough and capped days of difficult negotiations
as Washington confronted a national challenge unlike it has ever faced.
The 880-page measure is the largest economic relief bill in U.S.
history.
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Worldwide,
the death toll climbed past 21,000, according to a running count kept
by Johns Hopkins University, and the U.S. had 1,050 deaths and nearly
70,000 infections.
Spain’s
death toll has risen past 3,400, eclipsing that of China, where the
virus was first detected in December, and is now second only to that of
Italy, which has 7,500. Lidia Perera, a nurse at Madrid’s 1,000-bed
Hospital de la Paz, said more workers were desperately needed. “We are
collapsing,” Perera said.
The Spanish parliament voted to allow the government to extend strict stay-at-home rules and business closings until April 11.
Such
measures are becoming increasingly common in the U.S., where New York
is the epicenter of the domestic outbreak, accounting for more than
30,000 cases and close to 300 deaths, most of them in New York City.
Public
health officials in the city hunted down beds and medical equipment and
called for more doctors and nurses for fear the number of sick patients
will overwhelm hospitals as has happened in Italy and Spain.
A
makeshift morgue was set up outside Bellevue Hospital, and the city’s
police, their ranks dwindling as more fall ill, were told to patrol
nearly empty streets to enforce social distancing.
In
Washington, President Donald Trump has called for Americans to dedicate
themselves to social distancing for 15 days, including staying home
from work and closing bars and restaurants to help try to stall the
spread of the disease.
Yet,
he has also grumbled that “our country wasn’t built to be shut down”
and vowed not to allow “the cure be worse than the problem” — apparently
concerned that the outbreak’s devastating effects on financial markets
and employment will harm his chances for reelection later this year.
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“The
LameStream Media is the dominant force in trying to get me to keep our
Country closed as long as possible in the hope that it will be
detrimental to my election success,” Trump tweeted Wednesday.
Democrats say that Trump was prioritizing the economy over the health and safety of Americans.
“I’d
like to say, let’s get back to work next Friday,” said Joe Biden, the
front-runner for the Democratic presidential nomination. ”That’d be
wonderful. But it can’t be arbitrary.”
Biden
said the congressional aid package addressing the outbreak “goes a long
way,” but that “meticulous oversight” is required.
“We’re
going to need to make sure the money gets out quickly into peoples’
pockets and to keep a close watch on how corporations are using the
taxpayers funds that they receive, to make sure it goes to help workers,
not rich CEOs or shareholders,” the former vice president said.
Brazil
President Jair Bolsonaro has also called to reopen schools and
businesses, contending a clampdown ordered by many governors will deeply
wound the economy and spark social unrest. He called for only high-risk
people to quarantine and for governors to lift their stricter measures.
The country’s
governors resisted, saying his instructions run counter to health
experts’ recommendations and endanger Latin America’s largest
population. The rebellion even included traditional allies of Brazil’s
far-right president.
Meanwhile,
the governor of a state in central Mexico said the poor are “immune” to
the coronavirus, even as the federal government suspended all
non-essential government activities.
Puebla
Gov. Miguel Barbosa’s comment was apparently partly a response to
statistics showing that the wealthy, who travel much more, have made up a
significant percentage of Mexicans infected to date, including some
prominent businessmen. The country has seen six deaths so far.
“The
majority are wealthy people. If you are rich, you are at risk. If you
are poor, no,” Barbosa said. “We poor people, we are immune.”
Barbosa
also appeared to be playing on an old stereotype held by some Mexicans
that poor sanitation standards may have strengthened their immune
systems by exposing them to bacteria or other bugs.
In other developments:
—
Thailand’s capital, Bangkok, saw a drastic reduction in crowds and
traffic on the first day of a national state of emergency declared to
cope with the virus. The elevated Skytrain mass transit system was
largely empty during the normal rush hour and a main bus station was
quiet after the departure over the past week of many workers whose homes
are in rural provinces.
Outside
the usually throbbing city, checkpoints were set up to find travelers
with symptoms of the disease. The state of emergency allows the
government to implement curfews, censor the media, disperse gatherings
and deploy the military for enforcement.
—
Leaders of four Japaneses prefectures whose residents commute to work
and school in Tokyo asked people to avoid non-essential visits to the
capital. The calls come a day after Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike asked city
residents to work from home if possible and avoid going out on the
weekend. She said Tokyo is on the verge of a possible explosive increase
in infections.
—
Pakistani officials said a representative of an Islamic organization
spread coronavirus on the outskirts of capital by visiting mosques and
going house to house with other clerics. Several clerics and residents
are among the 25 people who tested positive in Islamabad. Pakistan’s
total of nearly 1,100 cases prompted efforts to persuade the country’s
more than 200 million people to stay home.
—
Pakistan’s giant neighbor, India, began enforcing the world’s largest
coronavirus lockdown, a gargantuan task of trying to keep 1.3 billion
people indoors. Official assurances that essentials wouldn’t run out
clashed with people’s fears that the disease toll could soon worsen,
gutting food and other critical supplies.
—
Beginning Friday, South Korea will enforce 14-day quarantines on its
nationals and foreigners with long-term stay visas arriving from the
United States. It already applies to arrivals from Europe. South Koreans
can be sued and foreigners expelled for failing to heed the order.
—
China’s National Health Commission says its 67 new COVID-19 cases were
all in recent arrivals from abroad. Once again, there were no new cases
reported in Wuhan, the original epicenter of the illness and which
remains under some restrictions until April 8. The government is trying
to restart the world’s second-largest economy as its cases subside. Of
the more than 81,000 people infected, more than 74,000 have been
released from treatment, while just under 4,000 remain in care.
—
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said more than 400,000 people
responded within a day to the government’s call for volunteers to help
the country’s most vulnerable people.
—
The Pentagon halted for 60 days the movement of U.S. troops and Defense
Department civilians overseas, a measure expected to affect about
90,000 troops scheduled to deploy or return from abroad.
For
most people, the coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as
fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some,
especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can
cause more severe illness, including pneumonia and death.
___
Long reported from Washington. Associated Press journalists around the world contributed to this report.
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