Covid-19: Global coronavirus death toll passes 3,000; spreads to over 60 countries

The global death toll from the new coronavirus epidemic surpassed 3,000 on Monday after more people died at its epicentre in China, as cases soared around the world and US officials faced criticism over the country’s readiness for an outbreak.

(Coronavirus outbreak: All the latest updates)

The virus has now infected more than 88,000 people and spread to more than 60 countries after first emerging in China late last year.

South Korea, the biggest nest of infections outside China, reported nearly 500 new cases on Monday, bringing its total past 4,000.

With fears of a pandemic on the rise, the World Health Organization urged all countries to stock up on critical care ventilators to treat patients with severe symptoms of the deadly respiratory disease.

The rapid spread of the coronavirus has raised fears over its impact on the world economy, causing global markets to log their worst losses since the 2008 financial crisis.

China’s economy has ground to a halt with large swathes of the country under quarantine or measures to restrict travel.

Other countries have started to enact their own drastic containment measures, including banning arrivals from virus-hit countries, locking down towns, urging citizens to stay home and suspending major events such as football matches or trade fairs.

(Coronavirus: Everything you need to know about the Covid-19 Wuhan virus outbreak)

In a stark example of growing global anxiety, the Louvre – the world’s most visited museum – closed on Sunday after staff refused to work over fears about the virus.

China reported 42 more deaths on Monday – all in central Hubei province. The virus is believed to have originated in a market that sold wild animals in Hubei’s capital, Wuhan.

The death toll in China alone rose to 2,912, but it is also rising abroad, with the second highest tally in Iran with 54, while the United States and Australia had their first fatalities from the disease over the weekend.

The WHO says the virus appears to particularly hit those over the age of 60 and people already weakened by other illness.

It has a mortality rate ranging between two and five percent – much higher than the flu, at 0.1 percent, but lower than another coronavirus-linked illness, SARS, which had a 9.5 percent death rate when it killed nearly 800 people in 2002-2003.

But infections are also rising faster abroad than in China now, as the country’s drastic measures, including quarantining some 56 million people in Hubei since late January, appear to be paying off.

After an increase on Sunday, China’s National Health Commission reported 202 new infections on Monday, the lowest daily rise since late January. There have been more than 80,000 infections in the world’s most populous country.

By contrast, infections are soaring elsewhere.

Four more people died in South Korea, taking its toll to 22.

Infection numbers have surged in recent days and the country’s central bank has warned of negative growth in the first quarter, noting the epidemic will hit both consumption and exports.

The figures are expected to rise further as authorities test more than 260,000 people associated with the Shincheonji Church of Jesus, a religious group often condemned as a cult that is linked to more than half the cases.

Infections nearly doubled over the weekend in Italy, Europe’s hardest hit country with nearly 1,700 cases.

Rome said Sunday it would deliver 3.6 billion euros ($4 million) in emergency aid to sectors affected by the virus.

President Donald Trump has downplayed concerns of a major outbreak in the US but his government has come in for criticism over its response to the threat.

Vice President Mike Pence and Health Secretary Alex Azar defended the administration’s handling of the virus, while seeking to reassure Americans and promising to make up for shortfalls in virus testing kits.

“We could have more sad news, but the American people should know the risk to the average American remains low,” Pence told CNN.

The assurances came a day after officials confirmed that a man in his 50s had died in northwestern Washington state.

He was one of a handful of people with no known links to global hot zones to have contracted the virus – indicating that the pathogen was now likely spreading in communities.

“We will see more cases,” Azar said. “But it’s important to remember, for the vast majority of individuals who contract the novel coronavirus, they will experience mild to moderate symptoms.”

Buttigieg drops out of Democratic race two days before Super Tuesday

Pete Buttigieg dropped out of the race for the Democratic presidential nomination on Sunday, saying he no longer saw a change of winning, the day after fellow moderate Joe Biden won a big victory in South Carolina.

The move shook up the Democratic contest to pick a candidate to take on Republican President Donald Trump in November’s election and came two days before the 14-state Super Tuesday nominating contests that will offer the biggest electoral prize so far.

Buttigieg, a 38-year-old former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, who gained early momentum after he narrowly won the Iowa caucuses last month and finished a close second in New Hampshire, had sought to unite Democrats, independents and moderate Republican voters. But he finished a distant third in Nevada and fourth in South Carolina.

“Today is a moment of truth … the truth is that the path has narrowed to a close for our candidacy if not for our cause,” Buttigieg told supporters in South Bend on Sunday night. “Our goal has always been to unify Americans to help defeat Donald Trump and to win the era for our values.”

His departure leaves six contenders in the Democratic presidential race, which once had more than 20 candidates. An adviser told Reuters that Buttigieg was dropping out to avoid helping the odds of front-runner Bernie Sanders, a senator from Vermont and self-described democratic socialist.

“Pete was not going to play the role of spoiler,” said the adviser, who spoke on condition of anonymity. “Could he have went through Super Tuesday and beyond? Sure. But this was not a vanity exercise.”

Buttigieg and Biden attempted to talk by telephone on Sunday but did not connect, according to a Buttigieg adviser.

Billionaire environmentalist Tom Steyer abandoned his bid after finishing third in South Carolina on Saturday.

Earlier on Sunday, Democratic candidates commemorated the anniversary of a landmark civil rights march in Alabama in 1965.

Some worshippers at the African-American church in Selma, Alabama, where the event was held, turned their backs on moderate presidential contender Michael Bloomberg, who will first appear on ballots on Tuesday after skipping the first four contests.

Bloomberg, a former New York mayor, received a chilly reception at the historic Brown Chapel AME Church in Selma after the pastor, the Rev. Leodis Strong, told the gathering the billionaire businessman initially had turned down the invitation to speak.

“I was hurt, I was disappointed,” Strong said as Bloomberg looked on stonily. “I think it’s important that he came, and it shows a willingness on his part to change.”

About 10 people in the small church with a couple hundred in attendance stood up and turned their backs on Bloomberg as he spoke about racial inequality.

Biden and Bloomberg are trying to present themselves as the party’s best choice to take on Trump, saying Sanders is too far to the left to win the general election.

‘Just an insult’

Black voters are a key Democratic constituency, and Bloomberg has been criticized for supporting the use of a policing practice called stop and frisk in New York City that encouraged police to stop and search pedestrians and disproportionately affected blacks and Latinos.

“It’s just an insult for him to come here. It’s the disrespect for the legacy of this place,” Lisa Brown, who traveled to Selma from Los Angeles, told Reuters after turning her back to Bloomberg. She said the idea to protest Bloomberg’s remarks had circulated but that she stood as an individual, not an organized group.

The quiet protest suggests Bloomberg faces an uphill climb with some African-American voters, who carried Biden to a resounding victory in South Carolina.

Biden, who was vice president to the first black U.S. president, Barack Obama, was clearly the favorite at the Selma church. He was seated by the pastor, facing the pews where Bloomberg sat, and got a glowing introduction from U.S. Representative Terri Sewell, a black Alabama lawmaker.

“He has earned the right to be in this pulpit and to address you now,” Sewell told the crowd.

The candidates were in Selma to mark the 55th anniversary of “Bloody Sunday,” when civil rights marchers were beaten by state troopers and local police while crossing a bridge.

‘Looking for a Democrat’

Some Democratic Party officials expressed concerns last week about Sanders’ early surge, worrying that his aggressive policy priorities including establishing a mandatory government-run healthcare system for all in place of private health insurance could turn off moderate voters badly needed to defend competitive seats in Congress.

“I think the Democratic Party is looking for a Democrat – not a socialist, not a former Republican, a Democrat – to be their nominee,” Biden told “Fox News Sunday.”

Biden’s reference to a former Republican appears to have been aimed at Bloomberg, who switched parties multiple times in his career.

Sanders attacked Biden for taking contributions from political organizations called Super PACs and billionaires, at what he said was the expense of working-class, middle-class and low-income people.

“I don’t go to rich people’s homes like Joe Biden,” Sanders said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”

Biden lags Sanders in fundraising and organization in Super Tuesday states and beyond.

Sanders planned to campaign on Sunday in heavily Democratic California, where he leads opinion polls.

The Sanders campaign said overnight it raised $46.5 million from more than 2.2 million donations in February, a huge sum dwarfing what any other Democratic candidate raised last year in any three-month period.

Biden said on Sunday his campaign had raised more than $10 million in the past two days, boosted by his South Carolina win.

Jamie Koufos

Jamie Koufos dreams to be a professional fitness model and to transform that dream into reality he has put all his effort in it. Starting early, at the age of 25 years he has been voted among the top 10 best personal trainers in Melbourne, Australia and made to the list of top 4 WBFF Australian fitness model. Associated with EHP labs, he feels passionate to transform other into the best shape of their life. It’s all his effort that led him to where he’s at this point in life.
With his in-depth knowledge in the field of fitness and how our body adapts to work-out and diet, Jamie with his team has launched well-balanced high protein, clean carbohydrate and low-fat meal system in order to achieve fitness goals. These meals can be customized depending on user’s choice, allergies and priorities, which can be delivered online within a 32Km radius of Melbourne CBD.

As he knows the importance and impact of fitness in one’s life and eventually wants to encourage others as well. Jamie has been assisting people online by mentoring them towards a healthy lifestyle. Further, he is planning to launch a podcast for users to have a better experience of the same.

 

 

 

 

 

–   A to Z services

Radi Budyonova

Her fashion week debut let people speeches.
24 years fashion model and social media sensation impress everyone with her amazing confident walk opening Alicia Ayla fashion show.

Radi Budyonova has been ranked number 1 on the list of Most beautiful fashion models.
Radi is 24 East European fashion model and beauty queen, whose photos of her beauty and career have amassed her social media popularity.
She become most loved Miss Global.
Over 15 magazines choose her to be them cover girl in 2019
She is one of the most successful Models . She has ranked on the list of those famous people who were born on November 7, 1995. She is one of the Richest Models who was born in Bulgaria. She also has a position among the list of Most popular Models .

Anmol Singh

In order to promote his passion for trading, Mr. Anmol Singh launched “LiveTraders.com” in the year 2015 that ranked #1 for three continuous years as the best trading education firm. He has assisted more than thousands of traders all over the world dealing with psychological and Behavioral issues resulting when high stakes are on the line that helped him become a leading expert in Trading Psychological space. His passion for trading is not limited to himself as he prefers to invest his valuable time working with students of Live Trader and helps them financially to uplift their own hedge funds. Mr. Anmol vision is not limited to shares as he adores a keen interest in Real Estate and various entrepreneurial ventures and franchise store in the automotive sector.

Mr. Anmol Singh considers success to be a subjective topic that helps him encourage million dollar traders irrespective of the industry they were into.

 

To be specific, the book is focused on to achieving success in various fields of your life and not about business and trading.

 

#>Hello Anmol, can you please tell us a bit about yourself?

— I try to keep myself indulged with managing funds and working with students of LiveTraders which I co-founded in 2014. Trading helps me stay organized and passionate about life. At first, trading was not as easy as it is for me today but it was the continuous effort that led to discover a pattern and eventually generate profit out of it for myself as well as the investors. Along with this, I have funded two other tech-based companies.

 

#>What are your focus areas and why?

–I feel it’s a dynamic world and you can’t simply focus on a single topic and therefore try to maintain a versatile portfolio to manage and maintain. For now, I am working in stocks, forex markets and online social media industry along with Real estate investment opportunities.

 

#>How do you describe “LiveTraders” in few words?

–LiveTraders is focused on creating a platform for people interested in trading by proving training and educational courses to implement their knowledge and learnings of trading. To do so, Live Trade offers a live trading room where the participants can analyze trades in real time on screens and hear audio of it as well.  With all this, we also serve the funds required to trade in exchange for a percentage of what the users make trading with us, for those who are interested in taking this as a career.

Diego with wife Cintia and their Children in Orlando Florida

I conquered because I didn’t get used to it and ran after it “says Entrepreneur who won the crisis in Brazil!

Diego Fortes in his beauty salon with one of his famous clients, actress Juliana Paes

In the midst of the economic crisis that plagues the country, many Brazilians have been looking for good examples to mirror, with stories of overcoming, entrepreneurship and professional growth. One of these examples is Casal Fortes, who came from unemployment to professional success as beauty professionals, speakers and entrepreneurs.
Diego Fortes (34), tells how it all started: “The idea came from a need and a vision of opportunity. When the two of us really saw the siege close and no job door opened, we had no choice but to undertake. One day, looking at a Mega Hair professional, we had an insight that I could, given market demand, do that. 10 years ago there were no specialized salons in Mega Hair. I wanted to offer a total service to these customers, in addition to the application only, in addition to support and maintenance for the application ”.

Diego says he started to apply mega hair without having attended a course: “I used everything I knew from my own experience, because my wife had used Mega Hair since she was 16 years old. Because she had very thin hair. Cintia Fortes my wife made a card improvised visit, and went to a mall, handing over our card from store to store, and talking about Mega Hair, so that was when the manager of one of the stores said she would like to do Mega Hair. She was our first customer. I believed “.

Diego Fortes with wife Cintia and their children in Orlando, Florida

Through the social network, Diego and Cintia began to advertise their services, and went through periods of great struggle until reaching success: “After 6 years of struggle and with few customers, our work began to be recognized, and in the last 4 years demand only increases. Because of our exclusive technique, imperceptible to the touch and with placement in 40 minutes, some celebrities started to become interested in our work, and then we went viral on social networks ”, he reveals.

Today the salon in Barra da Tijuca in Rio de Janeiro, has become a reference in Maga Hair throughout Brazil, and is frequented by celebrities like Juliana Paes, Aline, Riscado, Carol Nakamura: “when Juliana Paes met us, she was delighted with our work and chose to do with us the transformation of Bibi, her character from the soap opera A Força do Querer. At the end of last year, we went to the É de Casa program of REDE GLOBO Talk about Mega Hair Ao Vivo and tell our story of overcoming ”.

Locatelli unpacked: a meeting with Chef Giorgio in Dubai

F YOU HAVE been a UAE resident for any amount of time, you’ll most likely be aware of this chef’s name above the door at his Atlantis The Palm restaurant, Ronda Locatelli. However, if you are a fine dining aficionado or even have a passing interest in major international cooking TV shows, you will feel on familiar terms with the Italian maestro. This was our experience as we greeted the 56-year-old at Ronda this week as he paid a visit to Dubai in order to run his expert eye on how the eatery was faring. Having watched Giorgio Locatelli’s BBC exploits for almost two decades on shows including Italy Unpacked and more recently on Netflix’s The Big Family Cooking Show, his off screen persona is thankfully as ebullient and enthusiastic as when the cameras are rolling. We approached our intimate meeting table where, upon peering up from his signature translucent-framed specs, the chef rose and outstretched a hand to shake ours with gusto. We sat and almost immediately had to launch into an IMDb page recital, ticking off his past television work we had enjoyed.

“You know they made me a Cavalieri (knight) in Sicily because of Sicily Unpacked,” he said with a laugh once we had exhausted our super fan act. The 2012 series saw Locatelli and British art critic Andrew Graham-Dixon travel around the Mediterranean hotspot: Graham-Dixon unearthing the abundant architectural and artistic treasures and Locatelli sourcing bountiful fresh produce to prepare the duo meals. The presenter pairing made for compelling TV to such an extent Locatelli was awarded by the local Sicilian government for increasing British tourism numbers to the island.

“They (British) were always a little bit scared of Sicily. They just thought ‘mafia’. But after Sicily Unpacked they had to double the number of flights from London.

“My dad must have been turning in his grave thinking ‘what do you mean you’re promoting Sicily? You’re almost Swiss!'”

The Locatelli family hails from the northern Italian town of Corgeno. Giorgio’s uncle ran a restaurant, exposing the inquisitive budding chef to a working kitchen environment from an early age. After becoming a jobbing cook and steadily rising the ranks in his native country, the professional moved to England in 1986 to work in London’s legendary The Savoy hotel. After four years he relocated to Paris, but in 1995 returned to the UK capital to open Knightsbridge’s Zafferano where he made his name – gaining a Michelin Star in 1999.

Mission: Middle East

Locatelli’s Dubai restaurant journey, he told us, began almost 20 years ago. Around 2001, the chef arrived in a town on the cusp of becoming the metropolis it is today.

“Back then the Hyatt group wanted to do an Italian restaurant so we came down. You could see there was something happening but at that time there was just Sheikh Zayed Road and a few hotels, but I was fascinated. There was a great demand for the food because the food culture here hadn’t been established. I liked that.”

A few years passed and, through Locatelli’s association with Southern Sun Resorts founder Sol Kerzner and his son Butch – key players in Atlantis’ development – he found himself discussing the possibility of opening a marquee restaurant. Although, upon first inspection of Atlantis’ proposed site at the top of The Palm before a single brick had been laid, Locatelli remained dubious.

“We got a helicopter here because there was no trunk. There was this strip of sand with four boats spitting out more sand onto it. We landed and Butch was explaining how everything was going to be. In my experience of the way London works, I thought we’d open in 40 years. I thought he was mad and told my wife it was never going to happen. Four years later we opened. It was incredible.”

Now celebrating its 12th anniversary as one of Atlantis’ landmark culinary attractions, Locatelli describes Ronda as a ‘beast’.

“Sometimes people have to produce a large amount, but the quality suffers. Here we push out crazy numbers but the quality is always the best. It takes a lot. The drive is so amazing.”

He says ambition runs throughout the hotel using Nobu Matsuhisa’s eponymous venue and Gordon Ramsay’s Bread Street Kitchen both sat a few paces away as examples of the property’s aspirational qualities.

“It reflects what has happened in Dubai. You have the best chefs in the world represented in some way all together, which nobody would have thought possible a couple of decades ago.”

Rivalry in the celebrity chef world, as opposed to perhaps the sporting or entertainment realms, appears to be far lower key than one would expect. Akin to the recent Fury-Wilder boxing bout, in an equally competitive field we often anticipate a few barbs to be cast out to fellow restaurateurs in order to gain an upper hand. However, Locatelli confirmed the atmosphere is on the whole harmonious and even friendly when the neighbours come to call.

“When you cross paths with Nobu it is fantastic. He comes over and he wants to make a pizza all the time. We have been working on this raw pizza, but I am always telling him you have to put it in the oven.

“I have been friends with Gordon for a long time. We worked together when we were very young and have a great relationship.”

Truffle shuffle

Locatelli’s Dubai visits often coincide with the much-lauded white truffle season towards the end of the year. Ronda prides itself on offering the finest dishes in which you can experience the valuable Piedmont mushroom. It is a topic close to the chef’s heart.

“Truffle is a great expression of the biodiversity of a territory,” he explained. “Anything that is not natural will disturb the balance and will upset truffle growth.

“The reason they are so expensive is because the season is very short and unpredictable. It has become better with these mobile phones. If a picker finds one he can take a picture and send it and sell it there and then. They are always in contact.”

Locatelli has two agents sourcing him the finest truffles one of which is a longtime family associate in Alba whose father used to conduct the same business with Locatelli’s grandfather.

“What makes people want something? It’s because they can’t have it. Why do you want an Aston Martin? Because they don’t make enough for everyone, you have to wait two years. You want it. That’s the same with truffles. And then I think there is some primordial smell and flavour – there’s something about the nature between the vegetable and animal which makes you want it.”

And the best way to experience a white truffle?

“It must be served with the most simple thing. Anything with protein or starch. For me the best thing to have with truffle is a risotto. Rice holds the heat, so you have those volatile compounds which keep coming and get stronger and stronger as you eat it.”

When demand for traditional Italian recipes is so high, how much room for innovation is there on one of your menus?

“What is an Italian meal? That is very difficult to say. For someone from Sicily it is one thing, for someone from Tuscany it is something completely different. It’s based on historical values and availability of produce. Today in Palermo it is 26 degrees centigrade, but up north people are skiing. It’s the same nation but it is so different, so the ‘Italian meal’ as one doesn’t really exist.

“The world has an idea Italian food is pizza and pasta because immigrants in the early and mid 20th century took an idea of our food with them. When they arrived their meals took shape with what surrounded them. American Italian food is the way it is because you have a lot of meat in the US. Poor Italians when they arrived in New York in the 1900s went from eating meat once a year to once a day. That’s how you get spaghetti with meatballs. Native Italians could never imagine that.

“When it comes to innovation, the world is changing. There is a need to focus on certain trends and ingredients. Italian food lends itself very well to vegetarianism, to veganism. Before immigration we had to make a lot out of carrots and beans for hundreds of years! We can go back to those recipes. But the question also has to be how much do we want to innovate? Can you better a lasagne? If one day I have this inspiration and can make it better I will try, but at the moment it can’t be better.”  

FIFA, NFL ask US to keep Saudi Arabia on watchlist over piracy

Global sports bodies asked the US to keep Saudi Arabia on its higher-priority watch list of nations that don’t adequately protect intellectual-property rights because of what they say is unchecked content piracy in the kingdom.

The International Olympic Committee, global soccer governing-body FIFA, Europe’s UEFA, and a coalition representing US sports organisations including the National Football League are among those that have written in recent weeks to the US Trade Representative as part of its annual review to identify countries that deny adequate protection of IP rights. The USTR holds hearings on the so-called special 301 review in Washington Wednesday.

Global sports bodies say Saudi Arabia-based BeoutQ tapped illegally into coverage of their top events and sold it on to viewers across the Middle East. Qatar, whose Bein Media Group holds the rights to most soccer games, tennis matches and motor races, says BeoutQ has pirated much of its content, adding Saudi Arabia is behind the operation. The Saudi authorities denied the allegation and said they were combating piracy.

While beoutQ ceased operation in 2019, piracy continues to be an issue in Saudi Arabia, mainly through the availability of BeoutQ branded set-top boxes and similar IPTV devices made available in the Saudi market, the Sports Coalition said in its submission. It represents organisations including Major League Baseball, the National Basketball Association and the NFL.

In its 2019 report, the USTR placed Saudi Arabia on its priority watch list for failing to address longstanding IP concerns and further deteriorating IP protection and enforcement within its borders, and for “failing to take action against the rampant satellite and online piracy made available by illicit pirate service beoutQ.”

England’s Premier League, along with other sports-rights owners, sought lawyers to pursue copyright-infringement litigation in Saudi Arabia, but wasn’t able to retain legal counsel willing to act on its behalf.

“Ultimately, the Saudi Arabian legal system is not allowing the Premier League to have access to it, regardless of the merits of the case,” it said.

First UAE-made VTOL drone is launched

The first UAE-made high-performance drone has taken flight.

ADASI, the regional leader in autonomous systems and services, officially launched the Garmousha vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) drone in a deal with the General Headquarters of the UAE Armed Forces.

The drone is a light military unmanned aircraft designed to carry 100kg over a six-hour period and 150km with a high-definition camera.

It saves manned helicopters for critical missions and can also be used to detect gas pipeline leaks, to survey infrastructure and for search and rescue operations.

Faisal Al Bannai, chief executive officer and managing director, EDGE, said: “Drone technology is revolutionising our world, creating safer and cheaper alternative to manned aircraft.

“As an unmanned system, the launch of the sophisticated Garmousha drone helps advance ADASI’s vision for the future of defence, while strengthening the company’s position as the regional leader in autonomous systems and services.”

The drone can simultaneously carry a wide variety of payloads, including a stabilised electro-optical sensor for day and night ISR collection.

With a low-consumption diesel engine, its unmanned navigation and concurrent sensor capabilities make it a versatile system capable of solving some of the most difficult challenges in rugged environments.

Dubai links with Google Maps to offer real-time bus updates

Dubai’s Roads and Transport Authority (RTA) has started to run real-time updates of bus timetables on Google Maps in collaboration with Google.

The transport authority said Dubai has become the first city in the Middle East to use open data in public transport, adding the launch will result in better services for passengers.

“Linking and providing instant updates of bus schedules on Google Platform will help public transport riders and keep them

informed of bus timetables, especially in the event of an anticipated early departure or late arrival,” said Khaled Al Awadi, director of Transportation Systems at RTA’s Public Transport Agency.

“Such updates will enable them to better plan their journeys and minimise potential complaints from changes in timetables for unavoidable reasons,” he added.

Previously, Google Maps used to display fixed RTA bus timetables without any updates.

The new initiative aims to overcome delays or early arrival of buses for emergency factors.

“Google Maps are commonly used and are extremely popular worldwide. The initiative is in line with our leaders’ efforts to cater to the needs of Dubai residents, especially riders of public transport; the backbone of people mobility in Dubai,” Al Awadi said.

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