Jumat, 20 Maret 2020

Italy coronavirus deaths surge by 627 in a day, lifting total death toll to 4,032 - Reuters

ROME (Reuters) - The death toll from an outbreak of coronavirus in Italy has leapt by 627 to 4,032, officials said on Friday, an increase of 18.4% — by far the largest daily rise in absolute terms since the contagion emerged a month ago.

On Thursday, Italy overtook China as the country to register most deaths from the highly contagious virus.

Until Friday, Italy had never recorded more than 475 deaths in a single day, while China, where the contagion has slowed sharply, has never reported more than 150.

The total number of cases in Italy rose to 47,021 from a previous 41,035, an increase of 14.6%, the Civil Protection Agency said.

The hardest-hit northern region of Lombardy remains in a critical situation, with 2,549 deaths and 22,264 cases.

Of those originally infected nationwide, 5,129 had fully recovered on Friday compared to 4,440 the day before. There were 2,655 people in intensive care against a previous 2,498.

Reporting by Crispian Balmer; Editing by Gavin Jones

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2020-03-20 18:21:39Z
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Italy calls in military to enforce coronavirus lockdown as 627 people die in 24 hours - CNN

Desperate scenes have unfolded in the north of the country, particularly the hard-hit Lombardy region where infections first exploded last month, as hospitals struggle to treat thousands of cases.
And Chinese medical experts helping Italy deal with the crisis have said the restrictions imposed in Lombardy are "not strict enough."
The government has now agreed that the military can be used to help enforce the lockdown, the president of the Lombardy region, Attilio Fontana, told a news conference on Friday.
"(The request to use the army) has been accepted... and 114 soldiers will be on the ground throughout Lombardy... it is still too little, but it is positive," Fontana said. "Unfortunately we are not seeing a change of trend in the numbers, which are rising."
The soldiers had until now been deployed in the region to ensure general security in the streets.
More than 4,000 people have now died from the disease in Italy, the country's civil protection agency said Friday -- more than any other nation -- and nearly 6,000 new infections were confirmed in the past day, bringing the total to more than 47,000 cases.
Daniela Confalonieri, an Italian nurse in Milan, the region's capital, said the situation was so dire that the dead were no longer being counted.
"We're working in a state of very high stress and tension," Confalonieri told Reuters. "Unfortunately we can't contain the situation in Lombardy, there's a high level of contagion and we're not even counting the dead any more.
"Look at the news that's coming out of Italy and take note of what the situation really is like. It's unimaginable."
A hospital doctor in Bergamo, another Lombardy city, told CNN it had been hit so hard by the coronavirus that it is now sending patients who need intensive care to other parts of the country.
"Bergamo is sending ICU patients to other regions because we ran out (of space)," Dr. Stefano Magnone told CNN on Friday, adding that intensive care units in hospitals in nearby Brescia were also full. Brescia is the second-worst affected province, according to the civil protection agency.
Italian doctors hope for a sign the coronavirus lockdown is working, because there's no plan B
"Around 50 patients were sent out of Lombardy to other regions, mainly in the south," Magnone said. Less than half of those were Covid-19 cases, according to the civil protection agency.
Bergamo's mayor on Thursday announced plans to build a field hospital in the city to help manage the situation.
A doctor in the Lombardy city of Cremona, Romano Paolucci, told Reuters that he had "seen a lot of dead here" and that medical staff were battling to cope with a lack of equipment, long hours and increasing sickness within their own ranks.
"I would say that we are at the end of our strength," he said. "This is a small hospital and we are taking in a lot of people, I would say the capacity is finished.
"We do not have sufficient resources and especially staff because apart from everything else now the staff are beginning to get sick."
About 70% of those treated at the hospital for Covid-19 are surviving, he added.

Patients 'often die on their own'

The disease has taken the greatest toll on Italy's elderly population. Figures released Thursday by the Health Institute of Italy indicated that 86% of fatalities were among those aged over 70. People aged 60 to 69 made up a further 10% of the deaths.
Paolucci said his hospital was trying to help patients keep in touch with their family by phone, particularly the elderly who were less used to making calls.
Thousands of medical students are being fast-tracked into doctors to help fight the coronavirus
"The greatest problem which is emerging in these days, I would say, is that the patients cannot be visited by their relatives and often die on their own," he said.
Footage from Reuters showed army trucks collecting the bodies of coronavirus victims overnight in Lombardy.
The Prime Minister's office said a taskforce of up to 300 additional volunteer doctors would be sent to the areas of Italy worst affected by the pandemic.
This year's medical school graduates have also been told they can start working as fully qualified doctors immediately, months ahead of schedule, as Italy's authorities grapple with the crisis.

'I don't know what everyone is thinking'

Meanwhile, the Chinese Red Cross vice president, Sun Shuopeng, urged tougher measures to contain the spread of the coronavirus.
The situation "is similar to what we experienced two months ago in Wuhan, China, the epicenter of Covid-19," he said Thursday at a news conference in Milan.
"In the city of Wuhan after one month since the adoption of the lockdown policy, we see a decreasing trend from the peak of the disease," Sun Shuopeng said. "Here in Milan, the hardest-hit area by Covid-19, there isn't a very strict lockdown: public transportation is still working and people are still moving around, you're still having dinners and parties in the hotels and you're not wearing masks."
"I don't know what everyone is thinking."
He advised Italians to stop all "economic activities and cut the mobility of people," calling on everyone to just stay at home. "We need every citizen to be involved in the fight of Covid-19 and follow this policy."

Lockdown extension?

Italian authorities are considering lengthening school closures beyond April 3, amid rumors of the nationwide lockdown, affecting more than 60 million people, also being extended.
"I think we are going toward an extension," Italian Education minister Lucia Azzolina said Thursday, adding that schools would reopen once there is "certainty of absolute safety."
Corriere della Sera quoted Italian PM Giuseppe Conte as saying Thursday that "it is clear" the measures to tackle the outbreak, "both the one that has closed a lot of the country's businesses and individual activities, and the one that concerns the school, can only be extended to the deadline."
The Prime Minister's spokesperson told CNN no official decision had yet been taken.
Two convents in Rome have been placed into lockdown after reports of a high number of coronavirus cases, a notice from the Lazio region health assessor Alessio D'Amato said Friday.

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2020-03-20 18:12:59Z
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UK PM Boris Johnson announces lockdown measures in London, telling cafes, pubs and restaurants to close - CNBC

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson gestures as he speaks during a coronavirus news conference inside number 10 Downing Street on March 19, 2020 in London, England.

Leon Neal - WPA Pool | Getty Images

U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced lockdown measures Friday in the capital city of London, telling cafes, bars and restaurants to close.

"We are collectively telling cafes, pubs, bars and restaurants to close tonight as soon as they reasonably can and not to open tomorrow," Johnson said at a daily briefing on the coronavirus.

He said takeout services for these businesses would be able to continue.  

"We are also telling nightclubs, theaters, cinemas, gyms and leisure centers to close on the same timescale."

"These are places where people come together, and indeed the whole purpose of these businesses in many cases is to bring people together. But, the sad thing is, I'm afraid today, for now at least, physically we need to keep people apart," Johnson said.

It was not immediately clear whether the recommendations were enforceable by law, although Johnson said licensing laws would allow the government to order these businesses to close.

The prime minister said the newly announced measures would be reviewed on a monthly basis.

To date, the U.K. has reported 3,297 cases of the coronavirus, including 168 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University. 

Sterling rose on the news, trading up 1.5% to reach $1.1657 Friday evening London time

'Unprecedented' measures

Standing alongside Johnson at the daily press conference, U.K. Finance Minister Rishi Sunak announced the government would pay 80% of wages for employees who are unable to work — up to 2,500 pounds a month.

Sunak described the extra measures as "unprecedented" in the history of the British state.

It comes roughly 24 hours after the prime minister warned further restrictive measures might be needed in the capital city, with evidence suggesting the flu-like virus is spreading faster in London.

On Thursday, he suggested the U.K. could turn the tide against the coronavirus within 12 weeks if the right measures were taken.

Schools in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland will close until further notice from Friday.

The former mayor of London has ruled out the prospect of stopping public transport in London, despite speculation about possible travel restrictions where approximately 9 million people live. 

The U.K. government has been criticized for being too cautious with its approach to the outbreak. 

Separately, Transport for London announced Thursday that up to 40 Tube stations on the London Underground had closed as part of a partial network shutdown.

TfL also said there would be no night Tube and that bus services would be reduced. 

Epicenter of the outbreak

The U.K. has reported the sixth-highest number of coronavirus cases in Europe, behind Italy, Spain, Germany, France and Switzerland. The World Health Organization recently declared Europe as the new epicenter of the outbreak.

Italy has recorded the highest number of COVID-19 infections on the continent. It has also registered more deaths than any other country worldwide, overtaking China — where the outbreak started in December.

Earlier this week, the U.K.'s finance minister announced a 330 billion pound ($398 billion) aid package of loans for businesses, as well as a business rates holiday and grants.

— CNBC's Holly Ellyatt contributed to this report.

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2020-03-20 18:00:14Z
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Italy calls in military to enforce lockdown as coronavirus crisis intensifies in north - CNN

Desperate scenes have unfolded in the north of the country, particularly the hard-hit Lombardy region where infections first exploded last month, as hospitals struggle to treat thousands of cases.
And Chinese medical experts helping Italy deal with the crisis have said the restrictions imposed in Lombardy are "not strict enough."
The government has now agreed that the military can be used to help enforce the lockdown, the president of the Lombardy region, Attilio Fontana, told a news conference on Friday.
"(The request to use the army) has been accepted... and 114 soldiers will be on the ground throughout Lombardy... it is still too little, but it is positive," Fontana said. "Unfortunately we are not seeing a change of trend in the numbers, which are rising."
The soldiers had until now been deployed in the region to ensure general security in the streets.
More than 3,400 people have now died from the disease in Italy, the Italian Civil Protection Agency said. The number of deaths in China currently stands at 3,242, according to the World Health Organization.
Daniela Confalonieri, an Italian nurse in Milan, the region's capital, said the situation was so dire that the dead were no longer being counted.
"We're working in a state of very high stress and tension," Confalonieri told Reuters. "Unfortunately we can't contain the situation in Lombardy, there's a high level of contagion and we're not even counting the dead any more.
"Look at the news that's coming out of Italy and take note of what the situation really is like. It's unimaginable."
A hospital doctor in Bergamo, another Lombardy city, told CNN it had been hit so hard by the coronavirus that it is now sending patients who need intensive care to other parts of the country.
"Bergamo is sending ICU patients to other regions because we ran out (of space)," Dr. Stefano Magnone told CNN on Friday, adding that intensive care units in hospitals in nearby Brescia were also full. Brescia is the second-worst affected province, according to the Italian Civil Protection Department.
Italian doctors hope for a sign the coronavirus lockdown is working, because there's no plan B
"Around 50 patients were sent out of Lombardy to other regions, mainly in the south," Magnone said. Less than half of those were Covid-19 cases, according to Italy's Civil Protection Agency.
Bergamo's mayor on Thursday announced plans to build a field hospital in the city to help manage the situation.
A doctor in the Lombardy city of Cremona, Romano Paolucci, told Reuters that he had "seen a lot of dead here" and that medical staff were battling to cope with a lack of equipment, long hours and increasing sickness within their own ranks.
"I would say that we are at the end of our strength," he said. "This is a small hospital and we are taking in a lot of people, I would say the capacity is finished.
"We do not have sufficient resources and especially staff because apart from everything else now the staff are beginning to get sick."
About 70% of those treated at the hospital for Covid-19 are surviving, he added.

Patients 'often die on their own'

The disease has taken the greatest toll on Italy's elderly population. Figures released Thursday by the Health Institute of Italy indicated that 86% of fatalities were among those aged over 70. People aged 60 to 69 made up a further 10% of the deaths.
Paolucci said his hospital was trying to help patients keep in touch with their family by phone, particularly the elderly who were less used to making calls.
Thousands of medical students are being fast-tracked into doctors to help fight the coronavirus
"The greatest problem which is emerging in these days, I would say, is that the patients cannot be visited by their relatives and often die on their own," he said.
Footage from Reuters showed army trucks collecting the bodies of coronavirus victims overnight in Lombardy.
The Prime Minister's office said a taskforce of up to 300 additional volunteer doctors would be sent to the areas of Italy worst affected by the pandemic.
This year's medical school graduates have also been told they can start working as fully qualified doctors immediately, months ahead of schedule, as Italy's authorities grapple with the crisis.

'I don't know what everyone is thinking'

Meanwhile, the Chinese Red Cross vice president, Sun Shuopeng, urged tougher measures to contain the spread of the coronavirus.
The situation "is similar to what we experienced two months ago in Wuhan, China, the epicenter of Covid-19," he said Thursday at a news conference in Milan.
"In the city of Wuhan after one month since the adoption of the lockdown policy, we see a decreasing trend from the peak of the disease," Sun Shuopeng said. "Here in Milan, the hardest-hit area by Covid-19, there isn't a very strict lockdown: public transportation is still working and people are still moving around, you're still having dinners and parties in the hotels and you're not wearing masks."
"I don't know what everyone is thinking."
He advised Italians to stop all "economic activities and cut the mobility of people," calling on everyone to just stay at home. "We need every citizen to be involved in the fight of Covid-19 and follow this policy."

Lockdown extension?

Italian authorities are considering lengthening school closures beyond April 3, amid rumors of the nationwide lockdown, affecting more than 60 million people, also being extended.
"I think we are going toward an extension," Italian Education minister Lucia Azzolina said Thursday, adding that schools would reopen once there is "certainty of absolute safety."
Corriere della Sera quoted Italian PM Giuseppe Conte as saying Thursday that "it is clear" the measures to tackle the outbreak, "both the one that has closed a lot of the country's businesses and individual activities, and the one that concerns the school, can only be extended to the deadline."
The Prime Minister's spokesperson told CNN no official decision had yet been taken.
Two convents in Rome have been placed into lockdown after reports of a high number of coronavirus cases, a notice from the Lazio region health assessor Alessio D'Amato said Friday.

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2020-03-20 16:55:54Z
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Israel's coronavirus outbreak gives rise to cellphone tracking initiative - The - The Washington Post

JERUSALEM — Four hundred Israelis looked at their cellphones Wednesday night and discovered just how closely their government is keeping tabs on them during the coronavirus crisis.

The country’s Health Ministry had sent tailored text alerts telling citizens that a digital review of their movements showed they had been in proximity to a person known to have tested positive for the virus.

It was not just an advisory. The text also delivered an instant quarantine order, in keeping with ever-tightening restrictions dictated by the Israeli government. “You must immediately go into isolation [for 14 days] to protect your relatives and the public,” the notice said.

Israelis who have tested positive also received messages informing them that their cellphone data would now be used to warn others who may have been exposed to them, according to a statement from the Health Ministry.

The recipients of these messages had not signed up for the tracking system. No one can opt out. And more waves of these messages could come as the epidemic continues to ripple across the country.

The Israeli initiative represents the most far-reaching step yet by a government in deploying the vast surveillance power that access to cellphone data provides and using it to detect and contain the public health threat posed by the coronavirus.

The program has sparked a clash of imperatives — taking every measure to control a pandemic vs. maintaining civil liberties in a democracy. Late Thursday, the Israeli Supreme Court issued a temporary injunction, allowing only those who test positive to be tracked, and ruled that a parliamentary committee would have to endorse the initiative by Tuesday or it must be shut down.

Even for some caught up in the digital dragnet, it is hard to know how to strike the balance.

“It is not a pleasant thing, but I guess I can understand why they are doing this,” said a man who received one of the notices and is now in isolation. Omer, a 37-year-old from central Israel, asked that his last name not be used, out of privacy concerns.

“My main concern is about the process of how the government made the decision,” he said. “I think it was done for a good cause, so I guess I can support that, but I would have liked to have seen a better decision-making process for taking this pretty extreme measure.”

In parts of Asia, digital tools and other high-tech tracking have been used to fight the spread of the virus.

South Korea's government posts a “travel log” of patients before they were diagnosed with the virus, retracing their steps using tools such as GPS phone tracking, credit card records and surveillance video. Singapore hosts a website that includes the age, gender and occupation of all its coronavirus patients and where they traveled recently. China’s massive surveillance state, which utilizes tools including facial-recognition technology and the Communist Party’s neighborhood committees, has been mobilized to keep close tabs on all movement and enforce quarantines and other measures.

U.S. officials have been exploring tactics similar to Israel’s through potential partnerships with technology companies. But such moves are being eyed warily by privacy advocates, who warn that location data, if not handled with appropriate safeguards, could reveal an individual’s friendships, sexual relationships, political activity, religious convictions and physical movements, and could be used by other government authorities long after the public health emergency has passed.

The White House has been in negotiations with major technology companies, including Google and Facebook, about potentially using aggregated and anonymous location data created by smartphone use, The Washington Post reported Tuesday, but those efforts have been kept largely from the public.

Sen. Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) sent a letter Thursday seeking answers about potential partnerships between the federal government and private companies.

“Although I agree that we must use technological innovations and collaboration with the private sector to combat the coronavirus, we cannot embrace action that represents a wholesale privacy invasion, particularly when it involves highly sensitive and personal location information,” Markey wrote to Michael Kratsios, the government’s chief technology officer. “I urge you to balance privacy with any data-driven solutions to the current public health crisis.”

The U.S. government has broad authority to request personal data in the case of a national emergency but does not have the legal authority, except in criminal investigations, to insist that companies turn it over, said Al Gidari, director of privacy at Stanford Law School’s Center for Internet and Society.

With appropriate safeguards, Gidari said, the potential use of location data to combat the coronavirus is “a real opportunity to do something positive with the technology and still protect people's privacy.”

The Israeli program is part of a push by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government to employ surveillance tools usually reserved for crime-fighting and counterterrorism in the effort to slow the spread of covid-19.

Earlier this week, the government approved the measure in a late-night telephone call, giving Israel’s Internal Security Agency, the Shin Bet, the power to use its advanced cyber-tracking capabilities to reach suspected carriers of the virus and monitor those meant to be in isolation. The government has not disclosed the exact criteria used in deciding whom to notify.

Israeli authorities said Thursday there were an estimated 677 confirmed cases of covid-19, with no reported deaths.

The government had already imposed tight restrictions, largely confining Israelis to their homes except for grocery buying and medical care.

Civil liberty groups and political opposition leaders condemned the cellphone tracking initiative as a draconian violation of privacy, one made unnecessary by the strict limits already in place.

With public gatherings of any kind prohibited, opponents of the program and what they say are other anti-democratic moves by Netanyahu's government organized a protest convoy Thursday. Hundreds of cars bearing posters and black flags headed for Jerusalem, according to local media reports, before being stopped by police outside the city.

The Supreme Court’s injunction came after an emergency hearing Thursday to consider a legal petition filed by advocacy groups against the tracking.

“These 400 notices show that every citizen of Israel can be surveilled anywhere at any minute in violation of the right to privacy and dignity,” said Suhad Bishara, a senior attorney for Adalah, the Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel, one of the groups that filed a petition. “The security services now have free hand.”

Hours after Netanyahu’s cabinet approved the controversial tracking program, opposition leader Benny Gantz tweeted: “These are exceptional times that, unfortunately, call for exceptional measures to save lives. That said, we cannot surrender transparency and oversight.”

The surveillance program has entangled Israel’s health crisis with its political crisis. Gantz on Monday was formally given the mandate to try to form the next government. But efforts by his Blue and White alliance to establish parliamentary committees and elect a new parliamentary speaker — replacing the chairman appointed by Netanyahu’s Likud party — were blocked this week by Likud, which insisted that the parliament observe the coronavirus restrictions.

Gantz and other critics maintain that Netanyahu is using the virus to undermine the country’s democratic process and slow the transition to a new government and parliament.

“So under pretext of fighting corona, he has closed the Israeli parliament, ordered people to stay in their homes, and is issuing whatever emergency decrees he wishes,” historian Yuval Noah Harari said in a tweet. “This is called a dictatorship.”

But defenders of the tracking program said the coronavirus epidemic is limiting traditional privacy rights for everyone.

“The contagious nature of this disease means that people’s freedom and civil liberty affects others. Normally we go outside and don’t hurt anyone, but in this situation we might,” said Eugene Kontorovich, director of the Jerusalem-based Kohelet Policy Forum and a law professor at George Mason University outside Washington. “Normally having our cellphone information kept private does not hurt anyone,” he said. “But if you carry the disease and the Health Ministry can’t contact those who you might have infected, then it is dangerous.”

In interviews with Israeli media, Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan said authorities would use the information only for warning those who might be infected and ordering them to self-quarantine. He said that the data would be destroyed.

Craig Timberg in Washington contributed to this report.

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Today’s coverage from Post correspondents around the world

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2020-03-20 17:22:45Z
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Trump administration announces US, Mexico limiting non-essential travel across border amid coronavirus - Fox News

The Trump administration on Friday announced sweeping new travel restrictions between U.S. and Mexico in the latest step to curb the spread of the coronavirus — it halted non-essential travel and moved to turn back any illegal immigrants trying to enter the country.

"The United States and Mexico have agreed to restrict non-essential travel across our shared border," Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said during a White House press briefing with other top officials.

TRUMP ADMINISTRATION, LAWMAKERS HUDDLE TO NEGOTIATE MASSIVE $1T STIMULUS, AMID CORONAVIRUS CRISIS

Officials emphasized that the restrictions would not affect lawful trade and commerce, as the administration seeks to keep the economic supply chain going amid the ongoing crisis.

Moments later, acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf announced that the Centers for Disease Control has directed the Department of Homeland Security to "suspend the introduction of all individuals without proper documentation" into the U.S. from both the northern and southern borders.

Those entering the country illegally between the ports of entry are frequently detained for a period of time, particularly if they claim asylum. But under this policy, they will be sent back immediately and not detained in a center where they could possibly spread or catch the highly contagious virus.

TRUMP ANNOUNCES SUSPENSION OF FEDERAL STUDENT LOAN PAYMENTS, STANDARDIZED TESTING REQUIREMENTS BECAUSE OF CORONAVIRUS

Wolf said the restrictions will go into place at midnight tonight, and that anyone caught entering the country illegally would immediately be returned to Mexico, Canada or a number of other countries from where they have originated. The restrictions come amid fears that a wave of migration could bring disease and overwhelm the American health care system.

“These measures will protect the health of all three nations and reduce the incentive for mass global migration that would badly deplete the health care resources needed for our people,” President Trump said.

Also during Friday's press conference, Trump announced that the administration would allow federal student loan borrowers to suspend their payments without penalty for at least 60 days, and that standardized test requirements would not be enforced for elementary and high school students amid the coronavirus pandemic.

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The press conference threatened to get derailed on a number of occasions. The president objected to one question by NBC News reporter Peter Alexander that he deemed "nasty" and called him a "terrible reporter." That led to a number of other reporters choosing instead to use their questions to ask both Trump and Pompeo about that remark. Trump refused to back off.

In another unusual moment, former press secretary Sean Spicer was called on to ask Trump a question.

Trump has slapped travel bans on China, Iran and the European Union. This week, Trump announced that the U.S. and Canada had agreed to stop all non-essential travel across the border -- that also goes into effect at midnight.

Trump said Friday the crisis threatens to “create a perfect storm that would spread infections to our border agents, migrants, and to the public at large. Left unchecked this would cripple our system, overwhelm the health care system and threaten national security."

A number of states have imposed significant restrictions on daily life. California and New York have issued orders for residents to stay at home, and businesses and schools have closed across the country.

The administration is also seeking to provide economic relief to Americans affected by the crisis. The Senate appears to be nearing agreement on a $1 trillion stimulus package that includes sending checks to Americans. Trump on Friday confirmed that Tax Day is being shifted to July 15.

As of Friday morning, the U.S. had 14,250 confirmed cases of coronavirus in all 50 states, including Washington, D.C. The U.S., so far, has seen 205 COVID-19-related deaths.

Fox News' Brooke Singman contributed to this report.

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2020-03-20 16:10:27Z
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