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World at war on virus as deaths soar again in Europe

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PARIS: The world stepped up its war on coronavirus as deaths soared again in Europe on Thursday, despite a sign of hope from China where zero new domestic cases were reported for the first time.


Spain’s death toll jumped by almost a third overnight while Italy and France were set to extend the lockdowns that are keeping tens of millions of people trapped in their homes.


Countries around the globe have tightened border controls and unleashed nearly a trillion dollars to prop up the teetering world economy, only to see the once-in-a-century pandemic seemingly spiral further out of control.


Across the planet, the death toll from the virus whose main symptoms are a dry cough and fever has risen to over 9,000 with more than 217,000 infections reported, according to an AFP tally based on official sources.


ITALY WORSENS


The pandemic is worsening elsewhere, with Italy appearing set to overtake China as the country where the most people are confirmed as having died from the COVID-19 disease.


Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said Italy’s national lockdown, which has been copied around Europe, would be prolonged to April 3, shattering hopes of a quick end to the crisis.


“We will not be able to return immediately to life as it was before,” he said.


France also mooted extending the two-week lockdown ordered this week by President Emmanuel Macron, as the Interior Minister blasted “idiots” who flout home confinement rules and put others at risk.


Spain, where coronavirus deaths jumped by nearly 30 per cent over the past 24 hours, is one of several countries that have begun requisitioning hotels for use as hospitals.


Hard-hit Iran also announced new fatalities and said it was granting early release to 10,000 prisoners to reduce numbers in jails.


The disease continued to hit high-profile figures with EU Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier and Monaco’s Prince Albert II among those testing positive.


‘ENEMY AGAINST HUMANITY’


The battle is only just beginning across the rest of the world, with the shadow of the virus lengthening across Africa.


The Nigerian mega-city of Lagos announced it would shut its schools while Burkina Faso confirmed the first death in sub-Saharan Africa.


Russia reported its first death and even the Pacific nation of Fiji said it had its first case.


The UN warned meanwhile that as nations bring in shutdowns and travel bans, some three billion people lack even the most basic weapons to protect themselves from the virus: soap and running water.


World Health Organization head Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus urged countries to “come together as one against a common enemy: an enemy against humanity”.


Countries are taking increasingly drastic steps to stem infections, with Australia and New Zealand banning nonresidents from arriving, and India imposing a one-day nationwide curfew.


Britain, where Prime Minister Boris Johnson had initially chosen a different path, closed dozens of London Underground stations and shut down schools, although his government denied reports it was about to lock down the capital.


— AFP


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