Coronavirus Global Updates 22 September ::: After India talks tough, UK says ‘Covishield qualifies as approved vaccine’
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Coronavirus Global Updates 22 September ::: After India talks tough, UK says ‘Covishield qualifies as approved vaccine’
Zimbabwe COVID19 Update
COVID-19 update: As at 21 September 2021, Zimbabwe had 128 464 confirmed cases, including 121 440 recoveries and 4 576 deaths. To date, a total of 2 976 512 people have been vaccinated against COVID-19.
After India talks tough, UK says ‘Covishield qualifies as approved vaccine’
Coronavirus Variants and Vaccinations, Coronavirus Active Cases in India Today: First, some good news – India continues to report less than 30,000 cases for the second day running. With 26,964 people testing positive in the last 24 hours, India witnessed more recoveries than new cases, Wednesday’s health bulletin says. There were 383 Covid deaths across India in the span of a single day, the government data says. In terms of active cases, the nation’s current caseload is 3,01,989. This is the lowest the country has seen in the last 186 days. The national recovery rate has been registered at 97.77 per cent.
Now, some update on the global vaccination, While India’s latest decision to restart the exports of the Covid-19 vaccines has been hailed by the WHO and other nations, there is a ‘recognition contagion’ brewing. Global powers are introducing or reenforcing clauses that don’t recognise the Covid shots from other nations. India, the biggest vaccine maker in the world, is finding it hard to convince others to recognise the Covishield jabs. A top MEA official has warned that there will be ‘reciprocal’ measures if nations such as the UK don’t recognise SII-produced Covishield. Meanwhile, Washington has still not clarified if it would accept the AstraZeneca shots. This kind of policy not only causes confusion but also hampers the process towards greater vaccine equity.
Puducherry reports 117 new COVID-19 cases, 2 deaths
Puducherry posted 117 fresh coronavirus cases during the last 24 hours ending 10 am on Wednesday raising the overall tally to 1,25,735. The fresh cases were identified at the end of examination of 5,097 samples and the cases were spread over Puducherry 73, Karaikal 29, Yanam one and Mahe 14. Two more persons hailing from Karaikal region and having co morbidities including diabetes succumbed to the viral infection raising overall toll to 1,834. Director of Health and Family Welfare Services G Sriramulu said the active cases were 945 of whom 142 were in hospitals and the remaining 803 were in home isolation. While 92 patients recovered and were discharged during last twenty-four hours the overall recoveries stood at 1,22,956. The Department of Health has tested 17.51 lakh samples so far and found 14.85 lakh out of them to be negative. - PTI
U.S. to donate an additional 500 mln COVID-19 vaccines
The United States plans to donate an additional 500 million COVID-19 vaccines made by Pfizer Inc and BioNTech SE to nations around the world, lifting the total the country is sharing to more than 1 billion doses, according to a source familiar with the plans.President Joe Biden is hosting a virtual summit on COVID-19 on Wednesday and is likely to announce the new pledge then.Earlier on Tuesday, Biden told United Nations General Assembly that the United States had put more than $15 billion toward the global response to COVID-19 in order to fund more than 160 million COVID-19 vaccines in other countries.The U.S. had already purchased 500 million doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine and donated them through the global vaccine-sharing platform COVAX.- Reuters
Brazil's health minister tests positive for COVID-19 in New York
Brazil's Health Minister Marcelo Queiroga tested positive for COVID-19 hours after accompanying President Jair Bolsonaro to the United Nations General Assembly in New York on Tuesday, the government said.Queiroga will remain in New York in quarantine, the government's communications office said."The minister is doing well," the statement said. It added that the rest of the delegation tested negative for the virus.Queiroga told CNN Brasil that he had worn a mask the entire time that he was in the U.N. building.Bolsonaro, a vaccine skeptic, defied U.N. rules that asked all those attending the assembly to be vaccinated. He has bragged about not getting vaccinated.In his speech to world leaders at a meeting where the global coronavirus pandemic was top of the agenda, Bolsonaro said his government did not support the use of a vaccine passport and stood by treatment of the virus with unproven drugs such as the anti-malarial hydroxychloroquine.He said Brazil's vaccination campaign against COVID-19 had been successful and that all adults who wanted a vaccine would be fully inoculated by November. – Reuters
Andaman & Nicobar reports 5 new COVID-19 cases
Andaman and Nicobar Islands reported five new COVID-19 cases, three more the previous day's count, pushing the tally in the union territory to 7,607, a health official said on Wednesday. All the five new cases were detected during testing at the Veer Savarkar Airport here, he said. Passengers arriving by flight have to undergo a mandatory RT-PCR test at the airport before they are allowed entry into the islands. The archipelago now has 17 active COVID-19 cases, of which 16 cases are in the South Andaman district and one in North and Middle Andaman district, the official said. Three more persons recuperated from the disease in the last 24 hours, taking the total number of recoveries to 7,461, the official said. - PTI
Chinese city shuts down over new outbreak worry
Officials in the northeast China city of Harbin say national level health officials have been sent to the city to deal with what may be a coronavirus outbreak. The city of 9.5 million people reported three infection cases Wednesday, a day after discovering a first case of community transmission. After the initial finding, authorities started mass testing and closed schools. The city also ordered businesses like mahjong parlors, cinemas and gyms to shut. City authorities say residents must display a negative virus test to be able to leave for only essential travel. Otherwise, people are being told to stay home. China has been able to keep the virus from transmitting widely within its borders through a costly and strict strategy that relies on lockdowns and mass testing. - AP
German officials fear anti-mask radicalization after killing
Senior officials in Germany have expressed shock over the killing of a young gas station clerk who was shot dead at the weekend by a man opposed to the country's pandemic restrictions. A 49-year-old German was arrested in the fatal shooting of the clerk Saturday in the western town of Idar-Oberstein. The suspect is being held on suspicion of murder. Authorities Tuesday said the man told officers he acted ‘out of anger’ after being refused service by the clerk for not wearing a mask while trying to buy beer at the gas station. ‘He further stated during interrogation that he rejected the measures against the coronavirus,’ the Trier police department said in a statement. A requirement to wear masks in stores is among the measures in place in Germany to stop the spread of the virus. ‘I'm deeply shocked,’ said Malu Dreyer, the governor of Rhineland-Palatinate state. ‘My thoughts are with the family and friends of the victim.’ - AP
China keeps virus at bay at high cost ahead of Olympics
The Beizhong International Travel Agency in the eastern city of Tianjin has had only one customer since coronavirus outbreaks that began in July prompted Chinese leaders to renew city lockdowns and travel controls. Most of China is virus-free, but the abrupt, severe response to outbreaks has left would-be tourists jittery about travelling to places they might be barred from leaving. That has hit consumer spending, hindering efforts to keep the economic recovery on track. China's ‘zero tolerance’ strategy of trying to isolate every case and stop transmission has helped keep the country where the virus first was detected in late 2019 largely free of disease. But the public and businesses are paying a steep price. Foreign athletes are due to compete in the Winter Olympics that start February 4 in Beijing and the nearby city of Zhangjiakou, but the government has yet to say whether restrictions that prevent most foreigners from entering China will be relaxed to allow spectators in. ‘Two years ago, this was our busiest season,’ said the Beizhong agency manager, Wang Hui. - AP
India's decision to resume COVID-19 vaccine shipments important development: WHO chief
World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has hailed India's decision to resume COVID-19 vaccine exports as an 'important development' in support of the goal to reach 40 per cent vaccination in all countries by end of the year. India on Monday said that it will resume export of surplus COVID-19 vaccines in the fourth quarter of 2021 under the ''Vaccine Maitri'' programme and to meet its commitment to the COVAX global pool. Health Minister Mansukh Mandaviya, however, said that vaccinating Indian citizens remains the topmost priority of the government. ‘Thank you Health Minister @mansukhmandviya for announcing #India will resume crucial #COVID19 vaccine shipments to #COVAX in October. This is an important development in support of reaching the 40% vaccination target in all countries by the end of the year,’ WHO Director-General Ghebreyesus said in a tweet to Mandaviya with the hashtag vaccine equity. India stopped the export of COVID-19 vaccines after the second wave of the pandemic hit the country in April this year. - PTI
Here are September 22nd updates
Thane has reported 258 new cases of coronavirus, raising the infection count in the Maharashtra district to 5,56,855, an official said on Wednesday. Besides these new cases recorded on Tuesday, the virus also claimed the lives of seven more people, which pushed the death toll in the district to 11,380. The COVID-19 mortality rate in Thane stood at 2.04 per cent, he added. In neighbouring Palghar district, the COVID-19 case count has gone up to 1,35,459, while the death toll stands at 3,273, another official said. PTI
Active infections in Tamil Nadu near 17,000; state adds 1,647 new cases
Tamil Nadu has added 1,647 new Covid-19 infections, including a returnee from Andhra Pradesh, pushing the overall caseload to 26,48,688 till date, while 19 people succumbed to the virus, taking the toll to 35,379, the Health department said on Tuesday. Recoveries were lesser than new infections with 1,619 people getting discharged in the last 24 hours, aggregating to 25,96,316 leaving 16,993 active infections, a medical bulletin said. (PTI)
Goa records 107 new coronavirus cases, 2 deaths
Goa's coronavirus caseload went up by 107 and reached 1,75,690 on Tuesday, while two more patients succumbed to the infection in the state, a health department official said. The death toll rose to 3,297, he said. The number of recovered cases in the state rose to 1,71,507 after 29 patients were discharged from hospitals in the last 24 hours, the official said. (PTI)
Maharashtra adds 3,131 COVID-19 cases, 70 deaths, 4,021 recoveries
Maharashtra on Tuesday reported 3,131 new COVID-19 cases and 70 fresh fatalities, while 4,021 patients recovered from the infection in the state, a health department official said. With these additions, the tally of COVID-19 cases in the state rose to 65,27,629, while the death toll increased to 1,38,616 and the number of recoveries shot up to 63,44,744, he said. Maharashtra now has 40,712 active cases, the official said. (PTI)
Gujarat reports 14 new COVID-19 cases, zero death, 14 recoveries
Gujarat on Tuesday reported 14 new coronavirus cases, raising its infection tally to 8,25,751, while no fresh death due to the disease was reported in the state, the health department said. The state's COVID-19 death toll remained unchanged at 10,082, said the department in a release. Also, 14 patients were discharged from hospitals during the day, pushing the number of recovered cases in the state to 8,15,536, it said. Gujarat now has 133 patients under treatment, three of whom are in critical condition, the department said. (PTI)
MP records 8 new COVID-19 cases, zero death; active tally at 90
The COVID-19 tally in Madhya Pradesh rose to 7,92,410 on Tuesday with the addition of eight fresh cases, while no new death due to the infection was reported in the state, a health department official said. The death toll remained unchanged at 10,517, he added. The recovery count stands at 7,81,803, leaving the state with 90 active cases. With 61,098 swab samples examined during the day, the number of tests in MP went up to 1,79,79,278, the official added. (PTI)
Mumbai reports 352 new COVID-19 cases, 1 death; tests top 1 crore
Mumbai reported 352 new coronavirus cases on Tuesday and one fresh fatality, the lowest death count in three weeks, while 363 patients recovered from the infection, a civic official said. The metropolis also crossed the milestone of one crore COVID-19 tests. Mumbai reported less than 400 daily COVID-19 cases after a gap of six days and witnessed only one fatality for the first time since August 31. (PTI)
China keeps coronavirus at bay ahead of Olympics
China's 'zero tolerance' strategy of trying to isolate every case and stop transmission of the coronavirus has kept the country of 1.4 billion people largely free of the disease. But the public and businesses are paying a steep price. The government has renewed city lockdowns and travel controls in some areas to quash outbreaks that began in July. Most of China is open for travel, but tourists are reluctant to risk getting caught in a lockdown. That led to a slump in August consumer spending. (AP)
244 new COVID-19 cases, one death in Telangana
Telangana on Tuesday logged 244 fresh COVID-19 cases, pushing the tally to 6,63,906, while the toll rose to 3,907 with one more fatality. The Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC) accounted for the most number of cases with 72, followed by Karimnagar and Nalgonda (19 each) districts, a state government bulletin said, providing details as of 5.30 PM, a health department bulletin said. (PTI)
OECD urges rich nations to share vaccines to even-up growth
A leading international economic watchdog urged developed countries to put more effort into providing low-income countries with coronavirus vaccines in order to ensure that the global recovery from the pandemic is more even. In its latest assessment of the state of the global economy, the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said Tuesday that the global recovery from the shock of the pandemic is faster than it anticipated a year ago. (PTI)
J-K reports 145 COVID-19 cases, two deaths
Jammu and Kashmir recorded 145 COVID-19 cases and two fatalities on Tuesday, taking its infection tally to 3,28,214 and the death toll to 4,419, officials said. Of the fresh cases, 24 were reported from Jammu division and 121 from Kashmir division, the officials said. They said Srinagar district recorded the highest number of 56 new cases, followed by Budgam with 19. (PTI)
818 new COVID-19 cases, 21 deaths in Karnataka
Karnataka logged 818 new COVID-19 cases and 21 deaths on Tuesday, taking the total number of infections to 29,69,361 and the toll to 37,648. The day also saw 1,414 discharges, taking the total number of recoveries in the state so far to 29,17,944. Out of the total number of new cases reported, 359 were from Bengaluru Urban, as the city saw 381 discharges and eight deaths. (PTI)
India govt won't buy Pfizer, Moderna vaccines amid local output –sources
India's government will not buy COVID-19 shots from Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna, three government sources told Reuters, mainly because domestic output of more affordable and easier-to-store vaccines has jumped. That essentially means the globally popular vaccines, which their makers have pledged not to sell to private parties during the pandemic, will not be available for now in the world's two most populous countries - China and India. (Reuters)
43 new cases take Sikkim's COVID tally to 31,014
Sikkim on Tuesday reported 43 new COVID-19 cases, 27 more than the previous day, with the tally increasing to 31,014, according to a health department bulletin. East Sikkim registered 29 new cases, followed by eight in West Sikkim, five in South Sikkim and one in North Sikkim. The death toll remained at 380 as no new fatality due to the infection was reported in the last 24 hours, the bulletin said. (PTI)
SC to list for hearing PIL on regulating cost of treatment of COVID-19 patients in private hospitals
The Supreme Court Tuesday said the PIL, seeking direction for regulating the cost of treatment of COVID-19 at private hospitals across the country, would be listed for hearing before an appropriate bench. A bench headed by Chief Justice N V Ramana was urged by lawyer Sachin Jain that the plea needed listing for the hearing. The lawyer said the apex court had earlier directed the Centre to call a meeting of Health Ministers and senior officials of States and Union Territories to consider an issue of treatment cost for marginalised sections of society in view of the pandemic. (PTI)
Delhi reports 39 new COVID cases
Delhi reports 39 new COVID cases and 18 recoveries in the last 24 hours Active cases: 400Total recoveries: 14,13,071Death toll: 25,085 (no new deaths today)
Active Covid-19 cases drop below 14,000 in AP
Active coronavirus cases reduced by 483 to drop below the 14,000 mark in Andhra Pradesh as the state reported 1,651 recoveries in 24 hours ending 9 am on Tuesday while 1,179 fresh positives were added. Also, 11 COVID-19-infected persons succumbed in a day, taking the overall toll so far to 14,089, a health department bulletin said. It said the state now has 13,905 active cases. The gross positives climbed to 20,40,708 and recoveries to 20,12,714. (PTI)
Serum Institute of India to supply nearly 22 cr doses of Covishield vaccine to Centre in Oct
The Serum Institute of India has informed the Centre that it will be able to supply around 22 crore doses of Covishield in October as the Union government has announced resuming export of surplus Covid vaccines in the coming fourth quarter under the 'Vaccine Maitri' programme, official sources said. In a communication to the Centre on Monday, Prakash Kumar Singh, Director, Government and Regulatory Affairs at Serum Institute of India (SII), said the firm has enhanced its production capacity of Covishield and it will be able to supply 21.90 crore doses in October to Government of India and private hospitals. (PTI)
French president welcomes India's decision to resume vaccine exports to COVAX
French President Emmanuel Macron & PM Modi held talks over phone. The two leaders discussed the situation in Afghanistan and agreed to coordinate ahead of multilateral summits such as G20 and COP26. Prez Emmanuel Macron warmly welcomed India's decision to resume vaccine exports to COVAX: Emmanuel Lenain, Ambassador of France to India (ANI)
R-value drops below 1 in mid-September
The R-value, or reproductive number, for COVID-19 in India dropped from 1.17 in August end to 0.92 in mid September, indicating that the spread of the infection across the country has slowed down, according to researchers. However, the R-values of some major cities, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Bengaluru, are over 1. The R-value of Delhi and Pune are below 1. (PTI)
HC gives nod to HPC for compensation for death due to oxygen shortage during COVID
The Delhi High Court Tuesday said it saw no difficulty in the constitution of a high powered committee (HPC) by the AAP government to probe the deaths caused by an alleged medical oxygen shortage during the second wave of COVID-19 pandemic. The court, dealing with a plea to operationalise the HPC, noted Delhi government's stand that the committee would not attribute any fault to any hospital and any compensation will be paid and absorbed by the government alone. It further recorded that as per Delhi government, the criteria for determining compensation will be open to scrutiny and its task would not overlap with that of a sub-group constituted by the Supreme Court on allocation and utilisation of oxygen. “In light of the aforesaid, we see no difficulty in the HPC constituted by GNCTD in discharging its assigned role,” said a bench of Justices Vipin Sanghi and Jasmeet Singh which opined that it was not necessary to await the order of the Supreme Court in relation to the grant of ex gratia compensation in terms of guidelines issued by National Disaster Management Authority. (PTI)
Andhra reports 1,179 new Covid-19 cases, 11 deaths
Andhra Pradesh reports 1,179 new <https://twitter.com/hashtag/COVID19?src=hash> #COVID19 cases, 1,651 recoveries and 11 deaths in the last 24 hoursTotal cases: 20,40,708Total recoveries: 20,12,714Death toll: 14,089Active cases: 13,905 (ANI)
Poland recommends COVID-19 booster shot for people over 50
Poland will recommend a booster dose of the COVID-19 vaccine for people over 50 as well as healthcare workers, a deputy health minister said on Tuesday. Waldemar Kraska said the booster would be administered at least 6 months after the second shot. A third dose was already recommended earlier for the immuno-compromised. (Reuters)
Booster dose of Covid shot prompts strong response, says J&J
Johnson & Johnson released data showing that a booster dose to its one-shot coronavirus vaccine provides a strong immune response months after people receive a first dose. J&J said in statement Tuesday that it ran two early studies in people previously given its vaccine and found that a second dose produced an increased antibody response in adults from age 18 to 55. The study's results haven't yet been peer-reviewed. “A booster dose of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine further increases antibody responses among study participants who had previously received our vaccine,” said Dr. Mathai Mammen, global head of research and development at J&J. (AP)
Ukraine tightens COVID-19 lockdown restrictions from Sept 23 –PM
A Ukrainian government commission decided on Tuesday to tighten coronavirus lockdown restrictions from Sept. 23 as the number of new infections has increased sharply, Prime Minister Denys Shmygal said. Ukraine lifted lockdown restrictions as cases dropped over the summer but has now imposed a nationwide 'yellow' code which restricts mass events and limits the occupancy rates of gyms, cinemas and other culture venues. (Reuters)
J&J says second shot boosts protection for moderate-severe COVID-19 to 94%
Johnson & Johnson said Tuesday a second shot of its COVID-19 vaccine given about two months after the first increased its effectiveness to 94% in the United States against moderate to severe forms of the disease. That compares to 70% protection with a single dose. The data will help J&J make its case to U.S. regulators for a booster shot even as the company stresses the durability of its single-shot vaccine as a tool to ease the global pandemic. President Joe Biden is pushing for booster shots in the face of surging hospitalizations caused by the Delta variant and J&J, the only drugmaker with a single-shot COVID-19 vaccine approved in the United States, has been under pressure to produce evidence on the effectiveness of an additional dose. The company has now "generated evidence that a booster shot further increases protection against COVID-19," Dr. Paul Stoffels, J&J’s chief scientific officer, said in a statement. (Reuters)
Vaccination process is halted today in Rajkot due to some technical reasons
The vaccination process is halted today due to some technical reasons but will resume from tomorrow onwards and will try to vaccinate all the people earliest: Pradiv Dav, Mayor Rajkot (ANI)
PM Modi to participate in Covid-19 Global Summit hosted by US President Biden tomorrow
PM Modi will participate in the COVID19 Global Summit hosted by US President Biden tomorrow: Foreign Secretary HV Shringla (ANI)
Khurda accounts for over 43% of 462 new COvid-19 cases in Odisha
Khurda district continued to report the highest number of new cases in Odisha, registering over 43 per cent of 462 fresh infections on Tuesday which pushed the state's caseload to 10,21,216, a health official said. Odisha's coronavirus death toll surged to 8,146 as five fresh fatalities were reported. A total of 268 new cases were reported in quarantine centres, while 194 infections were detected during contact tracing, he said. Seventy new patients are children. The rate of infection in the 0-18 age group slightly dipped to 15.15 per cent from 15.49 per cent on Monday. As many as 201 new patients, or 43.50 per cent of the total daily spike, are from Khurda under which Bhubaneswar falls. Jagatsinghpur trailed distantly with 31 infections followed by 30 in Cuttack. Khurda has 2,351 of the 5,351 active cases in Odisha. It has also registered 1,488 fatalities, including 1,015 in Bhubaneswar alone. As many as 10,07,666 people have recovered from the disease so far, including 600 in the last 24 hours. Fifty-three patients have died due to comorbidities so far. (PTI)
Covid vaccines safe, effective for cancer patients, studies find
People with cancer have an appropriate, protective immune response to COVID-19 vaccines without experiencing any more side-effects than the general population, researchers said on Tuesday. Evidence presented virtually to a global audience at the annual congress of the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO), suggests that a third "booster" shot could further increase the level of protection among this patient population. Patients with cancer were excluded from the clinical trials conducted to develop the COVID-19 vaccines and support their authorisation for use. The questions of whether the vaccines are safe in this vulnerable population and whether they provide adequate protection against severe forms of COVID-19 to individuals whose immune system may be weakened by various anticancer medicines had until now been left open. The first study explored the potential impact of chemotherapy and immunotherapy on the protection afforded by vaccination against COVID-19. (PTI)
Kerala govt to consider reopening of cinemas
After schools, the Kerala government is mulling reopening theatres and auditoriums in the southern state, which have remained shut for months following the spread of COVID-19 pandemic. State Minister for Cultural Affairs and Fisheries, Saji Cheriyan said the government would consider its reopening in the next phase. "The current situation in the state is comparatively better. Of course, we are thinking about its reopening. After reaching an understanding, a decision will be taken in this regard soon," he told reporters here. The minister pointed out that the test positivity rate (TPR) of COVID-19 cases in the state showed a decline in recent days. - PTI
Thai campaign to vaccinate schoolchildren makes progress
Health officials in the Thai capital made headway Tuesday in their effort to vaccinate children against the coronavirus, giving shots of the Pfizer vaccine to students aged 12 to 18 with underlying diseases. Vaccinations for that age bracket were first offered last month through hospitals, but now are arranged by schools. A separate campaign by a medical research institute on Monday began inoculating children aged 10 to 18 with China's Sinopharm vaccine. On Tuesday, 1,500 students received shots of the Pfizer vaccine, 800 for the first time and 700 as a follow-up to their first shot in August. Bangkok officials have asked the Health Ministry to provide more Pfizer vaccine to inoculate all children aged 12 to 18 in the capital city, said city Gov. Aswin Kwanmuang. Many schools have been closed for onsite learning since last December, and Aswin said he does not want to allow them to reopen until 70per cent of a total of more than 1 million students are vaccinated. He hopes to reach that goal in November if adequate vaccine supplies are available. - AP
INVESTORS DIARY 2021
Company
Event
Venue
Date & Time
Star Africa
AGM
virtual
September 23 -11am
National Unity Day
December 22
Christmas Day
December 25
Boxing Day
December 26
Public Holiday in lieu of Boxing Day falling on a Sunday
December 27
Companies under Cautionary
ART
PPC
Starafrica
Fidelity
Turnall
Medtech
Zimre
Nampak Zimbabwe
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