BRUSSELS: Europe crossed more than three million Coronavirus cases
BRUSSELS: Europe crossed more than three million
coronavirus cases on Thursday as EU lawmakers examined a massive aid package
for their pandemic-ravaged economies and the UN called for a basic income for
the poorest to help slow the spread.
The continent now accounts for a fifth of the world’s
total cases of more than 15 million and remains the hardest hit in terms of
deaths, with 206,633 out of 627,307 worldwide.
The European Parliament was meanwhile examining a
massive recovery package hammered out at a hard-fought summit that saw fiscally
disciplined nations oppose huge aid grants to coronavirus-hit countries such as
Spain and Italy.
The 750-billion-euro post-coronavirus recovery plan is
tied with the EU’s long-term budget.
EU chief Charles Michel said the total stimulus would
reach 1.8 trillion euros ($2.2 trillion).
“This moment, it’s my conviction, is pivotal in
European history. We acted fast and with urgency,” Michel told the European
Parliament.
“Europe’s response is greater than that of the United States
or China,” to fight the coronavirus, which has ravaged the global economy and
sent millions into dire poverty, he said.
The UN called for a temporary basic income for nearly
three billion of the world’s poorest people.
Funding of $199 billion per month would provide 2.7
billion people with a temporary basic income and the “means to buy food and pay
for health and education expenses”, the UN Development Programme said.
“Bailouts and recovery plans cannot only focus on big
markets and big business. A Temporary Basic Income might enable governments to
give people in lockdown a financial lifeline,” said UNDP Administrator Achim
Steiner.
United Nations projections have warned the virus could
kill 1.67 million people in 30 low-income countries.
Signs are emerging in many parts of the world that the
virus quickly springs back when lockdown measures are lifted.
Australia, Belgium, Hong Kong and the Japanese capital
Tokyo had all used restrictive measures to successfully beat outbreaks earlier
in the pandemic, but all are now facing an upsurge in cases.
Belgium on Thursday made masks mandatory in outdoor
markets and busy areas.
Anyone venturing out in Australia’s second-biggest
city Melbourne was also ordered to wear a mask.
“These measures are not advice, they are orders,”
Belgian Prime Minister Sophie Wilmes said of the move, which comes into effect
on Saturday.
“Announcing a strengthening of the rules is a hard
blow for our morale, but we’d prefer to take these measures today than to regret
it tomorrow,” she said.
In Melbourne, local resident Adam Ozmen added: “We
should go to... whatever is necessary to just eliminate the thing and go back
to what’s left of our normal lives.” South Africa’s Medical Research Council
has reported a 60 percent increase in overall numbers of natural deaths in
recent weeks, suggesting a much higher toll of coronavirus-related fatalities
in Africa’s worst-hit nation.
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