France's Macron tests positive
French President Emmanuel Macron has tested positive for COVID-19,
his office said on Thursday, although it was not yet clear where he
had contracted the virus.
"The President of the Republic has been diagnosed positive for
COVID-19 today," his office said in a statement. "This diagnosis was
made following a PCR test performed at the onset of the first
symptoms."
The presidency said he would isolate for the next seven days and
would continue to run the country remotely.
Vaccinations to start across EU from Dec. 27

All European Union member states plan to start vaccinations against
COVID-19 from Dec. 27, German Health Minister Jens Spahn said on
Thursday.
"In Germany we will start, if the approval comes as planned, on Dec.
27. The other countries in the EU want to be able to start and want
to start from Dec. 27," he said ahead of an online meeting with
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and executives from vaccine maker
BioNTech.
As an EU member, Germany is obliged, by and large, to wait for the
European Medicines Agency to approve the vaccine. The EMA is
expected to make an announcement on Dec. 21.
Biden to get vaccine next week
President-elect Joe Biden will get the coronavirus vaccine as soon
as next week, transition officials said on Wednesday, as U.S.
authorities try to build public confidence in the vaccine
Vice President Mike Pence will get the vaccine on Friday, the White
House said. The vaccine will become widely available to the public
next year.
[to top of second column] |
 Tokyo says strain on hospitals
is severe
Tokyo said on Thursday the strain on its medical
system was severe, raising its alert level to
the highest of four stages as the number of
cases spiked to a record daily high of 822.
A health official said it had become difficult to balance the care
of COVID-19 patients with regular ones as hospital beds filled up,
assigning a "red" alert for medical preparedness for the first time.
"Medical service providers have exhausted all spare resources,"
Masataka Inokuchi, vice chair of the Tokyo Medical Association, told
a coronavirus monitoring committee meeting. "Reducing the number of
(COVID-19) patients will be the only way to go."
Israel to halt sweeping cellphone surveillance
Israel will halt its cellphone tracking of coronavirus cases next
month except for carriers who refuse epidemiological questioning or
in the event of a surge in contagions, a government ministry said.
Used on and off since March, the Shin Bet counter-terrorism agency's
surveillance technology checks confirmed carriers' locations against
other cellphones nearby to determine who they came into contact
with.
The system has faced challenges in courts and parliament because of
privacy concerns and questions about its efficacy.
(Compiled by Linda Noakes; Editing by Frances Kerry)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
 |