Traffic jams signal return to normal in New York
New York City residents, gradually emerging from more than 100 days
of coronavirus lockdown, celebrated an easing of social-distancing
restrictions by shopping at reopened stores, dining at outdoor cafes
and getting their first haircuts in months.
The usual traffic jams clogged city streets, and the sound of
honking cars brought a welcome sense of a return to the ordinary.
But even as New Yorkers returned to some semblance of normalcy,
spikes in coronavirus infection rates elsewhere around the country
worried public health experts.
Chief among the latest hotspots was Florida, one of the last states
to impose stay-at-home restrictions.
Pig trial shows promise
A trial of AstraZeneca's experimental COVID-19 vaccine in pigs has
found that two doses of the Oxford University-developed shot
produced a greater antibody response than a single dose, scientists
said on Tuesday.
Research released by Britain's Pirbright Institute found that giving
an initial prime dose followed by a booster dose of the shot
elicited a greater immune response than a single dose - suggesting a
two-dose approach may be more effective in getting protection
against the disease.
Pigs are a useful research model for this type of vaccine and other
trials have been able to predict vaccine outcomes in humans,
particularly in studies of flu.
Meanwhile, French drugmaker Sanofi said it expects to get approval
for the potential COVID-19 vaccine it is developing with Britain's
GlaxoSmithKline by the first half of next year, faster than
previously anticipated.
Local lockdown in Germany
The premier of the western German state of North Rhine-Westphalia
said he was putting the Guetersloh area back into lockdown until
June 30 after a coronavirus outbreak at a meatpacking plant there.
Guetersloh is the first area in Germany to go back into lockdown
after the authorities began gradually lifting restrictive measures
at the end of April.
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More than 1,500 workers at a meat processing plant in Guetersloh had
tested positive for the coronavirus, plus some of their family
members and 24 people who had no connection to the plant.
The coronavirus reproduction rate in Germany is estimated at 2.76,
probably mainly due to local outbreaks.
UK death toll tops 54,000
The United Kingdom's suspected COVID-19 death toll has hit 54,089,
according to a Reuters tally of official data sources that underline
the country's status as one of the worst hit in the world.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson is due on Tuesday to announce cinemas,
museums and galleries in England can reopen next month to try to
revitalise the economy.
But the large death toll means criticism over his handling of the
pandemic - that Britain was too slow to impose a lockdown or protect
the elderly in care home - is likely to persist.
International haj pilgrims barred
Saudi Arabia said it would bar arrivals from abroad for the haj this
year due to the novel coronavirus, making this the first year in
modern times that Muslims from around the world have not been
allowed to make the pilgrimage to Mecca, which all Muslims aim to
perform at least once in their lives.
Some 2.5 million pilgrims typically visit the holiest sites of Islam
in Mecca and Medina for the week-long haj. Official data shows Saudi
Arabia earns around $12 billion a year from the haj and the lesser,
year-round pilgrimage known as umrah. International arrivals for
umrah pilgrimages have also been suspended until further notice.
(For Reuters' suite of interactive graphics on the coronavirus,
click https://tmsnrt.rs/2GVwIyw)
(Compiled by Linda Noakes; editing by Barbara Lewis)
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