Pole vaulters Kendricks, Chiaraviglio hit by COVID, sending chill
through Games
Pole vaulters Sam Kendricks of the United States and German
Chiaraviglio of Argentina have been ruled out of the Olympics after
testing positive for COVID-19, rattling competitors.
The immediate knock-on effect was that members of the Australian
team were forced to isolate in their rooms as a precaution, but
resumed normal activities later on Thursday after negative tests
were confirmed.
Two people attending the Games from overseas have been admitted to
hospital with COVID-19, a Tokyo 2020 spokesperson said on Thursday,
as daily cases in the host city and Japan as a whole hit new highs.
The Japanese capital, where pandemic restrictions are mostly
voluntary outside the "Olympic bubble", announced a record 3,865
daily infections on Thursday, up from 3,177 a day earlier.
Daily cases nationwide topped 10,000 for the first time.
Australia's Sydney posts record daily rise in COVID-19 cases, seeks
military help
Australia's biggest city Sydney posted a record one-day rise in
local COVID-19 cases on Thursday and warned the outbreak would get
worse, as authorities sought military help to enforce a lockdown of
6 million people poised to enter its sixth week.
Australia has struggled to contain an outbreak of the highly
infectious Delta variant in and around Sydney in recent weeks, which
threatens to push the country's A$2 trillion ($1.5 trillion) economy
into a second recession in as many years.
"We can only assume that things are likely to get worse before they
get better given the quantity of people infectious in the
community," New South Wales Premier Gladys Berejiklian told
reporters in Sydney.
J&J says U.S. FDA agrees to extend shelf life of its COVID-19
vaccine
The U.S. Food & Drug Administration extended the shelf life for
Johnson & Johnson's single-shot COVID-19 vaccine to six months from
four-and-a-half months, the company said.
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The agency also said the
extension was applicable to batches that might
have expired prior to the decision provided they
were stored at the recommended temperature.
Emergent BioSolutions meanwhile said it would resume production of
J&J COVID-19 vaccine at its troubled Baltimore facility, where
operations were stopped in April after millions of doses were found
to be contaminated.
AstraZeneca CEO hopeful COVID-19 vaccine may still have role in U.S.
AstraZeneca still plans to seek U.S. approval for its COVID-19
vaccine even though the process there is taking longer than
expected, CEO Pascal Soriot said on Thursday.
The company's plans to submit applications for approval have been
pushed to the second half of this year after repeated delays because
of requests for large data from U.S. authorities.
It also hopes to settle a legal dispute with the European Union over
vaccine deliveries in the coming weeks, potentially ending a row
that has dogged the drug maker and Brussels this year.
France calls UK quarantine rules discriminatory, excessive
England's decision to keep quarantine measures for travellers coming
from France and not for those coming from other European Union
countries is discriminatory and not based on science, a French
minister said on Thursday.
Cuba says Iran to start producing one of its COVID-19 vaccines
Iran will next week become the first country outside of Cuba to
start producing one of the Communist-run island's homegrown COVID-19
vaccines on an industrial scale, Cuban state-run media said.
(Compiled by Joe Bavier; Editing by Bernadette Baum)
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