Disruption frenzy: Nations try to slow virus, aid economies
The administration of President
Increasingly worried about the economic fallout of the global shutdown, the
But it was everyday people who suffered most.
Aguirre said he and his wife, janitors at a
“If we don't work, we don't eat,” said Aguirre, who brought his two daughters along because schools were shuttered. He had already lost his second job, at a hotel, when tourism conferences began canceling a month ago.
In
German
On Monday, the EU issued guidelines to ease the flow of critical goods like food and medicine, while helping individual nations restrict non-essential travel.
But on Tuesday it was chaos on many borders with traffic backed up for dozens of kilometers (miles).
“We are all desperate, cold and sleepless here for a third day," said Janina Stukiene, who was stuck in
The line of cars and trucks in
French President
In
Among them was the 86-year-old diabetic grandmother of
“We feel totally helpless and devastated because my grandma spent her last week only with her husband and caretakers but no other relatives,” Ruiz said, adding that her main worry is now the health of her grandfather, who is 87 and remained by his wife during her last days.
The global number of cases worldwide exceeds 198,000, though 81,000 of them have recovered, mostly in
The virus causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough, for most people, but severe illness is more likely in the elderly and people with existing health problems. COVID-19 has killed over 7,900 people.
As the pandemic intensified in
Major Asian stock markets were higher Wednesday after
The
In
Among the measures,
In the
The pandemic roiled
Problems arose, including in
In
Some scientists, and many worried Britons, have said the government should have acted sooner.
Britain’s dramatic escalation of restrictions was sparked by new scientific evidence suggesting 250,000 people in the
The analysis, published by
And in
The city's bus service was canceled at
“Just now?" a maintenance man,
Sullivan reported from
The Associated Press receives support for health and science coverage from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s
Follow AP coverage of the virus outbreak at https://apnews.com/VirusOutbreak and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak


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