- The United States is turning its back on the COVID-19 Vaccines Global Access Facility (COVAX), a global effort to develop and distribute a coronavirus vaccine that is being led by the World Health Organization (WHO).
- The pandemic has pushed Australia into a recession for the first time since 1991 after the country reported a second-quarter drop in GDP that was the biggest since records began.
- The latest data from Johns Hopkins University shows more than 25.7 million people around the world have been diagnosed with the coronavirus, and 857,015 have died. More than 17 million people have recovered.
Here are all the latest updates:
Wednesday, September 2
05:30 GMT – Hong Kong hospital authority reports two COVID-19 deaths
Hong Kong’s Hospital Authority spokesperson says two people confirmed with COVID-19 died on Wednesday morning.
The two patients were a 66-year-old man admitted to Yan Chai Hospital on August 2 with a persistent fever and cough, and a 79-year-old man who had been in United Christian Hospital since August 9 who had underlying health issues.
04:50 GMT – Hong Kong to relax some coronavirus curbs
The government in Hong Kong is expected to announce later tonight a relaxation of some coronavirus curbs.
Public service broadcaster RTHK says fitness centres and massage parlours will be allowed to open with some restrictions, while restaurants will be able to open longer for customers wanting to dine in.
The territory, which has just started a mass-testing campaign, is expected to announce just eight cases of the disease on Wednesday, the broadcaster said.
The #HongKong government is set to relax some #Covid social distancing measures like extending dine-in services till 10pm and allow fitness centres as well as massage parlours to reopen https://t.co/Cj7VFC2UZl
— RTHK English News (@rthk_enews) September 2, 2020
04:20 GMT – Australia’s AFL Grand Final to be held outside Melbourne in historic first
The Australian Football League’s Grand Final is to be held outside Melbourne, and at night, for the first time in its history as Australia’s second biggest city battles a resurgence of coronavirus.
The highlight of the Australian Rules football season is usually played on a late September afternoon at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in front of 100,000 fans.
This year it will take place in Brisbane, the capital of the state of Queensland, on October 24.
04:00 GMT – Nike for chicken: Filipinos turn to bartering
Scores of online bartering sites have popped up in the Philippines to help people struggling to make ends meet.
Many people are trying to swap possessions – from kitchen appliances to branded goods – for food.
“It’s so difficult nowadays,” Lorraine Imperio, a mother of two who swapped some Nike shoes for a chicken, told AFP news agency. “You don’t know where you’ll get the money to settle the bills for groceries.”
AFP estimates about 98 online bartering groups have appeared across the archipelago with tens of thousands of members. Searches for ‘barter food’ on Google have also soared, and there has been an increase in bartering groups on Facebook, too.
03:10 GMT – BTS movie postponed in South Korea after virus cases surge
A documentary on the K-pop band BTS has been postponed because of the recent surge in coronavirus cases in the country.
Big Hit Entertainment, the band’s agency, says Break the Silence: The Movie, which was originally scheduled for a September release will be delayed indefinitely, according to Yonhap News Agency.
South Korea reported 267 new cases on Wednesday, the 21st consecutive day of triple-digit increases.
The Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says authorities were unable to identify the transmission route in 24.3 percent of patients over the past two weeks.
02:00 GMT – US sends rapid COVID tests to states for schools
The White House says it will send most of its newly-purchased 150 million rapid response COVID-19 tests to the states for schools, day care centres and emergency services.
The tests can give a result within 15 minutes and cost $5.
US President Donald Trump is pushing schools to reopen but many districts are reluctant to do so while the virus continues to circulate.
In New York, Mayor Bill de Blasio has reached an agreement with teachers’ unions for phased resumption of classes with physical teaching resuming on September 21.
I couldn’t have more confidence in the teachers, staff and leadership at @NYCSchools. They care deeply about our kids, and it shows.
The revised opening schedule we announced is an inspiring act of unity that will keep EVERYONE in our schools community safe. https://t.co/azXv13Sy3L
— Mayor Bill de Blasio (@NYCMayor) September 1, 2020
01:40 GMT – Australia in first recession in three decades
Coronavirus has brought Australia’s three decades of economic growth to a halt.
Latest figures show the economy contracted 7 percent in the second quarter after a 0.3 percent decline in the first quarter.
The drop was the biggest quarterly decline since records began in 1959.
A recession is defined as two consecutive quarters of contraction.
01:35 GMT – Xinjiang resumes ‘normal life’: State media
State media in China is reporting that people in the far western region of Xinjiang have resumed “normal life order and production” after a sudden spike in cases last month.
CGTN says some epidemic control measures remain in force.
#Xinjiang resumes production, but epidemic measures remain #COVID19 https://t.co/gBvmYpkqK7 pic.twitter.com/y3cuEaem5e
— CGTN (@CGTNOfficial) September 2, 2020
01:15 GMT – Cases continue to ease in Australia’s ‘hotspot’ state
Cases continue to ease in Australia’s southeastern state of Victoria.
The state confirmed 90 new cases on Wednesday, compared with a peak of more than 700 last month. Six more people died.
State officials will announce plans on Sunday to ease coronavirus-related restrictions. Melbourne, the state capital and Australia’s second biggest city, is in the fourth week of a strict six week lockdown.
00:00 GMT – US turns back on global vaccine effort
The United States has said it will not join the World Health Organization-led global push for a coronavirus vaccine.
More than 150 countries have established the COVID-19 Vaccine Global Access Facility, known as COVAX, but the US says it will not join because it does not want to be “constrained” by multilateral organisations like the WHO. It pulled out of the WHO in early July.
“The United States will continue to engage our international partners to ensure we defeat this virus, but we will not be constrained by multilateral organisations influenced by the corrupt World Health Organization and China,” said White House spokesman Judd Deere.
Read more on this story here.
23:30 GMT (Tuesday) – UN to hold summit on post-pandemic global governance
Niger, the current president of the United Nations Security Council, is organising a September 24 video conference between heads of state to discuss the future of global governance following the coronavirus pandemic.
The summit will debate “post-COVID-19 global governance in relation to the maintenance of international peace and security,” Niger’s UN Ambassador Abdou Abarry told journalists.
The session will take place during the annual UN General Assembly gathering of world leaders, which will take place this year mainly by video conference because of the pandemic.
“This will be an opportunity for our leaders to have political discussions on the need to adapt the current international system embodied by the United Nations and the Security Council in order to effectively face traditional threats to security such as conflicts, but also new threats such as organised crime and pandemics,” Abarry said.
23:00 GMT (Tuesday) – Recovered COVID-19 patients retain antibodies for months
A new study from Iceland has found antibody levels against the novel coronavirus rose and then held steady for up to four months in more than 90 percent of recovered COVID-19 patients.
Kari Stefansson, chief executive of deCODE Genetics, which conducted the study, says the findings could have implications for reinfection risks and vaccine durability.
Researchers measured antibody levels in more than 30,000 Icelanders.
Based on the results, they estimate that about one cent of the population had been infected. Of that group, 56 percent had received a confirmed diagnosis after a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) laboratory test. A further 14 percent had not been formally diagnosed, but had been quarantined after exposure to the virus. For the remaining 30 percent, the antibody tests led to the discovery of prior infection.
Among the 1,215 people with an infection confirmed by PCR, 91 percent had antibody levels that rose during the first two months after diagnosis and then plateaued, researchers reported.
The results were published in The New England Journal of Medicine on Tuesday.
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Hello and welcome to Al Jazeera’s continuing coverage of the coronavirus pandemic. I’m Kate Mayberry in Kuala Lumpur, keeping you updated for the next few hours.
Read all the updates from yesterday (September 1) here.