| | | | | | What you need to know about the coronavirus today | | | New data suggests European strain China has released genome sequencing data for the coronavirus responsible for a recent outbreak in Beijing, with officials saying it identified a European strain based on preliminary studies. Details published on China’s National Microbiology Data Center website revealed the Beijing genome data was based on three samples - two human and one environmental - collected on June 11. That was the same day the Chinese capital reported its first new local COVID-19 infection in months.
Seeking united recovery European Union leaders will try to narrow their differences over a coronavirus economic recovery plan at a video-conference summit, worried that further bickering and delay will only dent public confidence in the bloc as a deep downturn takes hold. German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the EU, reeling from more than 100,000 deaths linked to COVID-19 and facing its worst recession since World War Two, urgently needed an agreement on its multi-year budget and a multi-billion-euro recovery fund.
UK alert level lowered The United Kingdom’s chief medical officers have agreed that the COVID-19 threat level should be lowered one notch to “epidemic is in general circulation” from “transmission is high or rising exponentially”. The UK has a COVID-19 death toll of more than 50,000 based on official data including fatalities where it is mentioned on death certificates, making it one of the worst hit countries in the world. | | | | | | Reuters reporters and editors around the world are investigating the response to the coronavirus pandemic.
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