| | | | | | What you need to know about the coronavirus today | | | Australian protests at virus restrictions grow Australia’s prime minister pressed states to reopen their borders by December and ease restrictions, as businesses and locked-down households vented their frustration over deepening revenue and job losses. Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the country would look to bring more Australians home, raising the cap from 4,000 a week, and suggested an eventual travel bubble with New Zealand would boost tourism and help revive the economy, which has fallen into recession for the first time since 1991. “In the absence of a vaccine, we may have to live this way for years,” Morrison told reporters.
Airlines urge London-New York trial Major airlines want the U.S. and British governments to launch a passenger testing trial for the coronavirus for flights between London and New York to pave the way for a resumption of more international travel. In a letter to government transportation officials seen by Reuters, the chief executives of Airlines for America, Airlines UK, Heathrow Airport and Virgin Atlantic Airways said both governments should “establish passenger testing solutions in air travel. “We believe that in the immediate absence of a vaccine, testing of passengers in aviation provides the best and most effective frontline defense.”
Jump in rural India’s cases The sugarcane-growing village of Rajewadi in India’s west did not have a single confirmed coronavirus case until mid-August. Now one in every four people there has tested positive for the virus, with police blaming a local religious event for the spread. Such spurts in cases in small towns and villages, where mask-wearing and social distancing have nearly vanished and community gatherings are back, explain why India’s infections are rising faster than anywhere else in the world and why the country is soon set to top 4 million cases.
Berlusconi has pneumonia after positive virus test Italy’s former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, in hospital after testing positive for coronavirus, has been diagnosed with the early stages of double pneumonia, ANSA news agency reported. Double, or bilateral, pneumonia affects both lungs and can make breathing difficult. The condition has been seen in many cases of patients hospitalised with COVID-19. Berlusconi, 83, was taken to Milan’s San Raffaele hospital on Thursday evening, two days after his Forza Italia party announced he had tested positive for the coronavirus. | | | | Breakingviews - Corona Capital: Banks and government, Ryanair cash. Britain’s finance minister Rishi Sunak could hurt taxpayers by forcing lenders to chase pandemic borrowers and Ryanair’s war chest will come in handy if rivals go under. Catch up with today’s pandemic-related insights. | | | | Reuters reporters and editors around the world are investigating the response to the coronavirus pandemic.
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We prefer tips from named sources, but if you’d rather remain anonymous, you can submit a confidential news tip. Here’s how. | | | | | | | | | U.S. | Police shot and killed an anti-fascist activist as they moved in to arrest him for the alleged fatal shooting of a right-wing activist in Portland, Oregon, last weekend, officials said. Michael Reinoehl, 48, was wanted on a charge of murder when members of a fugitive task force shot him dead in Olympia, Washington after he left an apartment building and got in a car, according to police. | | The day California finally allowed hair salons to reopen after months of pandemic restrictions should have been a happy one for the sisters who own Hourglass Salon + Boutique in Sacramento. Instead, they spent it hauling out boxes and figuring out how to tell customers they were closing.
“Our hearts are shattered,” Erin Banville and Melissa Burgoon wrote to clients. The popular business faced thousands of dollars in rent payments, and the state’s order allowing hair salons to serve customers indoors came days too late. | | | Special Report | | | | | | | | | Top Stories on Reuters TV | | | | | | | |