| | What you need to know about the coronavirus today | | | Russia reports record deaths Russia reported its highest COVID-19 daily death tally a day after official data revealed a surge in excess deaths in October that made it Russia’s most deadly month in a decade.
Russia, which began vaccinating vulnerable people in Moscow, has resisted imposing a strict lockdown as it did in the spring, relying on targeted measures instead, though the Kremlin says places like St Petersburg are nearing a “red line”.
Officials reported a record 613 COVID-19 deaths in the last 24 hours, taking the official death toll to 45,893, a total some critics call into question, pointing to the significantly elevated number of excess deaths during the pandemic.
Americans get stern holiday warning A top coronavirus adviser to President-elect Joe Biden delivered a stern holiday message to Americans on Thursday - “no Christmas parties” - and warned they face a COVID-19 siege for weeks to come despite the latest moves toward U.S. government approval of a vaccine.
“The next three to six weeks at minimum ... are our COVID weeks,” Dr. Michael Osterholm told CNN. “It won’t end after that, but that is the period right now where we could have a surge upon a surge upon a surge.”
Osterholm stressed that it would be several months before the nation sees widespread availability of vaccines.
South Korea mobilizes military South Korea will mobilize military forces in the capital Seoul to help frontline health workers deal with a surge in coronavirus, with 689 new cases reported on Friday, and as the death toll and number of patients in critical care rose.
Of the new cases, 673 were locally transmitted, which brings the total tally to 40,786. The death toll increased by eight to 572 deaths.
The surge in cases has delivered a blow to South Korea’s vaunted pandemic-fighting system which successfully used invasive tracing, testing and quarantine to avoid lockdowns and blunt previous waves, and keep infections below 50 per day for much of the summer.
Germany braces for tougher lockdown Germany will have to shut down more parts of society before Christmas to try and get the pandemic under control, ministers said on Friday, as Europe’s largest economy reported a record number of daily infections and deaths.
The government of the southwestern state of Baden-Wuerttemberg said German Chancellor Angela Merkel and the premiers of the 16 federal states would meet on Sunday to discuss new measures to slow the spread of the virus.
Germany registered a record number of nearly 30,000 daily new infections and almost 600 deaths, data from the Robert Koch Institute for infectious diseases showed on Friday.
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