Covid-19: nearly 34% of French people fully vaccinated
LiveHealth
Most countries in Europe are easing their restrictions. But some, like Portugal, are tightening them once again for fear of the Delta variant, which worries many states around the world.
0By Le Parisien, Lucile Descamps and Marie-Laurence Wernert June 30, 2021 at 7:34 a.m., modified on June 30, 2021 at 9:06 p.m.The essential
The events of the day
9:05 p.m. This is the end of this live. Thank you for having followed us. See you tomorrow on Le Parisien to find out about the latest developments on the health crisis in France and around the world.
21 hours. Open letter. Every day, Le Parisien challenges an actor in society (politicians, bosses, artists, athletes, etc.) to ask him a question that concerns our daily life. Asked about the obligation to vaccinate caregivers in order to protect residents of nursing homes against Covid-19, the president of the Association of directors serving the elderly ensures that they must be convinced… without forcing them. Read his response here.
8:50 p.m. Guatemala threatens to demand reimbursement for undelivered Sputnik V vaccines. Guatemala paid $79.6 million to the Russian sovereign wealth fund (RDIF) in April for half of an order for 16 million doses of the vaccine to immunize eight of its 17 million inhabitants. Only 150,000 doses of Sputnik V have so far been delivered. "The contract was made, it was paid, and we did not get the answers we expected," said Guatemalan Health Minister Amelia Flores. And to specify that the government had sent a letter to the RDIF, in charge of the promotion of the vaccine. The government gives it a 20-day ultimatum to send at least the second doses for people vaccinated in May.
8:35 p.m. The World Bank is increasing funding for vaccines. The institution has decided to increase by 8 billion dollars to bring it to 20 billion its aid plan to help developing countries to access vaccines, announced its president David Malpass. The World Bank, which last October approved the initial allocation of $12 billion, has so far spent only $4 billion on projects in 51 countries. "The distribution of vaccines from advanced economies has not happened very quickly," acknowledged David Malpass, explaining the slow deployment of this funding and the announcement of additional funding.
8:10 p.m. Nearly 34% of French people fully vaccinated. Regarding vaccination, “33,896,012 people received at least one injection (i.e. 50.3% of the total population) and 22,785,561 people now have a complete vaccination schedule (i.e. 33.8% of the total population)”, indicates the Directorate General of Health (DGS) in its report of the day.
7:35 p.m. In France, 25 new deaths. This is what Public Health France recorded.
7:30 p.m. In France, hospitalizations continue to decline. This Wednesday, 8,541 people are hospitalized, including 1,204 in critical care. It's less than the day before.
7:20 p.m. The tests will be chargeable from July 7 for foreign tourists. “They will pay up to 49 euros for PCR and 29 euros for antigens. It is a question of reciprocity knowing that these tests are chargeable in most countries for French people who travel. And, the tourists who come to us are obviously subject to the health pass”, announces Gabriel Attal to the newspaper “les Echos”.
6:55 p.m. The WHO requests that the AstraZeneca-Covishield vaccine be recognized in Europe. The African Union (AU) complained yesterday about the non-recognition by the EU of the Covishield vaccine, manufactured in India at a lower cost. "Even though it uses production technology similar to that of Vaxzevria (AstraZeneca's vaccine), Covishield as such is currently not approved by the EU," said the European Medicines Agency ( EMA). The World Health Organization (WHO), however, has endorsed Covishield and is urging EU countries to accept the use of Covishield.
6:30 p.m. Bruno Le Maire: the health crisis "must allow Europe to wake up". The health crisis "must allow Europe to wake up" in order to play a leading role, said French Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire, during the recovery summit in Lisbon. “This pandemic can be seen as an opportunity,” he said, adding that Europe must currently make “strategic choices” to define its future. "I think it's the right time for Europe" to do everything possible to remain a leader, he recalled, while the EU is losing ground against China or the United States, d where the main innovations come from. This recovery summit, which comes to the end of the Portuguese Presidency of the Council of the EU, underlined the need to promote investments that ensure Brussels global leadership, particularly in the areas of climate and digital transition.
6:25 p.m. Refunds: air passenger rights “have not been guaranteed. The “ essential rights” of air passengers have “not been guaranteed” during the pandemic, judges the European Court of Auditors, deploring delays or even the absence of reimbursements from airlines following cancellations of flights. "During the first months of the crisis, many passengers were not reimbursed and many had no choice but to accept vouchers", write the auditors in a special report. "At the time of our audit, the possibility for passengers to obtain reimbursement was still not fully guaranteed, both when intermediaries (e.g. travel agencies) were involved and when vouchers were imposed on them", adds the institution.
The auditors recall that in the event of flight cancellation, "passengers who have booked a flight only are entitled to reimbursement of the price of the ticket by the airline, within seven days of the request", a period extended to 14 days as part of a "package trip" booked with a travel agency.
6:10 p.m. Confinement in a hotel in Mallorca: students who test negative can go out. Several parents of young people, who had been locked up in rooms at the Palma Bellver hotel on the Balearic island, went to court to have the confinement imposed on their children canceled. On Wednesday, a judge ordered it lifted for students who tested negative.
18 hours. Catering: aid for employees in integration structures. In order to overcome the difficulties of recruitment in the catering sector, the government is announcing financial support of 1.5 euros per hour of work this summer for employees in integration structures. The measure, which runs from July 1 to September 30, concerns employees "with experience in the catering trades" and "made available by intermediary associations or by temporary integration work companies", according to a statement.
5:50 p.m. Uganda: at least 800 people vaccinated with a counterfeit. The fake drug was mainly administered in private hospitals in the capital Kampala between mid-May and mid-June, according to an employee of the presidency. Two people were arrested. The police are looking for a doctor.
5:35 p.m. Will the vaccine soon be compulsory for caregivers? Castex launches a consultation. The Prime Minister announces that he will launch in the coming days a consultation of local elected officials and parliamentarians on the subject of the compulsory vaccination of caregivers. Our article.
5:25 p.m. United States: experts call for compulsory anti-Covid vaccination. Faced with the persistent reluctance of a large proportion of Americans, many experts are now calling for companies, institutions and universities to put in place the most effective measure in their eyes: compulsory vaccination against Covid-19. Concerns about the arrival of the Delta variant in the United States, where it currently accounts for around 35% of cases and could quickly become dominant, have reignited the debate. Just over 66% of adults have received at least one dose of the Covid-19 vaccine in the United States. But about 13% say they have no intention of getting vaccinated, and 7% only plan to do so if they have to, according to a late May survey from the Kaiser Family Foundation.
5:15 p.m. Two thousand Scots contagious after attending Euro-related events. Between June 11 and June 28, 1,991 of the 32,539 Scottish residents who tested positive for coronavirus were identified as having followed one or more events linked to the Euro football tournament while contagious, underlines Public Health Scotland in a report published today. This figure includes spectators who attended one or more matches in Hampden Park (Glasgow) or Wembley (London), the Glasgow fan zone or informal gatherings, in pubs or in people's homes. Nearly two-thirds (1,294) said they had traveled to London for an event related to the competition, including 397 people to attend the Scotland-England match (0-0) on June 18 at Wembley.
4:50 p.m. Portugal crosses the bar of 2,000 new daily cases. Portugal, faced with an upsurge in the coronavirus epidemic due to the Delta variant, crossed the bar of 2,000 new cases in 24 hours. The country of 10 million inhabitants recorded 2,362 new contaminations, including 1,386 in the Lisbon region. Nationally, this is the highest level since mid-February. With a total of 504 people treated by hospitals, including 120 in intensive care units, hospitalizations continue to increase.
4:30 p.m. Brazil: new suspicions of corruption in the purchase of vaccines. A senior Brazilian health ministry official demanded bribes from a representative of a Covid-19 vaccine supplier, according to the Folha de S. Paulo newspaper, in a potentially explosive new revelation for the Bolsonaro government . On Tuesday evening, shortly after the article was published, a director of the Ministry of Health was fired. The AstraZeneca laboratory explained in a press release that it never used an intermediary to offer vaccines to governments.
4:15 p.m. In France, appointments for the first vaccinations are resuming… slowly. The government is delighted with the rebound in appointments for first injections, after a long decline. However, this remains fragile and differs according to the departments. Our analysis.
3:45 p.m. Majorca: students protest against their "kidnapping". In Mallorca, students, who participated in end-of-year parties which generated a gigantic cluster and were still on the island, were quarantined. Some 250 of them, having "had a direct or indirect link with the student trip to Majorca", are housed under police surveillance at the Palma Bellver hotel. They posted videos on social media, calling the situation a "kidnapping". Tested, a quarter of them (25.7%) are positive for Covid-19. “We are scared because they haven't told us how long we're going to be stuck here,” 17-year-old Lucía Cano told El Pais. And while the cases proliferate, the criticisms do not stop raining, targeting both this youth, not yet vaccinated, accused of recklessness and the authorities.
Loud music, objects thrown on the public highway or alcohol delivered to the rooms thanks to buckets hung on sheets and then hoisted on the balconies: the local police confirmed having intervened several times in this hotel after complaints from neighbors.
3:15 p.m. Americans in Montmartre. In Paris, the first American tourists began to return to places popular with foreign travellers: Montmartre, the Sacré-Coeur, the Eiffel Tower… “It's incredible! We wanted to come back since last year but as the borders were closed (…) We are very, very happy to be here, it's like having a bowl of culture and we really missed it, ”said Padmini Pyapali, an engineer among these "ghosts".
15 hours. The English without spectators for the quarter of the Euro? The English Football Federation announces that it is giving up the 2,500 places to which it was entitled for the quarter-final of the Euro, this Saturday in Rome, due to health restrictions and the risks linked to the Covid-19 epidemic. These tickets will be sold through the usual distribution channels, but there is little chance of seeing English residents buying them (unless they are already there): to go to Italy, they must observe five days of quarantine, but the match takes place in three days.
2:45 p.m. How to help the territories most affected by the Covid crisis? MoDem deputy Jean-Noël Barrot has just submitted a report to the Prime Minister on the territories most affected by the economic crisis linked to Covid-19. According to him, the support measures (partial unemployment, solidarity fund, etc.) and recovery measures have rather well targeted the areas most affected by the drop in activity.
For the future, he advises in particular to install university campuses in “vulnerable territories”, to support young people who take over companies or to perpetuate the fund to convert industrial wastelands.
2:20 p.m. The Portuguese Prime Minister in solitary confinement. Antonio Costa, head of the Portuguese government, is in contact with one of his collaborators positive for Covid-19 and must therefore be placed in solitary confinement, even if he has received the two doses of vaccination.
2:10 p.m. Already a success for the sales? This day when the gauges are lifted in stores - except in the Landes - coincides with the start of the sales. And this period of sales seems to be off to a good start, in particular because there is “less concern” than last year, in particular thanks to vaccination, estimates Yohann Petiot, director general of the Alliance du commerce. But also because there is “a desire to consume”, which “really translates into facts”, according to the Minister Delegate for SMEs, Alain Griset, interviewed on Sud Radio.
14 hours. The pandemic is boosting connected objects. While global smartphone sales fell last year, those of connected objects jumped 37% in 2020 compared to 2019, estimates the consulting firm Strategy Analytics. Ear accessories - especially wireless headphones - are the ones that have sold the most, in particular due to the use of teleworking.
1:40 p.m. Thailand is opening up again despite the difficulties. Thailand is preparing to reopen the paradise island of Phuket on Thursday to international tourists from 66 countries considered to be at low or medium risk. Fully vaccinated people even have the right not to go through quarantine. But this reopening comes in a difficult context, since the kingdom records this Wednesday its worst daily toll since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, with 53 dead and tries to contain a third wave worse than the previous ones.
1:25 p.m. Worldwide progression of the Delta variant. The Delta variant has now been identified in 96 countries worldwide, 11 more than a week ago, indicates the WHO in its latest weekly epidemiological update.
1:14 p.m. Vaccination is on the rise again. One of these “cards” to avoid the 4th wave is vaccination, recalls the government spokesperson. Gabriel Attal welcomes the increase in first appointments. The other method is that applied in the Landes, where the lifting of restrictions taking place across France is delayed at least until July 6 inclusive. According to Gabriel Attal, the situation "seems contained at this stage" in this department.
1:10 p.m. But the variant worries. The Delta variant is progressing and represents a concern, "the incidence rate does not seem to have decreased for a few days", announces Gabriel Attal. It stabilized below 20. But we “have all the cards in hand to avoid a 4th wave”, he assures.
1:05 p.m. Attal announces the upturn. "The situation has improved further at the hospital" and even reaches a level "more affected since September", announces Gabriel Attal. The lifting of restrictions scheduled for today is therefore maintained.
12:55 p.m. First vaccination appointments are on the rise again. According to Olivier Véran, appointments for the first injections have started to rise again from 10% to + 20%. "The mobilization for vaccination is bearing fruit", explains the Minister of Health on Twitter, adding: "We continue, we accelerate. Free, fast, and near you. »
12:50 p.m. Rise in oil prices. On the eve of the OPEC + summit, driven by still solid demand and the prospect of seeing crude stocks decline in the United States, oil prices are on the rise. A barrel of Brent North Sea crude for August delivery hit $75.23 in London, up 0.63% from the previous day's close. In New York, the barrel of WTI for the same month gained 1.08%, to 73.77 dollars.
12:35 p.m. SNCF optimistic for the summer. SNCF is planning a good summer in its TGVs, even if attendance will not reach pre-health crisis levels, says Christophe Fanichet, CEO of SNCF Voyageurs. "There is a real patch of blue sky that opens up," says the manager, whose field includes passenger trains, TGV, Intercités, TER and Parisian suburbs. For the past few days, the reservation curve has been at the same level as that of 2019, the reference year before the pandemic. "On the main lines, we have between 300,000 and 350,000 tickets sold every day," he says. However, there are still clouds with the two strike calls launched for Thursday by the CGT and this weekend in the low-cost TGV Ouigo by Unsa-Ferroviaire, CFDT-Cheminots, SUD-Rail as well as the CGT.
12:30 p.m. The literary season is back to cruising speed with 521 novels. The literary season will return to its usual rhythm with a total of 521 novels in bookstores from mid-August, according to a count by the magazine Livres Hebdo. The start of the 2020 school year, marked by the health crisis, had seen a slight drop, with 511 titles, compared to 524 in 2019. However, publishers have tended to reduce this immense mass of novels which almost all arrive at the same time on the stalls. Among the highly anticipated books are that of Amélie Nothomb (“First Blood”, Albin Michel), Christine Angot (“Journey to the East”, Flammarion) and Guillaume Musso (“The Unknown of the Seine”, Calmann-Lévy).
12:25 p.m. Slight drop in the annual inflation rate in the euro zone. After reaching 2% in May, the upper limit set by the ECB, inflation fell slightly in the euro zone in June to 1.9%, according to Eurostat. These pressures on prices are causing financial markets to fear a rise in interest rates. But the ECB and many experts consider this rise in inflation “temporary”. Estonia recorded the highest annual inflation rate of the 19 eurozone countries in June at 3.7%, while Portugal experienced the lowest rate as the consumer price index fell. fell by 0.6% in this country.
12:15 p.m. 2% rise in infections worldwide, the first time in nine weeks. According to the World Health Organization, this increase is significant in Europe. By contrast, the number of new deaths hit a low since November. More than 2.6 million new cases were observed last week. After many weeks of decline, Europe, faced with the delta variant, had to deal with a 10% increase. Africa continues to experience a considerable surge, with an increase of around 35%. On the other hand, the American continent, part of Asia and the Western Pacific were able to rely on a decline, albeit not very high. In terms of new deaths, the decrease reached 10% over a week when nearly 58,000 people succumbed to the coronavirus. Only Africa sees the number of its victims spread widely.
12:10 p.m. A ship with sixteen sick sailors diverted to Le Havre. Many firefighters and a team from Smur intervened in the port of Le Havre to take care of sailors suffering from Covid. On board the North Sunda, flying the Singaporean flag and which came from Liberia, the sixteen sailors tested positive. According to Paris Normandie, the ship was diverted to the port of Le Havre while off Guernsey. Of the sixteen sailors, five of them who showed more severe symptoms were taken from the ship by firefighters to be hospitalized. The eleven others are prohibited from dismounting.
12 hours. Fifth city in lockdown in Australia. Alice Springs, located in the immense and desert Australian hinterland, has been confined since Wednesday. It is the fifth city in the country to be sealed off again, after Sydney (southeast), Brisbane (east), Perth (west) and Darwin (north). For the moment, the Alice Springs containment is declared for three days.
11:50 a.m. Vladimir Putin received the Russian vaccine. We knew that the Russian president had been vaccinated against Covid-19 earlier in the year. But, unlike other leaders, he did not perform his injection in front of the cameras and did not reveal which vaccine he had received. End of the mystery: according to Reuters, the Kremlin announces that Vladimir Putin has received two doses of Sputnik, the product developed by a Russian laboratory.
11:40 a.m. The Covid, less severe than expected for local finances. The health crisis affected the finances of local authorities less than expected last year, indicates a report by the Court of Auditors. With a few nuances: the municipalities are doing much better than the departments and regions. The crisis, however, interrupted “several years of favorable context”.
11:35 a.m. Beginning of the health pass. From this Thursday, the European health pass will come into force. To cross European borders, it will therefore be necessary to show this document which contains data linked either to vaccination or to screening.
11:25 a.m. Putin against compulsory vaccination. Despite the increase in contaminations - in particular linked to the progression of the Delta variant - and a record number of deaths, the Russian President, Vladimir Putin, reiterates his opposition to compulsory vaccination at the national level. For the time being, the city of Moscow has made vaccination compulsory for workers in the service sector. Our article.
11:15 a.m. Tensions around AstraZeneca in Australia. On Tuesday, the Australian Prime Minister suggested that everyone, including those under 40, could approach their GP to request a dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine. But, this Wednesday morning, many state governors contradict him head-on. Officials in Queensland, Victoria, New South Wales and Western Australia are refusing to allow those under 40 to receive AstraZeneca, The Guardian reports.
11:00. Crisis prevention to be reviewed. It is necessary to "develop the culture of crisis" in an "interministerial" way, and in particular the "management of stocks", estimates the professor Didier Pittet, president of the national independent mission on the evaluation of the management of the Covid-19 crisis and on the anticipation of pandemic risks, at a hearing in the Senate. For him, "digital is an absolutely key tool" in the fight against pandemics, "we must find the means to open access to data". He also notes that “all countries lacked anticipation, all countries had pandemic plans and no one used them”.
10:50 a.m. Russia still in trouble. For the second day in a row, Russia has recorded a record number of new deaths. 669 people have lost their lives in the past 24 hours due to Covid-19 and especially the Delta variant, according to the authorities. This is more than the 652 recorded yesterday and which was already a record.
10:35 a.m. In detail, in the Landes , gatherings remain limited to 10 people in public spaces. The gauge at 65% of the capacity is maintained in cinemas, performance halls, stadiums. Just like the 4 m2 gauge in shops, museums, libraries. And finally, a 50% gauge remains in force inside restaurants, bars and casinos. All these restrictions are lifted elsewhere.
Read alsoCovid-19 in the Landes: the last restrictions maintained until July 6
10:30 a.m. The Landes prefecture invites its inhabitants to be vaccinated and announces the establishment of a bus dedicated to vaccination, which will travel on the coast but also in shopping centers. In the department, 56% of the inhabitants received a first dose, the figure increases to around 58 to 59% when counting the Landais who received a dose elsewhere.
10:12 a.m. Restrictions maintained in the Landes. The Landes department will maintain the latest restrictions - in particular the gauges - beyond June 30 and until July 6 inclusive, due to the presence of the Delta variant in greater proportions than the rest of the country. The health situation is, for the moment, stabilized around the alert threshold of the various indicators, in particular people in intensive care, assures the Landes prefecture.
9:50 a.m. Covid-19 present in North Korea? The country has never acknowledged the presence of the virus on its territory, but the North Korean leader, Kim Jong Un, has dismissed several senior officials, accused of having "caused a serious incident which is causing a huge crisis for the security of the nation and its people" related to the Covid-19 pandemic. This information "means that North Korea has recorded cases," said Ahn Chan-il, a North Korean defector turned researcher at the Seoul-based Global Institute for North Korean Studies.
9:30 a.m. With the end of the restrictions, consumption is picking up again . Household consumption in France soared again in May, with an increase of 10.4% compared to the previous month. A phenomenon linked to the reopening of shops on May 19. Spending has even almost returned to its pre-health crisis level. The purchases that picked up the most were those of clothing/textiles.
9:05 a.m. Vaccination point for caregivers. Arnaud Fontanet considers, RMC / BFMTV that caregivers who are not vaccinated endanger the people they are supposed to treat.
8:50 a.m. Professor Fontanet recalls , on BFMTV, that we can rely on what is happening in Israel or in Great Britain, where vaccination is very advanced and where the Delta variant is spreading. “There is an increase in the number of cases, now we have to scrutinize the increase in hospitalizations. If there is an increase in hospitalizations in Great Britain, that means that the vaccine does not protect enough to avoid stressing hospitals, ”he summarizes.
8:46. Watch out for September. Like Jean-François Delfraissy, Arnaud Fontanet also warns against a possible new wave. For him, we will have “an increase in the number of cases at the start of the school year” but “we can spend the summer in peace”.
8:45 a.m. With two doses of vaccines, “we are 95% protected from serious forms with the Delta variant”, assures Professor Arnaud Fontanet.
8:40 a.m. Arnaud Fontanet says more about the Delta variant. The epidemiologist and director of research at the Pasteur Institute reminds on BFMTV that the Delta variant represents 20% of new cases, "it is about 50% more transmissible than Alpha" and will "become predominant in the weeks that follow. are coming ". This variant is "probably more suitable for severe forms", specifies Arnaud Fontanet.
8:25 a.m. Jean-François Delfraissy reassures about the effectiveness of the vaccine. He specifies, on France Inter, that the vaccines are effective against the Delta variant, including AstraZeneca, provided you have the two doses. He invites him to do his two doses by September.
8:20 a.m. Jean-François Delfraissy believes that we must "consider a vaccination obligation" for caregivers, particularly in nursing homes. "A lot is being played out now" to anticipate what will happen in September.
8:10 a.m. Watch out for backlash. “We must be realistic and aware”, warns Jean-François Delfraissy, president of the Covid-19 Scientific Council, believing that the very low incidence figures are “falsely reassuring”. “We must remember what happened last summer” and the “second wave in September”, he warns on France Inter, alerting to the risks linked to the Delta variant.
8 hours. Incidence still falling in Germany. The incidence continues to decline in Germany. According to the Robert Koch Institute, it is only 5.2. In 24 hours, 800 new contaminations took place, approximately three times less than in France.
7:30 a.m. No quick return to normal in the tourism sector. Three more or less pessimistic scenarios are presented for the year 2021 concerning the tourism sector. The most optimistic evokes a reduction in tourist arrivals of… 63% on average. According to the United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO), industry experts do not expect to return to normal affluence before 2023, "or even later", the main obstacles being restrictions on travel, the slow containment of the virus, low travel confidence and an unfavorable economic environment.
7:15 a.m. The collapse of tourism could cost more than 4000 billion dollars. That's a gigantic total. L'effondrement du tourisme international dû à la pandémie pourrait entraîner une perte de plus de 4000 milliards de dollars (environ 3330 milliards d'euros) pour le produit intérieur brut (PIB) mondial sur les années 2020 et 2021. C'est l'équivalent d'une fois et demie le PIB français, selon un rapport de la Conférence des Nations unies sur le commerce et le développement (Cnuced). Ce rapport est présenté conjointement avec l'Organisation mondiale du tourisme des Nations Unies (OMT). Le montant se répartirait à parts à peu près égales sur les deux années.
7 hours. Des quarantaines possibles pour des équipes entières aux Jeux olympiques. Les Jeux olympiques de Tokyo (Japon) s'apprêtent à commencer dans la crainte d'une diffusion du Covid-19. Le quotidien Yomiuri rapporte que l'ensemble d'une équipe pourra désormais être mise en quarantaine si un seul de ses membres est positif. De plus, les délégations pourraient être enjointes de manger en silence.
6h45. Le relais de la flamme olympique en partie à huis clos. Certaines parties du relais de la flamme olympique dans la ville hôte Tokyo (Japon) ne se dérouleront pas sur la voie publique en raison de craintes liées au Covid-19. Ce relais, qui commence à Tokyo le 9 juillet, aura lieu principalement sans public les huit premiers jours. La flamme fera son entrée dans le nouveau stade olympique de Tokyo le 23 juillet après avoir traversé les 47 départements du Japon.
6:30 a.m. Corée du Nord : des hauts responsables limogés après un « grave incident ». Le dirigeant nord-coréen, Kim Jong Un, a limogé plusieurs hauts responsables en raison d'un « grave incident » lié à la lutte contre la pandémie de Covid-19, annonce l'agence officielle KCNA. Ils ont « causé un grave incident qui provoque une énorme crise pour la sécurité de la nation et de son peuple », a déclaré Kim. Aucun détail n'a été fourni sur les personnes limogées et les faits précis reprochés. Jusqu'à présent, le régime nord-coréen a toujours soutenu que la pandémie de Covid-19 n'est pas arrivée sur son sol, ce dont doutent nombre d'experts.
6h15. Prudence avec le gel hydroalcoolique. L'Agence nationale de sécurité sanitaire (Anses) rappelle qu'un gel hydroalcoolique doit contenir au moins 65 % d'alcool et être conforme à la norme EN14476. De plus, elle recommande d'utiliser des petits flacons plutôt que de grosses bouteilles avec bec verseur. « Les pompes sont moins hermétiques que les bouchons et l'alcool s'évapore donc plus facilement », explique un responsable. L'Anses rappelle enfin qu'un bon lavage des mains est tout aussi efficace. More details in our article.
6 hours. Bonjour à tous. Bienvenue dans ce direct pour suivre l'actualité relative à la pandémie de Covid-19.
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