ANALYSIS: Coronavirus: EU states record highest one-day death toll, as virus continues to explode globally




March 16, 2020 02H:39  GMT/ZULU

   Share

Related Topics


Media caption

Police use drones to enforce movement restrictions in Spain's fight against the coronavirus infection

by Elodie Bagnol and Biodun Iginla, BBC News Analysts, Rome

The three states bearing the brunt of the coronavirus pandemic in Europe have all recorded their highest death tolls for a single day.

Italy saw 368 deaths bring its total to 1,809, Spain recorded 97 more deaths for a total of 288, and France reported 29 deaths, giving a total of 120.

The UK also saw a single-day record, with 14 new deaths and a total of 35.

Governments across Europe have responded by curbing the movements of citizens and tightening borders.

Germany is to impose controls on its borders with France, Switzerland, Austria, Denmark and Luxembourg as of Monday morning, while Portugal will clamp down on its frontier with Spain.

The Czech government has introduced stringent lockdown measures: people will be allowed to go to and from work and buy food or medicine, and make urgent family visits, but otherwise free movement will be severely limited from midnight (23:00 GMT) on Sunday until 24 March.

Austria is banning gatherings of more than five people from Monday, and the Republic of Ireland is asking pubs to shut until 29 March.

Schools will be closed across many European states.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has now declared Europe the "epicentre" of the pandemic which originated in China.




HOW FAR HAS THE VIRUS SPREAD?

In an indication of the extent of the crisis, Switzerland reported a leap in the number of infections by 800 to reach 2,200 in just 24 hours. The country has recorded 14 deaths.

Italy has borne the heaviest burden from the pandemic with 24,747 infections and 1,218 of its fatalities were recorded in one region, Lombardy, which is home to the business hub of Milan.

The government put the whole country in lockdown last Monday, restricting people's movements and ordering the closure of all shops except food stores and pharmacies. Schools, gyms, museums, nightclubs and other venues had been closed earlier.

On Saturday, Spain, which now has 7,753 infections, and France, which has 5,400, took drastic temporary measures of their own.

The Spanish government banned people from leaving home except for buying essential supplies and medicines, or for work.

Image copyright

REUTERS

Image caption

The area near the Arc de Triomphe in Paris was quiet on Sunday

In France, cafes, restaurants, cinemas and most shops are now shut.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has called on member states to fight the pandemic with a rapidly co-ordinated response and pooled resources.

She said the bloc would boost production of equipment such as ventilators, test kits and masks, which would then be shared across the EU instead of each country making its own supply.

The export of these products to non-EU countries would be strictly controlled.

HOW ARE OTHER PARTS OF THE WORLD RESPONDING TO THE CRISIS?

To date, an estimated 162,687 people have been infected worldwide, with just under half of them in China (81,003 cases). An estimated 6,065 people have died, 3,085 of them in China.

South Africa is closing its borders from Wednesday to foreign nationals from countries badly impacted by coronavirus.

With 61 infections, President Cyril Ramaphosa said the country was now dealing with the internal transmission of the virus and declared a "national state of disaster".


Media caption

Everything you need to know about the coronavirus – explained in one minute by the BBC's Laura Foster

The US Federal Reserve has cut interest rates to near zero in a further bid protect the US economy from the worst consequences of the pandemic.

A US decision to screen Americans returning from Europe is causing chaos at airports.

The Trump administration has banned non-Americans travelling from 26 European countries, and the ban will be extended to include the UK and Republic of Ireland as of Tuesday.

America has recorded 62 deaths related to coronavirus and 3,244 infections.


Have you been affected by the coronavirus? Share your experiences by emailing [email protected].

Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist. You can also contact us in the following ways:

Or use the form below

Your contact details

Name

Your E-mail address (required)

Town & Country

Your telephone number

Comments (required)

If you are happy to be contacted by a BBC journalist please leave a telephone number that we can contact you on. In some cases a selection of your comments will be published, displaying your name as you provide it and location, unless you state otherwise. Your contact details will never be published. When sending us pictures, video or eyewitness accounts at no time should you endanger yourself or others, take any unnecessary risks or infringe any laws. Please ensure you have read the terms and conditions.

Terms and conditions

The BBC's Privacy Policy


RELATED TOPICS

SHARE THIS STORY ABOUT SHARING

EUROPE

Video

Video

Coronavirus: Spain and Italy applaud health workers

  • 15 March 2020
  •    From the section
  • Europe

Full article Coronavirus: Spain and Italy applaud health workers


Spain's King Felipe renounces father's inheritance

  • 15 March 2020
  •    From the section
  • Europe

Full article Spain's King Felipe renounces father's inheritance


Mali backs singer Rokia after French arrest

  • 15 March 2020
  •    From the section
  • Africa

Full article Mali backs singer Rokia after French arrest

More Videos from the BBC

Recommended by Outbrain

Elsewhere on BBC

Recommended by Outbrain

You Might Also Like


From Around the Web

Promoted content by Outbrain

TOP STORIES

EU states record highest one-day death toll

Italy, Spain and France all report grim new figures for fatalities from the coronavirus.

1 hour ago

US in emergency rate cut and huge stimulus plan

1 hour ago

Virus isolation for UK over-70s 'within weeks'

2 hours ago

ADVERTISEMENT


FEATURES


Why US could be more at risk from coronavirus

  VIDEO

Why we touch our faces and how to stop doing it

  

Radcliffe says parents helped him cope with fame

  

Minecraft ‘loophole’ library of banned journalism

  

'The day I discovered I was born without a vagina'

  

Coronavirus: A visual guide to the pandemic

  

Did Spanish spies harass ex-king's 'lover'?

  

Meet Tata tycoon's millennial best friend

  

The millennial nuns practising a forbidden ancient skill

ELSEWHERE ON THE BBC


Football phrases

15 sayings from around the world

MOST READ

ADVERTISEMENT


ADVERTISEMENT



Why you can trust BBC News

Posted by Biodun Iginla at 4:54 PM  Email This

BlogThis!

Share to Twitter

Share to Facebook

Share to Pinterest

Labels: #BBC NewsaustriaCoronavirus: EU statesCzech governmentElodie Bagnol and Biodun Iginlafrancegermanyitalyone-day death tollspainThe UKUrsula von der Leyenworld health organization


No comments:


Post a Comment



Older Post

Home

Subscribe to: Post Comments

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Biodun Iginla的更多文章

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了