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  • now in Spain.

  • The death toll from the Corona virus has increased dramatically, now stands at 803.

  • The number of confirmed cases has also risen rapidly over 17,000.

  • More than 900 people are intensive care.

  • Spain has been under lock down since Saturday, with residents required to stay in their homes for all but essential travel.

  • Spain's neighbor Portugal has also declared a state of emergency to fight the pandemic.

  • The new measures allow the government to restrict movement of people, banned protests and social religious meetings, and temporarily suspend the rights of key workers to strike.

  • Portugal has 785 confirmed cases of the Corona virus so far, with three reported deaths.

  • But now to Italy there, the number of deaths from the Corona virus has surpassed those in China.

  • In Italy, 3405 have now died from curve it 19 a rise of 427 in just 24 hours.

  • The total number of cases has risen to above 41,000.

  • Italy's outbreak came to light in the north of the country in February.

  • Report now from Bergamo in Lombardy in northern Italy one of Europe's wealthiest regions, it finds itself at the epicentre of the country's outbreak under warning.

  • My report contains some distressing images.

  • Bergamot once upon a time just a month ago, still a byword for northern Italian charm.

  • Today, in terms of untimely deaths, perhaps the most dangerous place on earth.

  • At night, these army trucks bury the dead toe.

  • Other towns where they can be cremated, and the people trying to stop this from happening are the volunteers battling to save lives on their own town.

  • Bergamot alone has already had 4000 cases, with 400 deaths.

  • They don't want 84 year old terrace Xena to be the next.

  • She needs oxygen, which is already in short supply, and her Caro describes how things have gotten worse in the last 24 hours.

  • Her carer is struggling for me, Marie see, but simply to move terror scene from one room to another and put her in her own bed is a Herculean task.

  • With the hospital's full, she needs to stay home.

  • Then the records it deep, clean, as if your life depended on it, because it might during a short break, Samantha says.

  • It's heartbreaking to take patients to a hospital and then watch their families as doctors decide if they can help them or not.

  • Self or entity.

  • A true human identity.

  • For tomorrow.

  • Be a storm or endure Mr Moore and tell your people tomorrow, Take your suit.

  • Take you would go.

  • Fundamental.

  • As many as 10 people are dying every day in a small city of 120,000 health workers compared to a war or earthquake zone.

  • Michelle Michelle Etzioni He coming out of five hero or a group it toe in post office Key psyche unknown ship off our new teammate.

  • Alien.

  • The Marlow case.

  • A jacket with the needle.

  • They said it to Nikki about this over a year today, Sonny used by some potentate on the way to the next visit, written on someone's embroidered handkerchief.

  • If we get through this, a big thank you, we will get through this.

  • Funeral parlors overrun Churches have been banned from holding funerals, but I've been helping to store the bodies before cremation.

  • A month ago, the local newspaper had a single page for obituaries.

  • Yesterday there were 10 pages of names, but these air burials without Mourners behind closed cemetery gates for the volunteers.

  • Maur deep cleaning.

  • The next case involves Cloud Your Travel early in his late fifties, who should be going to hospital, but the health workers worried that he won't survive the wait until a bed and the ventilator of freedom.

  • So the decision is to keep them at home in his own bed.

  • His wife and daughter look on helpless, exhausted.

  • They have one final job tonight before doing it all again tomorrow.

  • Quest.

  • A personal documentary Trento detail the vein, giving Tracy most talkative today.

  • So case from living twittering 80 Sorry tone according to John Doe Coma Questo Vienna process starting must invest that their final cases.

  • 41 year old Antonio Amato, his wife and sons watch anxiously from a distance as their fathers carried down the stairs to the ambulance.

  • At least he's been deemed young enough to get a bed in intensive care, but they cannot know when they'll see him next.

  • But it's not all bad news.

  • China has today reported that have bean no locally transmitted infections at all today for the first time since the virus was detected three months ago.

  • But across the world, other countries are desperately trying to contain the spread as best they can.

  • And in America, President Trump has said he would slash red tape to allow existing drugs to be tested and used in the fight against Cove in 19 shovel Kennedy reports now on the latest from China and from across the world.

  • Wuhan residents in partial lock down cheer medical staff as they boarded buses to go home back to their families after being deployed to the epicenter of the virus.

  • Months after Kobe, 19 gripped the city, killing thousands in the province.

  • Scenes on to champion the essential slowly Today for the first time, Chinese state media says no new local cases of the disease were reported.

  • Wuhan is still designated high risk.

  • But residents now Frito wonder around their compounds to deliver food on take advantage of the rare fresh air with factories still closed while the endless sanitizing continues across China, the government says there are 34 new cases detected in people arriving from abroad, raising fears of reinfection.

  • This'll woman says the situation is going in a good direction.

  • Not so, says President Trump, a Zafar, a cz faras, believing what they're putting out.

  • Now I hope it's true.

  • Who used his daily press conference to once again point the finger at China?

  • People would have known about it.

  • It could have stopped, been stopped in place.

  • It could have been stopped right where it came from China.

  • It could have been stopped in its tracks.

  • Unfortunately, they didn't decide to make it public.

  • The president said he would cut red tape to help develop vaccines and therapies as fast as possible, though nothing is imminent.

  • And the number of confirmed cases in America at more than 10,000 with 100 and 60 dead is soaring in the virus hot spot of Washington state, Seattle airport was like a ghost town, its economy decimated as restaurants, bars and travel networks.

  • A ll shut down a nationally.

  • New figures today showed a sharp spike in unemployment claims a spheres of a depression like era loom.

  • And in Australia, the prime minister followed President Trump's lead with drastic travel restrictions.

  • Travel ban will be placed on a ll non residents, not Australian citizens coming to Australia, Theo country's national carrier, Qantas, if temporarily laying off about 20,000 employees, 2/3 of its workforce as the virus takes hold in Africa, Countries like Kenya have so far experienced fewer cases.

  • But they're disinfecting closing schools and banning public gatherings, and people entering the country will be arrested if they failed to observe 14 days of self isolation.

  • The World Health Organization warning all African nations today toe wake up to the threat and prepare for the worst shiv on Kennedy reporting.

  • Earlier, I spoke to Ian Goldin, he's professor of globalization and development at the University of Oxford, and I began by asking him Was a pandemic like the Corona virus and inevitable consequence off globalization?

  • I'm afraid it waas We are hyper connected on the super spreaders of the goods of globalization, like major airport hubs.

  • Unfortunately, also the super spreaders of the bads like pandemics in the same way that met major financial centers with the super spreaders off not only financial flows that led to investment, but also the financial crisis and our cyber systems spread systemic risk to cyber viruses.

  • So it was inevitable.

  • What does history therefore tell us in wishing to combat this thing?

  • History tells us that we have to act cooperatively.

  • Pandemics are very different to other threats, like climate change or antibiotic resistance or financial crises in that they really can originate anywhere in the world.

  • The poorest countries, slums near airports can spread viruses around the world in a very, very a short period of time.

  • And that means that we need to act cooperatively.

  • We need a monitoring system that is global.

  • We need a rapid response system that's global.

  • We need to work on vaccines collectively.

  • Well, working collectively demands leadership.

  • Where's that gonna come from?

  • Well, we have two options.

  • We have an option that looks like the aftermath of the first World War, where we had the League of Nations and then rising protectionism and nationalism, the collapse into the gate, Great Depression on the Second World War.

  • Then, after the second World War, we had much better leadership.

  • We had the coming together with the United Nations that worked for many years after the 2008 financial crisis, we had a dramatic global response, with President George W.

  • Bush calling a big meeting, phoning the heads of state China responding Maur aggressively than the rest of the world, pretty put together in terms of the financial package and put together, and this time we have something very different building on the frictions of trade.

  • On the other tensions of recent years, we have President Trump calling this a Chinese virus.

  • There's no wall high enough that will keep out of pandemic or other threats.

  • We really need to understand that isolationism and protectionism are gonna give us an even worse threat coming forward.

  • What sort of world do you believe will flow from this?

  • Well, I very much hope that we learn the horrible lesson that we're gonna have to endure over the coming months, which is that we need to worry much more deeply about the divisions within our society.

  • This is going to exacerbate inequality within our societies, and it's going to exacerbate inequality around the world, and we need to worry much more about how others are doing how we work with them to overcome these threats.

  • I believe that if we had empowered the w h o more effectively, if we'd work more effectively on this threat, we could have prevented it.

  • Well, finally, this is your subject.

  • Do these events of the present day leave you more optimistic or pessimistic?

  • This is a terribly worrying moment.

  • It's worrying not only because of what we seeing all around us, and the scale of the threat, which I think is much greater than the 2000 and head crisis, is more like a war on dhe because we seeing every week response globally.

  • I'm optimistic when we see the building of communities nationally and we see that in the UK and elsewhere, that's some good can come out of it.

  • But it really does require that I lead a step up, not only nationally but globally to join solution.

now in Spain.

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