UK ups testing, Italy lockdown, French transfers: COVID-19 bulletin

Tim Hanlon

text

TOP HEADLINES

**The UK plans to increase the number of coronavirus tests **to 25,000 dailyby the middle of April from its current capacity of 12,750 a day.

**Italy will extend anti-coronavirus lockdown restrictions **until 13 April, Health Minister Roberto Speranza confirms.

**French car registrations drop 72 percent **due to the pandemic.

Italian lockdown restrictions are to last until April 13. /Piero Cruciatti/AFP

**A 13-year-old boy has died in London after testing positive **said King's College Hospital.

The Spanish government has agreed new measures to protect families and workers – including the self employed. People renting can now apply for state loans of up to six monthly payments.

**Germany has had a retail sales boom **as households stock up on daily essentials – sales jumped 6.4 percent in February.

The Red Cross in Austria has launched a smartphone app called Stopp Corona , on which people make an anonymous digital diary of who they have come into contact with. If someone then tests positive, all their contacts can be made aware.

**France is transfering 38 critically ill coronavirus patients **by high-speed train from Paris to less overwhelmed regions.

Italy's manufacturing activity plunged in March at the sharpest rate for 11 years. It fell to 40.3 from 48.7 in February on the IHS Markit Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI).

00:18

ACROSS EUROPE

Ross Cullen in Paris

The first transfer of patients from the Paris capital Ile-de-France region to healthcare facilities elsewhere in the country, is happening on Wednesday. As authorities face up to a shortage of intensive-care beds and critical medical supplies.

The patients will be moved by a specially adapted TGV high-speed train to Brittany, where there is more capacity to deal with those suffering from the disease.

Patients from the east of the country – a region where many facilities are overwhelmed with cases – have already been moved to other areas in France and even abroad, to Germany. It comes after France set another unwanted record on Tuesday as 499 people died – the highest number of people losing their lives in a 24-hour period so far.

Isobel Ewing in Budapest

According to the government's official coronavirus task force, police have taken action in nearly 1,000 cases related to the lockdown, which came into force on Saturday. Police have handed out 800 warnings, 13 fines and reported 90 people for breaches of the rules.

Personal protective equipment is now available to all Hungarian hospital medical staff and patients, according to military commanders stationed at hospitals.

It comes after Hungary received a large shipment of protective gear from China, following reports that front-line staff did not have adequate protection.

The border at Balassagyarmat in northern Hungary has been reopened, after an agreement with Slovakia that commuters be allowed to pass back and forth.

Commuters between Austria and Hungary will also be able to cross the Austro-Hungarian border from Wednesday.

On Tuesday, nine members of the Hungarian swim team and its support network were diagnosed with the coronavirus, according to a statement issued by the Hungarian Swim Federation. This number is expected to increase as more results are expected on Wednesday. A total of 130 people were tested.

Budapest is using George Soros's one million euros ($1.1 million) donation to test the city's medical staff and those working in the social support system.

Each household in Budapest's District VI will be given a washable face mask – the intention is that most people stay at home, hence one per household.

Toni Waterman in Brussels

Belgium has received another shipment of medical supplies from the Jack Ma and Alibaba Foundations. This latest donation included 800 ventilators, 300,000 mouth masks and 300,000 protective hospital gowns.More than 50 percent of Belgium's intensive care beds are occupied due to the coronavirus, although some hospitals say they are near their saturation point.

Anyone caught spitting at police or on food products could now face hefty fines and jail time in Belgium. Several police officers say they have been spat on by people claiming to be infected with COVID-19. Offenders now face a fine up to €2,400 ($2,625) and two years in prison for spitting at law enforcement officials and a fine of €16,000 ($17,502) and up to five years in prison for spitting on food products.

Meanwhile, Belgium's Central Council of Penitentiary Surveillance is calling for "all prisoners who can be released" to be released from the country's overcrowded prisons during the outbreak.In an email statement to

The Brussels Times

, the CCSP president said prisons were holding 9,981 inmates but only had capacity for 9,219.

Ira Spitzer in Berlin

The German farmers' association has warned that some fruit and vegetables could become more expensive and harder to find with the country's borders closed to seasonal foreign workers because of coronavirus. Normally around 300,000 seasonal workers come to Germany's fields every year, mostly from other European countries, such as Romania.

The city of Jena became the first German city to require people to cover their mouths while shopping or taking public transportation to try to slow the spread of the virus. Given the shortage of protective masks, the city said scarves or towels are acceptable alternatives. The move has sparked a nationwide debate on the effectiveness of the measures, and whether they could spread to the rest of the country.

The German airline Lufthansa will cut the working hours of around 87,000 employees – two-thirds of its global staff. The airline has grounded around 95 percent of its fleet because of the coronavirus crisis. Lufthansa also confirmed it is asking the German government for financial assistance.

There are 71,808 confirmed coronavirus cases in Germany and 775 people have died, according to Johns Hopkins University at 8:00 GMT on Wednesday.

FROM OUR GLOBAL COLLEAGUES

From CGTN America:

Trump warns of 'painful' two weeks ahead over COVID-19

From CGTN Africa:

South African president defends national COVID-19 lock-down

From CGTN China:

China rebuts Pompeo stating people's health is upmost priority

**CGTN Europe has been providing in-depth coverage of the novel coronavirus story as it has unfolded. **

Here

** you can read the essential information about the crisis.**

Source(s): Reuters