Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
'Terrifying': Syrian Doctors Refute Government Claims, Say Outbreak Is Widespread
BEIRUT 鈥 In an act of defiance, Syria's union of doctors announced last month that 61 physicians had died of the coronavirus in the span of just a few days. The disclosure contradicted the Syrian government, which had said a day earlier it had registered exactly 60 deaths in the entire country since March, and represented an uncharacteristic challenge to a state known for its tight control of information and severe intolerance for alternative views. The tally released by the Syrian Medical Association signaled that the outbreak was already widespread, because reported cases among medical personnel often indicate a far larger number of unreported cases in the general public. One Syrian medical student called the number of doctors who have died 鈥渢errifying.鈥 (Dadouch, 9/25)
At least 30 of 41 members of a gospel choir in northeastern Spain have contracted coronavirus following a rehearsal indoors with little air circulation, local authorities and the chorus say. The River Troupe Gospel, a volunteer gospel group, rehearsed on Sept. 11 ahead of an open-air performance two days later for a local festival in Sallent, a town in the province of Barcelona. It was their first public show since the beginning of the pandemic. (9/24)
Chinese officials say foreigners holding certain types of visas and residence permits will be permitted to return to China as the threat of the new coronavirus continues to recede. The decision lifts a months-long blanket suspension covering most foreigners apart from diplomats and those in special circumstances. (9/24)
North Korea expressed regret on Friday that it shot dead a missing South Korean to prevent the spread of coronavirus, the South鈥檚 national security adviser said, amid growing political and public backlash. North Korea鈥檚 United Front Department, in charge of cross-border ties, sent a letter to South Korean President Moon Jae-in鈥檚 office a day after Seoul officials said North Korean soldiers killed a South Korean before dousing his body in oil and setting it on fire. (Shin and Cha, 9/25)
The mayor of Moscow urged businesses on Friday to get more people to work from home as Russia鈥檚 daily tally of new coronavirus cases hit its highest since June 23. Officials reported 7,212 new infections, bringing the national case total to 1,136,048. In Moscow, the tally of new cases rose almost 50% overnight to 1,560 from 1,050 the previous day. (9/25)
Swiss authorities ordered 2,500 students at an elite hospitality management school to quarantine themselves due to a coronavirus outbreak allegedly linked to off-campus partying, the latest back-to-school sign of higher education鈥檚 place in the pandemic. Authorities in Switzerland鈥檚 Vaud canton, or region, said all undergraduates at the Ecole Hoteliere de Lausanne, or the Lausanne Hospitality Management University in English, were told to quarantine at home both on and off campus because the virus already had spread too widely for a more limited order. (Achoui-Lesage and Keaten, 9/24)
For people around the world, the coronavirus has caused distressing separations and delayed homecomings. But the situation for a group of 25 residents from remote Easter Island stands out. For six months now the group has been stranded far across a vast stretch of ocean on Tahiti in French Polynesia. Children remain separated from their parents, husbands from their wives. Mihinoa Terakauhau Pont, a 21-year-old mom who is among those stranded, is due to give birth to her second son any day now, but can鈥檛 have her husband by her side because he鈥檚 back home. Her grief has left her exhausted. (Perry and Vergara, 9/25)
A cloud of uncertainty that has hung over Rio de Janeiro throughout the coronavirus pandemic has been lifted, but gloom remains 鈥 the annual Carnival parade of flamboyant samba schools won鈥檛 be held in February. And while the decision is being characterized as a postponement of the event, no new date has been set. (Sousa, 9/25)
And a little bit of happy news 鈥
An Italian couple has become known as the 鈥淩omeo and Juliet鈥 of the coronavirus lockdown. In true Shakespearean style, their romantic story began on their respective balconies this year while Italians were forced to sequester in their homes because of the pandemic. It was in Verona 鈥 the same city where 鈥淩omeo and Juliet鈥 took place. But the love story of this pandemic couple does not have the tragic ending of Shakespeare鈥檚 star-crossed lovers. In fact, six months after they met from afar, the covid-19 sweethearts are engaged to be married. (Page, 9/24)