Argentina's President Alberto Fernández hopes that a corona vaccine will be available by the end of the year. "If all goes well," said Fernández,
the country will have enough vaccine doses for ten million people by the end of December. He had held talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin about direct delivery of the Sputnik V vaccine.
There are also negotiations with pharmaceutical companies that are currently in the final phase of vaccine development. Pfizer should deliver 750,000 doses of its vaccine from December, and AstraZeneca's vaccine could be ready from March.
Argentina is one of the countries particularly hard hit by the pandemic, with more than 1.2 million cases and almost 33,000 fatalities.
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After live coronavirus was found on the outer packaging of imported cold chain food in three cities in two days, China is now requiring imported cold chain food to be thoroughly disinfected before going to market,
leading to increasing public concerns. In order to achieve closed-loop control and traceability for the entire process, imported cold chain foods will be thoroughly disinfected in order to reduce the risk of bringing in COVID-19 via imported cold-chain food,
China's State Council announced on Monday. The loading and transport carriers and the inner and outer packaging of the cold chain food are also related items that are also needed to be completely sterilized.
In recent weeks, a sharp increase in the COVID-19 positivity rate has been observed in Hyderabad, Gilgit and Multan, with the number exceeding 15%. On Sunday, a total of 1,650 persons tested positive for coronavirus,
bringing the tally to 344,839 as of November 9, with 18,981 active cases. In the past 24 hours, the death toll has reached 6,977, with nine people succumbing to the virus.
There were 33,340 Covid-19 PRC tests carried out, according to the National Command and Operations Centre (NCOC). The overall positive rate is 4.5%, with 16.59% reported by Hyderabad as the highest. Multan recorded 15.97%, Gilgit 15.38, Muzafarabad 14.12% ,
Emmanuel Macron has been defending the publication of Mohammed cartoons for weeks. Since then, Muslims around the world have been protesting against the French president. In Hamburg, too, up to 250 people take to the streets.
An Islamist institute is behind the demo. At an unannounced counter-demonstration with 15 participants, a France flag and a photo of the teacher Samuel Paty who was murdered in France were held up, the police spokesman said.
This led to expressions of discontent among the Muslims. But it remained peaceful. Hamburg's constitution protection had warned in the run-up to the event. According to the Office for the Protection of the Constitution, the Al-Azhari Institute,
Donald Trump apparently continues to cling to the hope that false claims about alleged election fraud could help him to a second term.
The US news portal Axios claims to have learned details about the planned campaign from several Trump advisors. Accordingly, they want to use obituaries to prove that the votes of the deceased had been counted.
These allegedly massive voices from the dead are a central part of the Trump team's electoral fraud narrative, which was distributed today on Fox News, among others. There is no evidence.
Health Minister Jens Spahn warns against overloading intensive care medicine in view of the age structure in Germany. The Federal Republic is the second oldest country in the world after Japan, said the CDU politician of the "Bild-Zeitung".
"We have 23 million Germans over 60. We are a prosperous country with diseases of civilization: diabetes, high blood pressure, obesity. All risk factors for this virus, as well as for many infectious diseases, by the way."
By definition, 30 to 40 percent of the population belonged to a risk group. "If around two percent of 20,000 newly infected people have to go to intensive care in one day, that's 400 a day. If intensive care treatment and support lasts 15 days on average - that's 6000."
Today (November 8th), residents of a village in southern India from which Kamala Harris's maternal grandfather hailed celebrated the victory of the vice president-elect with firecrackers and special sweets.
Footage showed locals setting off the pyrotechnics and eating some sweets from Tamil Nadu's Thulasendrapuram village. Children printed Harris placards and paraded them around the small village. A local minister who came to enjoy the festivities even visited them.
After her inauguration in January, Harris will be the first Indian American, the first African American, and the first female vice president in U.S. history.