LONDON: Countries across the world tightened restrictions on their populations over the weekend to fight a resurgence in the coronavirus, as the European Union offered to help drug companies expand vaccine production to improve distribution “bottlenecks”.From local curfews to alcohol bans and complete lockdowns, governments are trying to tackle a surge in cases. The coronavirus has killed more than 1.8 million people globally since emerging in China in December 2019, according to a tally from official sources compiled by AFP.
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But experts fear the worst is yet to come, predicting a sharp rise in infections and deaths after weeks of holiday gatherings. French police booked hundreds of New Year revellers at the weekend for flouting anti-Covid measures at an illegal rave. In Bangkok, the city’s nightlife shut down following a ban on bars, nightclubs and restaurant alcohol sales, among a raft of restrictions aimed at curbing the kingdom’s rising virus toll. Public schools in the Thai capital are to close for two weeks. An outbreak last month at a seafood market has led to a resurgence of the virus in Thailand, with infections detected in 53 of the kingdom’s 77 provinces.
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In Tokyo, the city’s governor asked Japan’s government to declare a new state of emergency as the country battles a third wave, with record numbers of new cases. And South Korea extended its anti-virus curbs until January 17 in the greater Seoul area, including a ban on gatherings of more than four people, which will be widened to cover the whole country. The soaring number of infections around the world means the race to vaccinate is set to dominate the coming year. Delays in getting the vaccines in Europe were not the fault of the European Union, said the bloc’s health commissioner Stella Kyriakides. “The bottleneck at the moment is not the volume of orders but the worldwide shortage of production capacity,” she said. The bloc would help drug companies in their efforts to expand production, she added. “The situation will improve step by step.” In Russia, health minister Mikhail Murashko said more than 800,000 people had received the domestically produced Sputnik V vaccine and that 1.5 million doses had been distributed throughout the country of around 147 million. The Kremlin has held back on imposing nationwide virus restrictions, instead placing its hopes on the mass vaccination drive to end the pandemic and save its struggling economy.
Lockdowns, curfews, alcohol bans as nations fight resurgent virus

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