Sept 1 (Reuters) - Here's what you need to know about the
coronavirus right now:
Japan finds another vial suspected to contain foreign
substance
Japan reported a fresh contamination case involving
Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine, the fourth such incident in less
than a week, threatening to slow the country's sputtering
inoculation campaign.
Kanagawa prefecture said on Tuesday several black particles
in one Moderna vaccine vial were found upon checking for foreign
substances before its use, and it has put the rest of the lot on
hold.
Japan suspended the use of 1.63 million doses of Moderna
shots last week after being notified of contamination in some of
the supply. Moderna and Spanish pharma company Rovi, which
bottles Moderna vaccines, have said the cause could be a
manufacturing issue, and European safety regulators have
launched an investigation.
Australia aims to live with virus instead of eliminating it
Australian authorities on Wednesday extended the lockdown in
Melbourne for another three weeks, as they shift their focus to
rapid vaccination drives and move away from a suppression
strategy to bring cases down to zero.
Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews flagged a staggered easing
of the tough restrictions once 70% of the state's adult
residents receive at least one dose, a milestone he hopes to
reach at least by Sept. 23, based on current vaccination rates.
New Zealanders on Wednesday visited beaches and queued for
takeaway food as tough lockdown measures enforced to beat an
outbreak of the highly infectious Delta variant were eased for
most of the country.
Thai malls reopen after virus cases ease
Thailand allowed shopping malls in the capital Bangkok to
reopen on Wednesday and restaurants to operate at half capacity,
after nearly three months of tough restrictions aimed at
containing the country's worst coronavirus outbreak.
The move comes after infection numbers started falling in
the middle of last month and with the government under pressure
to ease lockdown measures due to the impact on the economy.
Philippines health workers protest neglect
Scores of healthcare workers protested in the Philippine
capital on Wednesday to demand an end to what they called
government neglect and unpaid benefits, as pressure builds at
hospitals fighting one of Asia's longest-running coronavirus
epidemics.
Protesters wearing protective medical gear gathered at the
Department of Health and held placards demanding their risk
allowances and hazard pay, and the resignation of Health
Secretary Francisco Duque.
The Philippines passed the 2 million mark in coronavirus
cases on Wednesday, a fifth of those recorded in the past month
alone. Medical staff are overwhelmed and 103 have died during
the pandemic, among some 33,500 coronavirus fatalities overall.
Israeli students return to school amid surge in cases
Israeli pupils returned to school on Wednesday with mask
requirements and mandatory COVID-19 testing aimed at stemming a
surge in coronavirus cases that has overshadowed the
highly-vaccinated country's reopening.
Health officials worry the launch of a new school year -
with most students attending in-person - will exacerbate the
current wave ahead of this month's Jewish holiday season,
potentially forcing another national lockdown.
New infections have soared since the emergence of the Delta
variant, reaching a pandemic-high 10,947 on Tuesday among
Israel's 9.3 million population.
(Compiled by Linda Noakes; Editing by Edmund Blair)
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