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EU calls for vaccine makers ‘ship’ provides

Employee Jessica Mueller brings the Pfizer BioNTech Covid-19 coronavirus vaccine into a freezer in the vaccine warehouse, where the cans will be stored in Irxleben near Magdeburg, eastern Germany, before being distributed on January 8, 2021.

RONNY HARTMANN | AFP | Getty Images

LONDON – European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on Tuesday called on coronavirus vaccine makers to deliver on their pledges to deliver millions of doses to the block and beyond.

Your comments face an unprecedented challenge for the EU when it comes to introducing vaccines in each of the 27 Member States. The EU’s vaccination campaign began on December 27, a later start than the UK or US, and the patchy, slow rollouts in many of its members have worried officials and the public.

“Europe has invested billions to support the development of the world’s first Covid-19 vaccines. To create a truly global common good,” said von der Leyen at the virtual Davos Agenda summit. “And now companies have to deliver. They have to meet their obligations.”

“Europe is determined to contribute to this global common good, but it also means business,” she said

“We were turned inwards”

A few hours later and at the same time, Chancellor Angela Merkel called for more cooperation and multilateralism in the life-saving blows.

She told the World Economic Forum: “It has become even clearer to me than before that we have to take a multilateral approach, that a self-isolating approach will not solve our problems.”

The coronavirus pandemic highlighted the high level of interdependence and networking in the world, and Germany initially made the mistake of looking inward to defeat the pandemic instead of working with others.

“We looked inward and cut ourselves off from each other, but very quickly we learned the lesson (not to do that),” she said.

Lack of vaccine

With the increase in infections and related bans, the EU is now faced with the challenge of vaccine shortages. Both Pfizer-BioNTech and AstraZeneca have warned of production issues that will either mean a temporary cut in production and the supplies the EU is receiving, and in the case of AstraZeneca, could mean it cannot meet a commitment to deliver 80 million Cans until the end of March.

An unnamed official told Reuters last week that AstraZeneca announced that the supply would instead be around 31 million doses, around 60% less than envisaged by the EU, which is expected to use the vaccine for emergencies later this week.

The news, understandably, enraged the bloc, which threatened to restrict exports of vaccines from the EU. The Pfizer BioNTech vaccine is made in Belgium.

Talks between the EU and AstraZeneca are due to resume on Wednesday. The former asked the pharmaceutical company to provide detailed plans for the manufacture and sale of vaccines. EU Health Commissioner Stella Kyriakides said in a statement on Monday that an “export transparency mechanism” would be put in place to assess vaccine exports from the EU.

Haves vs. have-nots

The supply of vaccines is also a hot topic of conversation outside of Europe, which like other wealthy nations has at least started its vaccination campaigns. The poorer countries say they are at the bottom when it comes to access to life-saving footage.

Last week, the World Health Organization head said the equitable distribution of coronavirus vaccines was at “serious risk” and warned of “catastrophic moral failure” if vaccines were not distributed fairly.

This point was repeated on Tuesday by Angel Gurria, Secretary General of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development.

“This is the biggest test for all of humanity, and especially for OECD countries, as most of those countries bought three, five or even ten times as many vaccines as their entire population,” Gurria told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe “. “”

These vaccines are “badly needed” in developing countries and could “be a very important source of overseas aid support and international cooperation,” he added. “We won’t get rid of this pandemic until it’s gone everywhere,” he said.

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Indian Farmers March Set for Republic Day

NEW DELHI – Thousands of protesting farmers flocked to the Indian capital of New Delhi on Tuesday as their tractors pulled barricades apart, caused police to fire tear gas and marked a chaotic start to an event that had already been classified as direct Challenge to the government.

The protest against India’s new farm laws was due to begin at 12:00 noon local time to avoid disruption to the celebrations commemorating the holiday of the Republic of India in central Delhi. But the peasants began dismantling barricades about two hours earlier, amid some apparent confusion among protesters.

The protest had already threatened to stage the 72nd annual celebration of the beginning of the Indian constitution. Prime Minister Narendra Modi oversaw a lavish armed forces parade, but news channels showed surreal scenes of Mr Modi saluting officers while chaos erupted in parts of the city just a few kilometers away.

On the city’s border with the village of Ghazipur, where farmers have been camping in protest for months, tractors removed a shipping container that was blocking their route when the police stood by helplessly. Elsewhere, thick clouds of tear gas rose over approved marching routes as farmers on tractors, horses, and on foot violently began their rally lessons prematurely.

The farmers waved flags and mocked police officers, as TV news showed. Many carried long swords, tridents, sharp daggers, and battle axes – working, if largely ceremonial, weapons.

Indian television news showed smaller groups breaking off the approved routes, tipping over buses and violently clashing with overwhelmed police officers armed with bamboo sticks as they marched towards central Delhi. In the early afternoon, the Delhi police commanders had deployed officers with assault rifles. They stood in the middle of key streets and stared at the demonstrators with rifles pointed at the crowd.

Even so, the majority of the demonstrators stuck to the approved routes and avoided the city center. At one of the capital’s largest intersections, near the Indian Supreme Court in the heart of Delhi, farmers withdrew with tractors after police fired several volleys of tear gas.

“Once we make it in Delhi, we won’t be going anywhere until Modi repeals the law,” said Happy Sharma, a farmer from the neighboring state of Uttar Pradesh, who was among 27 people riding a tractor truck.

The demonstration, after the central government failed in its desperate efforts to prevent the tractor march, dramatically showed how deeply the impasse with the farmers embarrassed Mr. Modi. Although he has emerged as India’s most dominant figure after his political opposition was crushed, the peasants have been tenaciously defiant.

In September, Mr Modi went through three parliamentary agriculture bills that he hopes will bring private investment into a sector that has been plagued by inefficiency and lack of money for decades. But farmers quickly stood up and said the government’s relaxation of regulations left them to the corporate giants who would take over their businesses.

As their protests grew in size and anger, and tens of thousands of farmers camped in the cold for two months and dozens of them died, the government has offered to amend some parts of the law to meet their demands. The country’s Supreme Court also stepped in and ordered the government to suspend the laws pending an agreement with farmers.

But the farmers say they will not stand in front of a lift, and they have started putting on the pressure. In addition to their tractor protest on Tuesday, they announced plans to march on foot to India’s parliament on February 1, when the country’s new budget is presented.

Tensions were high until Tuesday. Some officials claimed the protests had been infiltrated by insurgent elements who would resort to violence if the peasants could enter the city. Just days earlier, the peasant leaders brought before the media a young man whom they had allegedly arrested on suspicion of a conspiracy to shoot the leaders on Tuesday to disrupt the rally. None of the claims could be independently verified.

There was some confusion about the scope and size of the tractor march before it should begin. Reports in local media quoting Delhi police documents said the march would not begin until after the high-profile Republic Day parade in the heart of New Delhi culminated. The reports also say that the number of tractors and the length of their stay in the city were limited.

However, at a press conference on Monday, the farm managers said there are no time limits or restrictions on the number of tractors as long as they stick to the routes set by the Delhi police. Maps of the routes indicated a compromise between the farmers and the police, which could enable the demonstrators to enter the city but not to get near sensitive institutions of power.

The leaders said that about 150,000 tractors had been gathered at the borders of the capital for the march, that about 3,000 volunteers were trying to help the police keep order, and that 100 ambulances were on standby.

The farm leaders made statements to the demonstrators and repeatedly appealed for peace during the press conference.

“Remember, our aim is not to conquer Delhi, but to win the hearts of the people in this country,” read online instructions for protesters who were told not to carry weapons – “not even sticks “- and to avoid provocative slogans and banners.

“The hallmark of this agitation was that it was peaceful,” said Balbir Singh Rajewal, one of the movement’s main leaders. “My request to our peasant brothers and to our youth is that they keep this movement peaceful. The government is spreading rumors that the authorities have begun to mislead people. Be careful of that.

“If we stay peaceful, we have won. If we get violent, Modi will win. “

Jeffrey Gettleman and Hari Kumar contributed to the coverage.

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Inventory futures down barely forward of busy day of company earnings

Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange

Source: The New York Stock Exchange

US stock futures fell slightly on Monday night as Wall Street prepared for the heart of corporate earnings season.

Futures contracts linked to the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell more than 90 points, or around 0.3%. Those for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 also fell 0.3%.

The futures move follows a volatile day on Wall Street as the S&P 500 rose 0.4% to a new record high after falling more than 1% at the start of the session. The Nasdaq Composite also set a new record at 0.7%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 37 points, or 0.1%.

Monday’s session saw wild swings in sharply shortened stocks, including GameStop and AMC Entertainment, as retail investors bet against short-selling hedge funds, and woU.S. Stock futures tktk on Monday night as Wall Street prepared for the heart of corporate earnings season. Remember that stocks are breaking away from their fundamentals.

Tuesday brings corporate earnings from larger companies with greater impact on market indices. General Electric, Verizon, and Johnson & Johnson are expected to release results before the bell, while tech giant Microsoft is expected to release its second quarter results after the bell.

BTIG chief equity and derivatives strategist Julian Emanuel told CNBC’s Fast Money that the surge in the market over the past few weeks and high levels of bullish option buying could make it difficult for earnings reports to take another leg higher.

“This is the kind of setup that is ready for disappointment,” Emanuel said, referring to the struggles for some other stocks, although profits were beaten earlier in the season.

However, the strategist also said the recent frothy trade may not have peaked and could propel broad market indices even higher.

On the Covid-19 front, health officials and policymakers continued to warn the public about new strains of the virus. Moderna said Monday that its vaccine offers some protection against a variant found in South Africa, while officials in Minnesota reported the first US-confirmed case of a strain found in Brazil.

Investors are also waiting for results from other big tech companies and a new Federal Reserve policy statement later this week. Tuesday’s economic data includes data on consumer confidence and house prices.

Tuesday will also be the first trading session after Janet Yellen is confirmed as Treasury Secretary. The former Fed chairwoman is the first woman to hold this position.

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Covid-19 Information: Stay Updates – The New York Instances

Here’s what you need to know:

Credit…Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Moderna’s vaccine is effective against new variants of the coronavirus that have emerged in Britain and South Africa, the company announced on Monday. But it appears to be less protective against the variant discovered in South Africa, and so the company is developing a new form of the vaccine that could be used as a booster shot.

“We’re doing it today to be ahead of the curve should we need to,” Dr. Tal Zaks, Moderna’s chief medical officer, said in an interview. “I think of it as an insurance policy.”

He added, “I don’t know if we need it, and I hope we don’t.”

Moderna reported findings from a study that used blood samples from eight people who had received two doses of the vaccine, and two monkeys that had also been immunized.

The variant found in Britain had no effect on the levels of neutralizing antibodies — the type that can disable the virus — produced after vaccination. But with the form from South Africa, there was a sixfold reduction in those levels.

Even so, the company said, those antibodies “remain above levels that are expected to be protective.”

Moderna collaborated on the study with the Vaccine Research Center at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, part of the National Institutes of Health.

The results have not yet been published or peer-reviewed, but have been submitted to bioRxiv, which posts preliminary studies online.

The company’s action is part of a race to control a shape-shifting virus that has already created global havoc and now threatens to mutate in ways that will make it even harder to fight.

In other vaccine news:

  • The pandemic has inflicted the greatest labor crisis since the Great Depression, Guy Ryder, the head of the United Nations International Labour Organization, said on Monday. Mr. Ryder said the coronavirus has caused a loss of working hours equivalent to some 255 million jobs last year. There is still massive uncertainty about when the global economy will return to pre-pandemic levels of employment, but it won’t be in 2021, the agency said. Its analysis also pointed to the unevenness of the pandemic’s impact, with growth in the finance and I.T. sectors, underscoring the need for a targeted response to the crisis.

  • Australia on Monday approved the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for use among people 16 and older, the country’s first coronavirus vaccine approval. Vaccinations are expected to start late next month. The announcement came one year to the day after Australia reported its first coronavirus case.

  • After delays, Turkey received 6.5 million more doses of a Chinese-produced coronavirus vaccine Monday morning, the state-run news agency, Anadolu, reported. Turkey was expecting to receive at least 10 million doses of the vaccine in December, and 20 million more in January. But the batches were delayed and the number of doses remained below expectations, an apparent blow to China’s vaccine diplomacy. Turkey has given more than 1. 2 million inoculations, according to Health Ministry data, using the CoronaVac shot from the Chinese company Sinovac. Almost 2.5 million people in Turkey are infected with the coronavirus and more than 25,000 people have died, government data shows.

Livia Albeck-Ripka contributed reporting.

United States › United StatesOn Jan. 24 14-day change
New cases 129,527 –33%
New deaths 1,815 –5%
World › WorldOn Jan. 24 14-day change
New cases 449,163 –20%
New deaths 8,808 +8%

Where cases per capita are
highest

Customers waiting in line to order food for take out at a restaurant in Salinas, Calif., on Sunday.Credit…Joel Angel Juarez for The New York Times

California officials announced on Monday morning that they were lifting severe coronavirus restrictions on huge swaths of the state, home to tens of millions of people. The decision would allow restaurants in those areas to reopen for outdoor dining, and would give hair salons and other personal care businesses the green light to resume limited operations.

However, local officials can still opt to keep restrictions in place, based on conditions in individual communities.

“Seven weeks ago, our hospitals and frontline medical workers were stretched to their limits,” Dr. Mark Ghaly, the state’s secretary of health and human services, said in a statement. “But Californians heard the urgent message to stay home when possible, and our surge after the December holidays did not overwhelm the health care system to the degree we had feared.”

Effective immediately, state officials said, they were ending regional stay-at-home orders, which banned gatherings of any size and required residents to stay home except for essential work. The orders came into force when hospital intensive-care units in the region were projected to become dangerously full.

Such orders had been in effect for Southern California, a huge region encompassing Los Angeles, Orange County and San Diego, as well as for the San Joaquin Valley and the Bay Area. Counties in those regions will now return to a tiered system of rules tied to the prevalence of the virus in each county.

The move is a victory for restaurateurs, who have been pushing the governor to ease what they have said are arbitrary and unnecessary rules.

But it is also a sign that Gov. Gavin Newsom’s administration is struggling to keep a firm grip on a pandemic response that has been criticized as chaotic and piecemeal, undercutting what should be strong, clear public guidance.

The news came on the heels of a weekend of mixed signals from the state about its strategy to curb the rampant spread of the virus.

While California’s overall case numbers have been on the decline, hospitals in Southern California are still overwhelmed, and experts worry that new variants of the virus — including one that researchers recently found in more than half of test samples collected in Los Angeles — could threaten progress.

In the Bay Area, the amount of available intensive care unit capacity has risen to 23.4 percent, according to the state as of Sunday — well above the 15 percent threshold that triggered the stay-at-home order for the region. Yet the Sacramento area has just 11.9 percent intensive care unit capacity, and was allowed to exit the strict order more than a week ago.

Although The San Francisco Chronicle reported on Saturday that officials in the region were feeling hopeful that the order would be lifted soon, the state’s department of public health said on Sunday that the Bay Area wasn’t eligible to have restrictions loosened based on its projections.

Mr. Newsom has repeatedly said that the state’s reopening process would be guided by transparent data, but The Associated Press reported that Mr. Newsom’s administration has refused to disclose key data that officials are using to make decisions about restrictions.

And even after President Biden unveiled what experts have long said is a desperately needed national strategy for finally controlling the pandemic, there are still major hurdles in the vaccine rollout, which in California has contributed to continuing chaos, in which vaccine eligibility rules have been implemented differently county by county.

The state quietly rolled out a promised clearinghouse website to help people find vaccination appointments. But it’s still described as a pilot site.

The governor has been facing mounting political pressure from a recall effort. Experts have said that the vaccine rollout, as well as efforts to reopen, are key tests for his administration.

Credit…Tom Mihalek/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Merck announced on Monday that it was abandoning a pair of Covid-19 vaccines in clinical trials.

The news came as a disappointment at a time when the United States and other countries are struggling to accelerate their sluggish vaccination campaigns and new coronavirus variants threaten to bring surges over the next few months.

The two projects are the second and third vaccines to be abandoned in clinical trials. The University of Queensland in Australia abandoned its own effort in December. Sanofi and other vaccine makers have paused some projects after getting disappointing initial results but are now regrouping to move forward.

Merck was slower than other companies to get into the Covid-19 vaccine race. In June, it acquired the Austrian firm Themis Bioscience to develop a vaccine originally designed at Institut Pasteur, based on a weakened measles virus. Researchers began a Phase 1 trial in August. In a second effort, Merck partnered with IAVI, a nonprofit scientific organization that develops vaccines and treatments, on another vaccine. For that one, they used the same design that they successfully employed to make a vaccine for Ebola.

Merck and IAVI were awarded $38 million for their vaccine research, but neither of Merck’s projects earned the lavish support that Operation Warp Speed showered on other efforts from companies such as Moderna and Johnson & Johnson. In its announcement, Merck said that both vaccines looked safe in early clinical trials. But neither produced a strong response from the immune system. They decided that it was not worth going forward with large-scale trials that would demonstrate whether the vaccines protected people from Covid-19.

“We are grateful to our collaborators who worked with us on these vaccine candidates and to the volunteers in the trials,” Dr. Dean Y. Li, the president of Merck Research Laboratories, said in a statement.

Merck will instead focus its Covid-19 efforts on an experimental antiviral drug known as molnupiravir. Originally designed for influenza, it has shown promising effects in studies on animals and in early clinical trials. The trial is set to finish by May, although preliminary results could come out as early as March.

IAVI said it would continue searching for Covid-19 vaccines. “Our scientists will continue to evaluate other candidates to see if other routes of administration or changes to the construct could lead to improved immune response,” said Karie Youngdahl, senior director and head of global communications at IAVI.

Airport security staff members checked passengers entering Charles de Gaulle Airport in Roissy, outside Paris, on Monday.Credit…Yoan Valat/EPA, via Shutterstock

The European Commission, the executive arm of the European Union, recommended on Monday restricting nonessential travel in a bid to curb the spread of new more contagious variants of the coronavirus.

At the same time, the commission’s proposal aims to prevent blanket border closures, which would obstruct trade and the movement of cross-border workers. Traveling without restrictions would still be possible for family, work and health reasons, which are deemed essential.

“The situation in Europe with the new variants have led us to take difficult but necessary decisions,” Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the commission, wrote on Twitter. “We need to keep safe and discourage nonessential travel.”

The move came amid signs in Britain that Prime Minister Boris Johnson would announce an extension and tightening of lockdown rules in England. In the United States, President Biden has moved to restrict travel from Europe and South Africa over concerns about new variants. Also on Monday, Moderna announced that while its vaccine is effective against new variants, it appears to be less protective against the one that emerged in South Africa, raising further concern.

In the E.U. plan, countries and regions where the 14-day infection rate is more than 500 per 100,000 inhabitants would qualify as “dark red,” or high-risk zones, and moving between them should be limited to essential reasons, the commission said. At the same time, those coming in from outside the bloc, even for essential reasons, would have to undergo testing and quarantines. “The first recommendation is: don’t travel,” said Ylva Johansson, the bloc’s commissioner for home affairs.

The commission’s proposal is nonbinding and needs to be endorsed by national governments, who will discuss it Monday afternoon. It comes after last week’s meeting of the leaders of 27 European Union nations, who agreed in principle to selectively restrict nonessential travel, but did not decide on the details.

“There is currently a very high number of new infections across many member states,” said Didier Reynders, the bloc’s commissioner for justice. “There is an urgent need to reduce the risk of travel-related infections, to lessen the burden on overstretched health care systems.”

Freedom of movement is the cornerstone of the bloc, but travel restrictions remain the province of national governments and vary from country to country, creating a chaotic patchwork of measures. Belgium, for example, has announced a ban on nonessential travel coming into force this Wednesday, with fines for those who don’t comply.

Francisca Alves Xavier, 102, receiving China’s Sinovac vaccine in Brasília last week.Credit…Eraldo Peres/Associated Press

China’s coronavirus vaccines were supposed to deliver a geopolitical win that showcased the country’s scientific prowess and generosity. Instead, in some places, they have set off a backlash.

Officials in Brazil and Turkey have complained that Chinese companies have been slow to ship the doses and ingredients. Disclosures about the Chinese vaccines have been spotty. The few announcements that have trickled out suggest that China’s vaccines, while considered effective, cannot stop the virus as well as those developed by Pfizer and Moderna, the American drugmakers.

In the Philippines, some lawmakers have criticized the government’s decision to purchase a vaccine made by a Chinese company called Sinovac. Officials in Malaysia and Singapore, which ordered doses from Sinovac, have had to reassure their citizens that they would approve a vaccine only if it has been proven safe and effective.

At least 24 countries, most of them low and middle income, signed deals with the Chinese vaccine companies because they offered access at a time when richer nations had claimed most of the doses made by Pfizer and Moderna. But the delays in getting the Chinese vaccines and the fact that the vaccines are less effective mean that those countries may take longer to vanquish the virus.

Beijing officials who had hoped the vaccines would burnish China’s global reputation are now on the defensive. The state news media has started a misinformation campaign against the American vaccines and promoting the Chinese vaccines as a better alternative. They have also distributed online videos that have been shared by the anti-vaccine movement in the United States.

The vaccines are also meant to prove that China has become a scientific and diplomatic powerhouse. It remains on par with the United States in the number of vaccines approved for emergency use or in late-stage trials. Sinopharm, a state-owned vaccine maker, and Sinovac have said they can produce up to a combined two billion doses this year, making them essential to the global fight against the coronavirus.

Unlike the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, their doses can be kept at refrigerated temperatures and are more easily transported, making them appealing to the developing world.

China’s campaign has been plagued with doubts, however. A YouGov survey this month of roughly 19,000 people in 17 countries and regions showed that most were distrustful of a Covid-19 vaccine made in China. The misinformation campaign surrounding Western vaccines could further undermine its image.

A mass coronavirus vaccination site had been set to launch this week at Citi Field in Queens.Credit…Ryan Christopher Jones for The New York Times

Mayor Bill de Blasio of New York City announced on Monday that the openings of planned mass coronavirus vaccination sites at Yankee Stadium and Citi Field would be postponed because of the low supply of doses available.

“We want to get those to be full blown, 24-hour operations,” Mr. de Blasio said at a news conference, “but we don’t have the vaccine.”

The site at Citi Field had been set to launch this week, while plans for the one in the Bronx were still being developed. Another site at the Empire Outlets on Staten Island was initially scheduled to open last week, but would also be postponed, the mayor said.

The city had a total of 19,032 first doses in inventory on Monday morning, Mr. de Blasio said, and expects to receive just under 108,000 doses this week. But he continued to warn that figure was not nearly enough to keep up with the pace at which New Yorkers are being inoculated: If the supply was greater, the mayor said New York City would be on pace to administer roughly 500,000 doses per week.

Instead, he said many inoculation appointments will continue to be canceled or rescheduled as they were last week.

Some public health experts have worried that the limited supply could undermine goals of state and city officials to prioritize communities hard hit by the virus — Black and Latino people and low-income New Yorkers — in the vaccine rollout.

The state has not released demographic information on the distribution, but Mr. de Blasio said on Monday that data would come “this week,” adding that “it’s part of making sure that we act to address the disparities that have pervaded the Covid experience.”

The mayor last week also sent a letter to President Biden requesting more doses, along with the “flexibility” to use second doses to increase the pace of vaccinations. He did not discuss any specific progress made on Monday, but appeared hopeful that an update could come soon.

“What is so clear now is the commitment of the Biden administration,” Mr. de Blasio said, “to finding every conceivable way to get us more vaccine quickly. We are waiting in the course of this week for more detailed information.”

But federal health officials and corporate executives agree that the immediate supply is unlikely to increase before April because of manufacturing constraints. Public health officials are also awaiting clinical trial results for the vaccine under development by Johnson & Johnson, which city officials said on Monday they hoped would also raise supply levels.

Still, the current vaccination effort has so far sown confusion and frustration across the country as other states similarly struggle with shortages.

And as small businesses across New York City continue to collapse during the pandemic, Mr. de Blasio said the city’s annual restaurant week started on Monday with a focus on takeout and delivery options.

“There’s a lot of things we need to keep doing to help our business in the meantime,” he said, “as they work to survive.”

Meghan Hayes, a teacher at John Hay Community Academy, teaching her class outside the school board president’s home earlier this month. Credit…Pat Nabong/Chicago Sun-Times, via Associated Press

With roughly 70,000 kindergarten through eighth grade students scheduled to return to public school classrooms in Chicago next week, the district and the teachers’ union remain locked in a battle over the reopening plan, with the union saying that a majority of its members voted to authorize a strike if the district seeks to force teachers back into buildings.

All staff working in kindergarten through eighth grade classrooms were originally supposed to report to buildings on Monday to prepare for students’ return next week. But late last week, the union asked its members to vote on a resolution calling on them to refuse to report in-person and to authorize a strike if the district locked them out of its electronic systems.

Over the weekend, the two sides jockeyed for leverage. The district sent a message to families and staff saying that it had agreed to a request from the union to postpone the date for staff to return to Wednesday. Shortly after, the union sent its own message denying that there had been any agreement and saying that its members had voted to continue working remotely indefinitely.

The district said that the union was making several requests that it disagreed with, including delaying reopening until all staff members had been able to receive at least one dose of the vaccine or until the citywide positivity rate fell below 3 percent. Over the last week, the citywide positivity rate has been 7.2 percent. The district has said it will begin vaccinating teachers in mid-February and that it hopes to vaccinate all employees in the coming months.

According to the district, the union was also requesting weekly surveillance testing of staff as well as regular testing of students in parts of the city with high positivity rates. Currently, the district is planning to test up to a quarter of staff each week and is not planning to do surveillance testing of students.

Prekindergarten students and some special education students returned to school buildings on Jan. 11, in the first wave of the district’s reopening. The district said on Friday that roughly 60 percent of the 5,352 students who were expected to attend in person actually did in the first week. Overall about a third of families in the district who have been given the option to have their students return in person have signed up to do so.

Chicago is not the only district where opposition from teachers’ unions is threatening reopening plans: Over the weekend, plans to reopen schools in Montclair, New Jersey, were postponed indefinitely after the superintendent said he did not have enough teachers to properly staff the schools.

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador of Mexico said he would continue to carry out his official duties.Credit…Marco Ugarte/Associated Press

Mexico’s president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, said Sunday that he had contracted the coronavirus and was undergoing “medical treatment” for what he described as mild symptoms.

Mr. López Obrador, writing on Twitter, said he would continue to carry out his official duties, including holding a call with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia that is set for Monday.

“As always, I am optimistic,” he said.

The Mexican leader has consistently played down the pandemic, questioning the value of wearing masks and refusing to wear one himself in most public appearances.

On Friday, he posted a photo of himself indoors, again without a mask, conducting a call with President Biden. He was accompanied by Marcelo Ebrard, the foreign minister, and Alfonso Romo, a former top aide — and neither was wearing a mask. And on Saturday, the president met with local business leaders in Monterrey.

Hours before disclosing that he had contracted the virus, Mr. López Obrador, who flies commercial on all official trips, sat in coach on a flight from San Luis Potosí to Mexico City, according to local media reports.

As late as June, Mr. López Obrador was still sounding dismissive. He said that having a clean conscience would help fight off the virus. “No lying, no stealing, no betraying, that helps a lot to not get coronavirus,” he told reporters.

And for months, the president has repeatedly insisted that the end of the pandemic’s devastation was just around the corner.

“The worst is ending,” he said this month, as deaths surged. “We are coming out of it.”

In the spring, The New York Times reported that the Mexican government had failed to record hundreds, possibly thousands, of deaths in Mexico City, dismissing officials who had tallied more than three times as many fatalities in the capital than the government had publicly acknowledged.

Then in December, federal officials, loath to damage the economy still further, reassured the public that Mexico City had not reached the level of contagion that would require a full lockdown. In fact, the government’s own numbers showed that the capital had surpassed that threshold, an analysis by The Times found.

Some public health experts said they were little surprised that Mr. López Obrador had become infected, given his preference for going mask free, even in situations where the risk of exposure was high.

“One even expected or assumed, because of his way of exposing himself to so many people and not wearing a mask, that he would have been infected earlier,” said Carlos Magis Rodríguez, professor of medicine at the National Autonomous University in Mexico. “In all the public appearances of López Obrador, except for when he went to visit Trump, we saw him without a face mask.”

He said there was reason for concern about the prognosis for Mr. López Obrador, who is 67 and had a heart attack in 2013. “He’s at greater risk than a young person,” Dr. Magis said.

Mr. López Obrador has told reporters that he will wait to get vaccinated with the rest of his age group, most likely in mid-March.

The news came as Mexico is confronting its worst moment since the pandemic began, with deaths hitting horrific highs. On Thursday, Mexico confirmed 1,803 new coronavirus deaths, surging past the previous record of more than 1,500 set days earlier.

And while the president is already being treated, many Mexicans are struggling to get medical care. The country’s hospitals are overrun, and close to 90 percent of beds in Mexico City, the epicenter of the national outbreak, are occupied.

Mexico has intentionally kept testing low throughout the pandemic, which has obscured the true extent of the virus’s reach across the country. But it is undeniable that Mr. López Obrador has presided over one of the worst outbreaks in the world.

To date, the country has recorded more than 1.7 million coronavirus infections and nearly 150,000 deaths, the fourth-highest global death toll.

Official numbers severely underestimate the true toll of the pandemic. As of December, the country had recorded 250,000 more deaths than expected, an excess mortality rate that suggests the pandemic has been far deadlier than official numbers suggest.

Kirk Semple and Elda Cantú contributed reporting.

Dr. Anthony S. Fauci with President Donald Trump during a White House coronavirus briefing in April.Credit…Doug Mills/The New York Times

An adviser to seven presidents and the nation’s top infectious disease expert for decades, Dr. Anthony S. Fauci has weathered many crises.

But in 2020, as one of the most familiar, trusted faces of the nation’s public health community, Dr. Fauci, 80, faced a year like no other when the coronavirus pandemic unfolded in the final months of the Trump administration amid an extremely divisive election season.

In an hourlong conversation with The New York Times over the weekend, Dr. Fauci described some of the difficulties, and the toll, of working with President Donald J. Trump.

The Chicago Teachers Union said on Sunday that its members had voted to defy an order to return to the classroom before they were vaccinated against the coronavirus.Credit…Anthony Vazquez/Chicago Sun-Times, via Associated Press

In his first 48 hours in office, President Biden sought to project an optimistic message about returning the nation’s many homebound students to classrooms. “We can teach our children in safe schools,” he vowed in his inaugural address.

The following day, Mr. Biden signed an executive order promising to throw the strength of the federal government behind an effort to “reopen school doors as quickly as possible.”

But with about half of American students still learning virtually as the pandemic nears its first anniversary, the president’s push is far from certain to succeed. His plan is rolling out just as local battles over reopening have, if anything, become more pitched in recent weeks.

Teachers are uncertain about when they will be vaccinated. With alarming case counts across the country and new variants of the coronavirus emerging, unions are fighting efforts to return their members to crowded hallways.

The Chicago Teachers Union told members to defy orders to return to the classroom on Monday and to begin working remotely. The teachers say the district has not done enough to keep students and teachers safe during the pandemic. Students are supposed to come back to classrooms on Feb. 1.

Given the seemingly intractable health and labor challenges, some district officials have begun to say out loud what was previously unthinkable: that schools may not be operating normally for the 2021-22 school year. And some labor leaders are seeking to tamp down the expectations Mr. Biden’s words have raised.

“We don’t know whether a vaccine stops transmissibility,” said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, the nation’s second-largest teachers union.

Some virus experts, however, have said there is reason to be optimistic on this question.

Ms. Weingarten said a key to returning teachers to classrooms in the coming months would be promises to allow those with health conditions, or whose family members have compromised immune systems, to continue to work remotely; the collection of centralized data on the number of coronavirus cases in specific schools; and assurances from districts that they would shut down schools when cases occur.

Fights over those very demands have slowed and complicated reopenings across the country.

Mr. Biden’s executive order directs federal agencies to create national school reopening guidelines, to support virus contact tracing in schools and to collect data measuring the impact of the pandemic on students. The White House is also pushing a stimulus package that would provide $130 billion to schools for costs such as virus testing, upgrading ventilation systems and hiring staff members.

Research has pointed to the potential to operate schools safely before teachers and students are vaccinated, as long as practices like mask wearing are adhered to, and especially when community transmission and hospitalization rates are controlled.

A parking lot of the State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Ariz., which has been turned into a mass vaccination site.Credit…Juan Arredondo for The New York Times

An 8-year-old girl in Missouri is getting an earful from frustrated Arizonans who are trying to get inoculated against Covid-19 and mistakenly calling her instead.

Sophia Garcia of Sullivan, Mo., who used to live in Arizona, has been receiving dozens of calls from people in the state on her hand-me-down phone, whose Phoenix number is just one digit different from the Arizona health department’s vaccine help line.

“Every five minutes my phone keeps ringing,” she told Phoenix’s CBS affiliate, KPHO/KTVK. Callers have been complaining about scheduling difficulties and asking how to book an appointment, her family said. In response, Sophia has recorded a voice mail message directing callers to the appropriate number.

Her story offers a glimpse of the struggles and at times desperation of people seeking vaccination in Arizona and elsewhere. People across the United States have complained of their second dose appointments being canceled after vaccination sites ran out of supplies. And there are concerns that President Biden’s goal of 100 million shots in 100 days may not be ambitious enough.

Arizona, which has the worst infection rate in the country, is speeding up vaccinations after a slow start, with the Department of Health Services announcing on Sunday that more than 400,000 doses had been administered. Over 61,000 people have received both doses, the health department said. A New York Times tracker monitoring the vaccine rollout in each state places Arizona in the top 20 for doses administered.

After earlier glitches and staff shortages, the state attributes the turnaround partly to round-the-clock use of the State Farm Stadium in Glendale, a suburb of Phoenix, as a site for inoculations in the past few weeks. “The success of our State Farm Stadium vaccination site has made it clear that Arizona can efficiently and effectively administer vaccine to large numbers,” Dr. Cara Christ, director of the Arizona Department of Health Services, said in a statement.

Another vaccination site at the Phoenix Municipal Stadium is set to open next week.

State officials said the federal government had denied a request for an additional 300,000 doses each week. “Now the federal government has to step up its game and provide additional vaccine to support Arizona’s proven momentum,” Dr. Christ said.

In the meantime, Arizonans who inadvertently call Sophia in Missouri will get this firm but encouraging message: “Hopefully, if you try carefully, you could get the right number.”

GLOBAL ROUNDUP

An official in the northeastern Chinese city of Tonghua, where residents are barred from leaving their homes amid a strict lockdown, apologized to residents who said they had not been receiving enough food.

Tonghua, an industrial city of about two million people in Jilin Province, went into lockdown on Jan. 20 after the number of recent cases grew to nearly 100. Since then the local outbreak has been largely brought under control, with just two new symptomatic cases reported on Saturday.

As China observes the one-year anniversary of the lockdown in Wuhan, the central city where the virus was first discovered, other parts of the country are confronting smaller outbreaks. The government has responded with mass testing and citywide lockdowns that at one point affected more than 28 million people, almost three times the size of the population that was initially locked down in Wuhan.

On Monday, China reported 124 new cases in the previous 24 hours, including 117 local cases and seven among travelers in quarantine after returning from overseas. That is an increase from 80 cases reported a day earlier, though still vastly lower than other large countries. Mainland China, which has a population of 1.4 billion people, has recorded a total of about 100,000 coronavirus cases and 4,635 deaths, according to a New York Times database.

In Tonghua, the tough restrictions on movement have led to widespread complaints, with residents taking to social media to vent and seek help. Jiang Haiyan, a deputy mayor, acknowledged the problems on Sunday, saying that a lack of personnel had hindered the distribution of supplies.

“At present, there are problems of untimely and inadequate distribution of household materials for citizens, which has caused great inconvenience to everyone’s lives,” Ms. Jiang said.

The city’s Communist Party committee and local government “express their sincere apologies to everyone,” she added.

The city had since recruited a large number of community workers and volunteers to ensure adequate supply distribution, Ms. Jiang said.

But on the social media accounts for The People’s Daily, the Communist Party’s main newspaper, some people continued to express dissatisfaction with the situation.

“Before the residents weren’t treated humanely, they didn’t tell us anything and in one night went from house to house sealing everything up,” read one popular reply. “Now grass-roots officials and volunteers are treated inhumanely, and in one night all the food must be distributed door to door.”

Lin Qiqing and Salman Masood contributed reporting.

In other developments around the world:

  • Australia on Monday approved the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine for use among people 16 and older, the country’s first vaccine approval. Vaccinations are expected to start late next month. The announcement came one year to the day after Australia reported its first coronavirus case.

  • Pakistan is likely to approve the Russian Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine for emergency use, officials said. It would be the third to get such approval, joining Oxford University’s AstraZeneca and the Chinese SinoPharm vaccines. Pakistan, which has an approximate population of 212 million, has yet to start its rollout. Dr. Faisal Sultan, the de facto health minister, said last week that one million dosages would be distributed in the first three months of 2021. Trials of the Chinese CanSino vaccine are currently being conducted in the country, and the results are expected in the first week of February, officials said.

  • Officials in New Zealand confirmed on Monday a case of the South African variant of the coronavirus in a returned traveler a week after she left hotel quarantine. Officials have said the 56-year-old, who had tested negative twice before being allowed to return home, was probably infected by a fellow returned traveler while in quarantine. People who were at the same hotel have been urged to self-isolate immediately. It is the first case New Zealand has recorded outside quarantine since November. The government in Australia responded on Monday by suspending its travel bubble with New Zealand for at least 72 hours, saying all travelers from the country must quarantine on arrival.

  • The presidential election in Portugal on Sunday was marked by record-low voter turnout amid a nationwide lockdown and the country’s highest one-day death toll from the coronavirus. Turnout was about 39 percent, according to the preliminary results, despite an easing of restrictions on movement and an increase in the number of polling stations. In the last presidential election in 2016, turnout was more than 48 percent. On Sunday, officials reported a record 275 coronavirus deaths, one day after reporting 15,333 cases, also a single-day record. Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, Portugal’s center-right president, was re-elected to a second five-year term with about 61 percent of the vote.

VideoVideo player loadingVideo by City of New Orleans, courtesy of Crista RockCreditCredit…Crista Rock

With the snap of the snare drums, New Orleanians take joyous turns high-stepping and chicken strutting, dressed in the finery of their social clubs and krewes. The celebration, shown on a 30-second public service announcement, is one of numerous efforts around the country to persuade people to get inoculated against the coronavirus. But its homegrown approach, using neighborhood personas and invoking local Carnival culture, may make it particularly effective, say experts in vaccine hesitance and behavioral change.

“I’m getting the vaccine so we can have Mardi Gras, y’all!” shouts Jeremy Stevenson, a Monogram Hunter Mardi Gras Indian, also known as Second Chief Lil Pie, as he sways in a 12-foot tower of turquoise feathers and beading.

Other locals prance forth to offer their own reasons, concluding: “Sleeves Up, NOLA!”

“I teared up several times and also just laughed out loud with delight. The sense of community is contagious,” said Alison M. Buttenheim, the scientific director of the Center for Health Incentives and Behavioral Economics at the University of Pennsylvania. “Vaccination is framed as a collective action that everyone can contribute to in order to bring back things the community values and cherishes.”

Although national vaccine hesitation rates are falling, surveys show that antipathy to the new shots is still widespread among some demographic groups. But there has been little consensus around ways to build confidence in the shot.

In November, New Orleans put together a coalition of public health doctors, clergy, leaders from Black, Latino and Vietnamese communities, and heads of the city’s large social clubs. The group identified cultural icons that would appeal widely to residents.

Rather than focusing messaging on the miseries wrought by the pandemic, it decided to emphasize an aspirational and inviting tone, a core insight derived from behavioral change research.

“I’m getting my shot so I can visit my 92-year-old mom and we can eat in our favorite restaurants,” says Julie Nalibov of the Krewe of Red Beans.

The spot will be shown on local TV stations and saturate social media. Photographs will adorn citywide billboards.

“I hope state and local health departments around the country can get resources to develop more hyperlocal campaigns,” Dr. Buttenheim said. “Imagine similar spots from Philly, or Boise, or Hawaii, or the Cherokee Nation.”

Protesters clashed with the police during a demonstration against coronavirus restrictions in Eindhoven, the Netherlands, on Sunday.Credit…Rob Engelaar/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Prime Minister Mark Rutte of the Netherlands said on Monday that anyone involved in riots over the weekend protesting the country’s coronavirus measures had engaged in “criminal violence” and warned that perpetrators would be treated accordingly.

Hundreds of people were detained during unrest in Amsterdam, Eindhoven and at least eight other cities after the start of a 9 p.m. curfew on Saturday, the police said. Officers used tear gas, attack dogs and water cannons to disperse crowds in the southern city of Eindhoven, where shops were looted and cars set on fire. In Urk, a staunchly protestant fishing village young people burned down a Covid test facility.

“This has nothing to do with protest or fighting for freedom,” Mr. Rutte, told reporters on Monday. “This is criminal violence, and we will treat it as such.”

His caretaker government implemented harsh new lockdown measures last week, vetted by Parliament, to curb the spread of the coronavirus. Flights to Britain, South Africa and most of South America were halted on Saturday. It also implemented a nationwide curfew, the first since World War II.

The mayor of Eindhoven, John Jorritsma, was visibly upset when he spoke to reporters about the violence in the city. He called the rioters “scum of the earth” and said he feared the Netherlands, normally one of the quietest countries in the European Union, was “on a path of civil war.”

A spokesman for the Dutch police union said the group feared that the illegal protests and riots were just the start of the curfew-related unrest. “I hope it was a one-off, but I’m afraid it was a harbinger for the coming days and weeks,” the spokesman, Koen Simmers, said, according to the public broadcaster NOS. “We haven’t seen so much violence in 40 years,” he added.

The protesters also gathered last week in Amsterdam after calls on social media to “resist” the lockdown rules and the government’s policies overall. Mr. Rutte is one of the longest-serving European leaders. Elections in the Netherlands are scheduled for March.

Protests also erupted over the weekend in Denmark. Five people were arrested on Saturday during an anti-lockdown demonstration in Copenhagen, local news outlets reported. Around 1,000 protesters gathered to demonstrate against what they said were limitations of their freedoms, after a call for protest by a Facebook group. Protesters tied an effigy of Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen to a pole and burned it, Danish channel TV2 reported. A sign was hung around the effigy’s neck saying, “She must and should be killed.”

Outside a cafe in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Monday, the first day after lockdown restrictions were lifted.Credit…Gleb Garanich/Reuters

Ukraine reopened schools, restaurants and movie theaters on Monday after testing showed the coronavirus was spreading less rapidly after just one week of a strict lockdown.

The health minister, Maksym Stepanov, pointed to the improving statistics as a clear indication that a strict lockdown, even if brief, can tamp down numbers. The rate of new infections declined about a third after the first seven days of closures, he said.

The cumulative number of infections nationwide last week was just over 30,000, nearly 14,000 less than the week before, Mr. Stepanov said. “The statistics are relatively optimistic and point to an improvement in the situation,” he said, local media reported.

Mr. Stepanov also pointed to a decline in hospitalizations, which typically trail infections by several weeks, suggesting that the downward trend had begun before the lockdowns and that New Year celebrations had not shifted the dynamic.

President Volodymyr Zelensky quickly imposed lockdowns last spring before easing them over the summer. The country retained a system that can close businesses in cities or regions with flare-ups.

Though the government lifted some restrictions on Monday, not all businesses can open. Nightclubs and sports stadiums remain closed. Schools are not allowed convene large gatherings of students, such as for performances or schoolwide meetings.

Ukraine, which aspires to join the European Union but is not in the bloc, has struggled to find vaccines and may not be able to inoculate its population until well into the year, forcing it to rely on quarantines, lockdowns and other restrictions until then.

Google said it will make company buildings, parking lots and open spaces available to serve as temporary vaccination clinics in partnership with health care providers and public health officials.

In a blog post on Monday, Sundar Pichai, the chief executive of Google’s parent company, Alphabet, said the company will start by opening sites in Los Angeles, the San Francisco Bay Area and New York City, with plans to expand to other sites nationwide.

The move is part of a series of measures to help accelerate vaccination efforts. Google also said it plans to contribute $100 million in ad credits to health organizations to educate people about the vaccine and $50 million for groups working on fair access to the vaccine.

It will also include more information in search results and maps to help people find vaccination locations with details about who is eligible and whether appointments are necessary. Google said it will provide local distribution information in search results in the coming week so people can determine whether they are eligible to receive a vaccine.

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U.S. inventory futures rise forward of busy week for earnings, Apple shares acquire

US stock futures rose early Monday as Wall Street prepared for the busiest week of earnings that will feature reports from some of the biggest tech companies.

Futures contracts linked to the Dow Jones Industrial Average implied an opening gain of around 28 points. S&P 500 futures gained 0.3%. Nasdaq 100 futures were up 0.9%.

In the coming week, 13 Dow Components and 111 S&P 500 companies will be showing profits. Quarterly reports on deck include reports from Apple, Microsoft, Netflix, Tesla, McDonald’s, Honeywell, Caterpillar and Boeing.

Before the quarterly report on Wednesday after the bell in premarket trading, Apple shares rose by 2%. Tesla, which also reported on Wednesday, gained 1.5%

According to Bank of America, 73% of the S&P 500 components that have already reported profits have outperformed both sales and EPS. The company said it was similar to last quarter when the number of companies that beat hit a record.

Stocks ended mixed Friday – the S&P 500 and Dow closed in the red while the Nasdaq Composite closed at a record high – although all three posted gains for the week. The Dow recorded its fifth positive week in six while the S&P recorded its third positive week in four. The Nasdaq rose 4.19% last week for its best week since November and the fifth positive week in six when stocks of big tech names drove the index to new all-time highs.

The surge came as President Joe Biden tried to push through a $ 1.9 trillion stimulus package that many Republicans in Congress are opposed to. The tax subsidy includes, among other things, direct controls for millions of Americans, aid to state and local governments, funding for Covid vaccines and tests, increasing the minimum wage, and improving unemployment benefits.

Lindsey Bell, chief investment strategist at Ally Invest, noted that additional stimulus could lead to a spike in inflation.

“Right now, watch out for signs of inflation as a temporary or longer-term trend. If it’s just a quick shock, we can see some market weakness without major action by the Fed,” she noted. “On the other hand, persistently high inflation could force the Fed to consider a rate hike and withdraw its market support.”

In an inflationary environment, investors should prefer the consumer staples, energy and financial sectors. She added that real estate and gold are among the other assets that can help hedge against inflation.

The number of coronavirus cases in the US and abroad continues to rise, but many economists are forecasting a return to growth this year.

“We continue to believe that a reduction in virus risk from mass vaccination coupled with fiscal support for consumer spending will result in a mid-year consumption boom and very strong growth in 2021,” Jan Hatzius, chief economist at Goldman Sachs, told a note to customers over the weekend. “We currently forecast GDP growth of + 6.6% for the full year, 2½ percentage points above consensus,” he added.

However, the company found that while risks like insufficient tax subsidies are less likely, other risks remain. Hatzius cited consumers who remained more cautious than expected, as well as the development of a vaccine-resistant virus strain, as possible future headwinds for the market.

Biden’s surgeon general said Sunday the U.S. is trying to keep up as the coronavirus mutates.

“The virus is basically telling us that it will keep changing and we need to be prepared for it,” said Dr. Vivek Murthy told ABC News “This Week”.

“We need to be number one and do much better genome monitoring so we can identify variants when they arise, and that means we need to double up on public health measures like masking and avoiding indoor gatherings,” he added.

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Your Monday Briefing – The New York Occasions

The UK’s disclosure on Friday that a new variant of the virus could be more deadly than the original has silenced those who had called for a swift return to life as before.

The UK government is expected to announce in the coming days that it will extend and tighten the nationwide lockdown imposed by Prime Minister Boris Johnson this month. Schools can remain closed until Easter, while overseas travelers may need to be quarantined in hotels for 10 days.

For Mr Johnson, who has faced relentless pressure from members of his own Conservative Party to relax restrictions, the warning of the variant made a strong case that Britain may be in the middle of a serious new phase of the pandemic – and that it does relaxed constraints now could be disastrous.

Effects: While scholars agree that the evidence of the variant’s greater lethality is preliminary, they said it was nonetheless served government purposes in the lockdown debate in which Mr Johnson, drawn between science and politics, is often Has shown an aversion to tough steps.

Here are the latest updates and maps of the pandemic.

In other developments:

  • Larry King, who interviewed presidents, movie stars and people from all walks of life, died on Saturday in Los Angeles at the age of 87. He had recently been treated for Covid-19.

  • Israel will suspend most air travel in and out of the country for at least a week from midnight on Monday to block the invasion of emerging variants.

  • Egypt began vaccinating health workers in isolation facilities, pulmonary hospitals and fever wards on Sunday in the country’s first wave of vaccine rollouts.

  • Protesters in the Netherlands clashed with police in two cities on Sunday and a coronavirus testing facility burned down on Saturday as fury over a nationwide lockdown grew.

  • The European Union said it would take legal action if necessary to ensure that pharmaceutical companies fulfill contracts to supply vaccines to the block after manufacturers announced possible delays.

Some right-wing extremists, united around the world by a racist ideology charged by social media, were spurred on by the January 6 events at the U.S. Capitol.

While many online users disapproved of storming the Capitol as an amateur botch, others saw it as a teaching moment – how to pursue their goal of overthrowing democratic governments in a more concerted and concrete way.

It is difficult to say exactly how deep and lasting the ties are between the American right and its European counterparts. However, officials are increasingly concerned about a web of diffuse international connections, and fear that the networks that were encouraged back in the Trump era have become more resolute in recent weeks.

Germany: Following the violence in the US, German authorities tightened security around the parliament building in Berlin, where far-right protesters, waving many of the same flags and symbols as the Washington rioters, tried to force their way out in August. 29. No specific plans for attacks have currently been identified in Germany.

As the world nears 100 million coronavirus cases – with 25 million in the US as of Saturday and nearly 30 million in Europe – questions are emerging about new variants of the virus that could slow or even reverse progress in ending the pandemic as well about the uneven adoption of vaccines around the world.

One of these questions is how effective the current vaccines will be against these modified versions of the virus that originally appeared in the UK, South Africa, Brazil and the US. Some seem more contagious than the original version, and all of them are little known.

At the same time, failure to distribute Covid-19 vaccines to poor countries is likely to lead to global economic devastation in which wealthy countries will be hit almost as badly as in developing countries, according to a new study commissioned by the International Chamber of Commerce is released today.

By the numbers: In the most extreme scenario – with rich nations fully vaccinated by the middle of this year and poor countries largely closed – the study concludes that the global economy would suffer losses of more than $ 9 trillion, a sum , which is above the annual production of Japan and Germany combined.

On the impoverished northeastern Caribbean coast of Nicaragua, the predominantly indigenous population is dependent on fishing – and high-priced lobster is one of the most sought-after quarries.

But lobster there is an amazingly dangerous pursuit. Hundreds of fishermen are paralyzed from hunting for lobsters and other delicacies such as clams and sea cucumbers found deep in the ocean.

Trump impeachment proceedings: The House of Representatives will file its indictment against former President Donald Trump with the Senate today, but the trial won’t begin until February 8.

Asia’s “El Chapo”: Tse Chi Lop, allegedly the leader of a billionaire drug consortium, was arrested on Friday in Amsterdam and is about to be extradited to Australia.

Chinese miners: Two weeks after an explosion trapped a group of miners underground in Shandong Province, at least eleven were found alive and lifted to the surface on Sunday.

Snapshot: Above, supporters of the imprisoned opposition leader Aleksei Navalny held banners in Moscow on Saturday with the inscription: “Do not be afraid. Do not be still ”and“ One for all and all for one. “On Saturday there were demonstrations in more than 100 cities, the largest protests in Russia since at least 2017. Analysts say the stalemate between the Kremlin and its critics seems to be worsening.

Cosmically lost and found: Missing: a very, very large black hole. One of the largest galaxies in the universe appears to be missing the dark centerpiece – and despite the efforts of astronomers, they are no closer to finding it.

“That was for Nepal”: A group of climbers from Nepal earlier this month became the first people in the world to climb K2 in winter, a mountaineering challenge that many thought was impossible.

What we read: This GQ piece by Douglas Emhoff about his role as the first “second gentleman”. It’s interesting read about reinvention.

Knit: Artisans in search of Harry Styles ‘colorful cardigan and Bernie Sanders’ housewarming gloves are redesigning their own patterns.

Clock: Repeat – or maybe enjoy for the first time – five films that define the romantic comedies of the 1980s.

You can stay safe and take your time. At Home offers a comprehensive collection of ideas for what to read, cook, see, and do while inside.

With reporter-manned offices in around 30 countries, The Times can quickly cover breaking news that occurs almost anywhere. At the heart of this effort are our three main hubs for the newsroom – New York, London and an Asia hub located in Hong Kong but moving to Seoul. Here’s a look at how it works.

At the end of the working day in New York, the editors will pass the coverage to the editors in Hong Kong and Seoul, who are currently 13 and 14 hours in advance. While the editors in Asia wind down their day, a lively London newsroom will act as the main hub. A few hours later that team will return the baton back to New York and everything repeats itself again, a rotation that is vital to a 24 hour news operation.

“There is a lot of overlap,” said Adrienne Carter, Asia editor for the Times, “so there are probably only a handful of hours that a group is alone.”

When Asia hands the reporting over to London, a newsroom with around 70 employees on four continents will have to keep watch. Journalists begin with the newsroom’s coverage of Europe, Africa, and the Middle East, often coordinating the early morning US news with the international, national, and academic desks, as well as the Washington office.

Jim Yardley, the Europe editor, said the way the international newsrooms are structured makes the collaborative effort seamless. “One of the things about London and Hong Kong is that they emerge primarily from the international desk, but in many ways they are part of every desk,” he said. “It’s an attempt to actually make the work more collaborative and less silly.”

That’s it for this briefing. I wish you a pleasant start to the week.

– Natasha

Many Thanks
To Theodore Kim and Jahaan Singh for the break from the news. You can reach the team at briefing@nytimes.com.

PS
• We listen to “The Daily”. Our final installment is about President Biden’s instructions and how to deal with government by decree.
• Here is our mini crossword puzzle and a clue: Champ or Major for the Bidens (three letters). You can find all of our puzzles here.
• Marcela Valdes, who has been reporting on politics, culture, immigration and more for the New York Times Magazine for many years, joins the magazine as a contributor.

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China acquired extra international funding final yr than U.S., U.N. says

Employees will be working on the WEY Tank 300 SUV production line at a Great Wall Motors factory in Chongqing, China, on January 19, 2021.

VCG | Visual China Group | Getty Images

The Chinese economy brought in more FDI than any other country last year, knocking the United States off the list.

China brought in $ 163 billion in inflows last year, compared to $ 134 billion attracted by the U.S., the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development wrote in a report released on Sunday. In 2019, the U.S. received $ 251 billion in inflows and China received $ 140 billion.

Overall, the report found that foreign direct investment increased globally as the Covid-19 pandemic virtually brought countries large and small to a standstill.

FDI fell 42% to $ 859 billion in 2020, a 30% decrease from the depths of the 2009 financial crisis. The economic measure takes into account investments in one country made by people and businesses in other countries, such as building a factory or opening a satellite office.

The industrialized countries were hit harder than the so-called “developing countries” last year. Investments in the United States fell 49%, slightly below the industrialized nation’s average of 69%.

Foreign direct investment in developing countries fell by a comparatively moderate 12%. China, featured on this list, actually saw its inflows rise slightly, up 4%.

In the European Union, FDI fell by two-thirds, according to the report, while the United Kingdom did not see any new inflows. Great Britain is particularly badly affected by the coronavirus.

China managed to get the coronavirus largely under control within its borders last year, despite being the first nation to be affected by the deadly disease.

Strict lockdown measures, early mass testing, and an abundance of personal protective equipment have been blamed for the relatively low death toll in the country.

Since the pandemic began, China has had fewer than 100,000 confirmed Covid-19 cases and has suffered around 4,800 deaths from the disease, according to Johns Hopkins University.

In the US, with a much smaller population, there have been nearly 25 million cases and more than 400,000 deaths.

Although China outperformed the US in FDI in 2020, the total foreign investment inventory in the US is still much larger than it is in China, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

Other economic data also suggest that China has borne the brunt of the pandemic more nimbly than its peers. Beijing posted GDP growth of 2.3% in 2020 earlier this month and is expected to be the only major economy to show a positive annual growth rate.

The United Nations report comes a day before China’s President Xi Jinping will address a virtual meeting of the World Economic Forum. President Joe Biden is not expected to attend the event.

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Barred From U.S. Underneath Trump, Muslims Exult in Biden’s Open Door

Of 45,000 Iranians who applied for a visa waiver between January 2017 and July 2020, only 7,000 received visas, according to the Foreign Ministry. “The impact has been across the board – financial, emotional, educational, professional, romantic,” said Reza Mazaheri, a New York-based immigration attorney who represents many Iranians.

For others, the ban is a closed, tragic chapter.

Mohamed Abdelrahman, a Libyan businessman, believed he hit the jackpot in 2017 when he won a green card lottery that offered an escape route from a country in deep chaos, said his nephew Mohamed Al-Sheikh.

But the Trump ban forced Mr Abdelrahman to delay and before he could leave Libya he suffered a stroke and died.

If there had been no ban, “his life might have been completely different,” said the 34-year-old al-Sheikh over the phone from Tripoli. “He just needed a stable place to live for the rest of his life.”

The reporting was done by Farnaz Fassihi from New York; Vivian Yee from Cairo; Ben Hubbard and Hwaida Saad from Beirut, Lebanon; Abdi Latif Dahir from Nairobi, Kenya; Ruth MacLean from Dakar, Senegal; Mohammed Abdusamee from Tripoli, Libya; Hannah Beech from Bangkok; and Saw Nang from Yangon, Myanmar.

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Biden to signal govt orders on starvation, staff’ rights

President Joe Biden signed two executive orders on Friday to reduce hunger and empower workers during the coronavirus pandemic as his administration urges Congress to pass another comprehensive coronavirus aid package.

A White House move urges the federal government to offer every possible relief through “existing authority,” Brian Deese, director of the National Economic Council, told reporters on Thursday evening. The other calls for “the empowerment of federal workers and contractors”.

The orders included multiple tools to offer aid during the pandemic as Biden seeks to advance his $ 1.9 trillion proposal through Congress.

  • Biden urged the U.S. Department of Agriculture to consider giving states access to enhanced benefits from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program as the country faces a hunger crisis that has been unseen for decades.
  • The USDA will also investigate a 15% increase in the Pandemic Electronic Benefits Transfer program, which replaces meals for low-income children who would otherwise be fed in school.
  • The president called on the finance department to put in place tools to more efficiently deliver the direct payments approved by Congress to eligible individuals. The White House said up to 8 million people failed to receive the first $ 1,200 stimulus check, passed in March.
  • Biden called on the Department of Labor to put in place rules that make it clear that workers have the right to refuse jobs that endanger their health during the pandemic – without losing their entitlement to unemployment benefits.
  • The president asked his administration to prepare a potential executive order that he would like to sign in his first 100 days in office, which requires federal entrepreneurs to offer a minimum wage of $ 15 an hour and paid emergency leave.
  • Biden revoked former President Donald Trump’s executive orders that the White House had harmed workers’ collective bargaining power, and repealed a rule that restricted health and safety for civil servants.
  • He asked the agencies to review which federal employees earn less than $ 15 an hour.

Before signing the orders on Friday, Biden said the country was “facing the growing hunger crisis.” He added that “no one has to choose between a livelihood and their own health or the health of their loved ones”.

Biden stressed that he wants Congress to “act now” for wider relief than his government can alone.

“We are in a national emergency. We need to act as if we were in a national emergency,” he said.

United States President Joe Biden speaks about his administration’s plans to respond to the economic crisis as Vice President Kamala Harris listens during a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) response in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington on January 22, 2021 .

Jonathan Ernst | Reuters

The executive measures fit Biden’s early drive to contain the outbreak and mitigate its damage to the economy. He signed a series of orders on Thursday designed to encourage the wearing of masks and streamline the production of Covid vaccines and protective equipment, among other things.

His actions on the first day of Wednesday included extending a federal eviction moratorium through March and a break in federal student loan payments and interest accumulation through September. Both pandemic relief efforts would have expired by the end of the month.

Biden has been trying to boost the economy through executive orders while trying to get Congress to pass the $ 1.9 trillion bailout package. Republicans have begun to express doubts about supporting another relief bill after Congress passed a $ 900 billion bill last month.

Deese will speak to a non-partisan group of senators about the aid package on Sunday. Speaking to reporters on Friday, he said he would try to “get in touch” with the senators and “understand their concerns.”

Democrats who control a 50:50 Senate through Vice President Kamala Harris’ runoff must win 10 GOP votes for the plan or use a budget vote that only requires a majority. The White House has said Biden wants to pass law with the support of both parties.

Deese didn’t respond directly on Friday when asked when the Biden government would decide to move forward only with democratic support.

The Biden administration has warned that the US economic recovery could be faltering, stressing that the risk of spending too much is less than the risk of spending too little. Another 900,000 people filed unemployment claims for the first time last week, and around 16 million people received benefits, the Ministry of Labor said on Thursday.

A $ 300 per week unemployment benefit included in the latest relief bill expires on March 14th. Biden’s plan is to extend unemployment benefits by $ 400 a week through September.

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World News

Professional-Navalny Protests Sweep Russia in Problem to Putin

MOSCOW – From the frozen streets of Russia in the Far East and Siberia to the grand squares of Moscow and St. Petersburg, tens of thousands of Russians gathered on Saturday in support of imprisoned opposition leader Aleksei A. Navalny at the largest nationwide showdown in years of the Kremlin and his opponents.

The demonstrations did not immediately pose a serious threat to President Vladimir V. Putin’s rise to power. But their broad scope and the remarkable defiance shown by many demonstrators signaled widespread weariness in the face of the stagnant, corruption-torn political order that Putin had been two of For decades.

The protests began to unfold in the eastern regions of Russia, a country with eleven time zones, and they moved like a wave across the country despite a heavy police presence and a host of threatening warnings from state media to stay away.

On the island of Sakhalin, north of Japan, hundreds gathered in front of the regional government building and sang, “Putin is a thief!” The protests spread to the sub-Arctic city of Yakutsk, where it was located minus 60 degrees Fahrenheit and to rallies attended by thousands in cities across Siberia. Hours later, when night fell in Moscow, people threw the police down with snowballs and kicked a car belonging to the domestic secret service.

By late evening in Moscow, more than 3,000 people had been arrested in at least 109 cities, according to OVD-Info, an activist group that tracks arrests during protests.

Mr Navalny’s supporters claimed success and promised further protests over the coming weekend – although many directors of his regional offices had been arrested.

“If Putin believes the scariest things are behind him, he is very wrong and naive,” Leonid Volkov, a top aide to Mr. Navalny, said in a live broadcast on YouTube from an unknown location outside of Russia.

The protests came six days after Mr Navalny, a 44-year-old anti-corruption activist, was arrested on a flight from Germany on arrival in Moscow, where he had been recovering for months from poisoning by a military-grade nerve agent. Western officials and Mr Navalny have described the poisoning, which took place in Siberia in August, as an assassination attempt by the Russian state. The Kremlin denies this.

Now facing years of imprisonment, Mr Navalny urged supporters across the country to take to the streets this weekend, despite officials not allowing protests. The Russians responded with the most widespread demonstrations the nation has seen since at least 2017 – tens of thousands in Moscow and St. Petersburg, and thousands in several cities in the east, including Yekaterinburg, Novosibirsk, Tomsk, Omsk and the Pacific port of Vladivostok.

“There was this heavy feeling that Russian public opinion was hardened in cement, as if it was stuck in a dead, hidden ball,” said Vyacheslav Ivanets, a lawyer in the Siberian city of Irkutsk who participated in the protests. “Now I feel like the situation has changed.”

Mr Navalny, for a long time Putin’s loudest domestic critic, has used his populist touch on social media and his humorous, harsh and simple language to distinguish himself as Russia’s only opposition leader with a following in a broad cross-section of society. His status among Putin critics continued to rise in recent months as he survived the nerve agent attack and then returned to Russia despite facing almost certain arrest.

This arrest on Sunday, the demonstrators said, helped spark pent-up dissatisfaction with Putin’s economic stagnation and widespread official corruption.

But Putin’s Kremlin has outlasted protests before – and there have been few immediate indications that this time around would be any different. Russia’s state media quickly made it clear that there was no chance the Kremlin would come under pressure and condemned the protests as a nationwide “wave of aggression” that could result in prison sentences against some participants.

“Attacking a police officer is a criminal offense,” said a state television report. “Hundreds of videos were shot. All faces are on them. “

In Washington, the State Department said Saturday that it “strongly condemns the use of tough tactics against protesters and journalists” in Russia. The Russian State Department countered by alleging that the United States helped “incite radical elements” to join the unauthorized protests and that American officials were facing “serious talk” with Russian diplomats.

Some protesters admitted that despite the importance of Saturday’s protests, it would take far more people to change course in national politics. In neighboring Belarus, many more people protested for weeks against the authoritarian President Aleksandr G. Lukashenko – a close ally of Putin – without removing him.

“I’m a little disappointed, honestly,” said Nikita Melekhin, a 21-year-old nurse in Moscow. “I expected more.”

The police presented a monumental demonstration of violence in the streets, but largely avoided large-scale violence. In Pushkin Square in central Moscow, the focal point of the rally in the capital, riot police, wielding batons, repeatedly pushed the crowd in an attempt to disperse them, but avoided the use of tear gas or other more violent methods to control the crowd .

They pre-arrested most of Mr. Navalny’s best employees and arrested his wife, Yulia Navalnaya, in a protest Saturday before releasing them hours later.

However, videos circulated on social media recorded notable clashes between protesters and police – an indication of a new fearlessness among some Russians and uncertainty about what lies ahead. Protesters were seen throwing snowballs at police on several occasions, despite prosecutors having requested years of imprisonment for people who threw objects at officers.

Singing “shame” protesters in Moscow also threw snowballs at a passing government car. After it stalled, people stormed and stepped on the car owned by the Russian secret service. The driver sustained an eye injury in the attack, state news media later reported.

The state news media reported that at least 39 Moscow police officers were injured in the events on Saturday. There were also videos of officials viciously beating and kicking individual protesters, including outside the Moscow prison where Mr Navalny was incarcerated.

The question now is whether the intensity of the clashes will continue to shake the Russians – or keep them from responding to the Navalny team’s call for more protests.

Opinion polls in recent months – of uncertain value in a country saturated with state propaganda where people are often afraid to speak up – have shown that Mr Putin is not a great challenge to his popularity from Mr Navalny, whose name has never been approved was appearing on a presidential election. Mr Putin refuses to speak his name publicly.

A November poll by the Levada Center, an independent and highly respected electoral organization, found that only 2 percent of respondents named Mr Navalny as their first choice when asked who they would vote if there were presidential elections the following Sunday. Fifty-five percent named Mr. Putin.

Even so, Mr Navalny’s dramatic return to Russia last Sunday – and his video report on Putin’s alleged secret palace, viewed more than 70 million times on YouTube – raised the opposition leader’s notoriety across the country.

“I’ve never been a big believer in Navalny, and yet I understand very well that this is a very serious situation,” said Vitaliy Blazhevich, 57, a university professor, in a telephone interview about why he was working for Mr. Navalny in Khabarovsk city on the Chinese border.

“There is always hope that something will change,” said Blazhevich.

Vasily Zimin, a 47-year-old partner in a Moscow law firm, trudged through mud and said he had come to protest the rampant corruption during Putin’s reign.

“How can you say, ‘I can’t take any more of this’ while sitting on your couch?” he said.

Ivan Nechepurenko and Andrew E. Kramer reported from Moscow. Oleg Matsnev and Sophia Kishkovsky contributed to the research.