Home NEWS Princess Diana interviewer Martin Bashir “seriously unwell” with Covid-19

Princess Diana interviewer Martin Bashir “seriously unwell” with Covid-19

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1 min ago

Princess Diana interviewer Martin Bashir “seriously unwell” with Covid-19

From CNN’s Simon Cullen in London

Martin Bashir arriving for the Pride of Britain Awards held at the The Grosvenor House Hotel, London, on October 28, 2019.
Martin Bashir arriving for the Pride of Britain Awards held at the The Grosvenor House Hotel, London, on October 28, 2019. Ian West/PA Images/Getty Images

BBC journalist Martin Bashir, well known for his interviews with Princess Diana and Michael Jackson, is “seriously unwell with Covid-19 related complications,” the corporation says.

“Everyone at the BBC is wishing him a full recovery. We’d ask that his privacy, and that of his family, is respected at this time,” a BBC spokesperson said in a statement.

The British journalist made headlines in 1995 with his interview with Princess Diana, in which she confirmed Prince Charles’s affair with Camilla.

“Well, there were three of us in this marriage, so it was a bit crowded,” she told Bashir.

He also famously interviewed Jackson over an extended period, during which the entertainer granted rare access to his private life.

Bashir later moved to the US where he worked for cable news channel MSNBC. However, he resigned over controversial remarks he made about former Alaskan governor Sarah Palin in 2013.

He re-joined the BBC in 2016.

8 min ago

Belgium’s deputy prime minister in ICU with Covid-19

From CNN’s Simon Cullen in London

Belgium’s Deputy Prime Minister Sophie Wilmès has been admitted into intensive care during treatment for Covid-19, her spokesperson says.

The spokesperson has told CNN that Wilmès is conscious, stable and able to communicate with her team.”Her condition is not alarming,” the spokesperson added.

Wilmès was admitted to the ICU on Wednesday night.

The news comes days after the country’s health minister said the outbreak in the Belgian region of Wallonia and the capital Brussels is “close to a tsunami.”

Frank Vandenbroucke warned “the health situation in Wallonia and in Brussels is the worst and the most dangerous in the whole of Europe.” 

However, during a Sunday news conference, the health minister defended the government’s policy of installing a curfew from midnight, and not earlier in the evening, saying that the government “did not want to make life impossible.” 

According to CNN analysis of data from Johns Hopkins University and the World Health Organization, Belgium and the Czech Republic are seeing the highest number of new coronavirus cases worldwide when measured against their populations. 

As of October 16, both countries were reporting a daily average of more than 800 new cases per million of their populations, with the Czech Republic at 817 and Belgium tallying 811.

38 min ago

Czech Republic posts another daily high increase in Covid-19 cases, as restrictions tighten

From CNN’s Tomas Etzler in Prague

A healthcare worker conducts a Covid-19 test at a drive-in testing station in Prague, Czech Republic, on October 10.
A healthcare worker conducts a Covid-19 test at a drive-in testing station in Prague, Czech Republic, on October 10. Gabriel Kuchta/Getty Images

The Czech Republic registered 14,968 new coronavirus cases on Wednesday, according to new data from the Ministry of Health released Thursday.

The increase is 2,842 more than yesterday’s update. To date, at least 208,915 people have been infected in the country since the beginning of the pandemic. 

Some 4,417 patients are being treated in hospital for the virus. At least 1,739 have died.

The country was previously hailed as a success story during Europe’s first wave of Covid-19 in March. But authorities are now struggling to cope with the rising number of infections throughout the country, and the government is enacting further restrictions on movement in order to stop the virus from spreading further.

Those measures went into effect at 6 a.m. local time and are expected to last until November 3.

53 min ago

Experts worry the worst of the fall surge in the US is yet to come

From CNN’s Christina Maxouris

The US reported more than 1,100 new Covid-19 deaths on Wednesday — the highest daily toll recorded in more than a month.

The toll follows a pattern of other concerning trends across the country, including climbing cases and hospitalizations that are reminiscent of previous surges. Only this time, doctors say Americans will likely see the worst surge yet.

At least 31 states are now reporting more new Covid-19 cases than the previous week and only one state — Hawaii — is trending in the right direction. Hospitalizations are also on the rise, with tens of thousands of patients nationwide and hospital systems already taking a hard hit.

And some experts predict the country’s daily death toll, which usually lags behind rising cases, will also begin creeping upward. More than 2,300 Americans could be dying daily by early January, according to a model by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington.

Read the full story:

The US topped 1,000 daily Covid-19 deaths and experts worry the worst of the fall surge is yet to come

1 hr 6 min ago

Police drones will monitor Australia’s Victoria state while local sporting heroes clash over 1,000 miles away

From Meenketan Jha

The Geelong Cats line up for the national anthem during the 2020 AFL Second Preliminary Final match with  the Brisbane Lions at The Gabba in Brisbane, Australia, on October 17.
The Geelong Cats line up for the national anthem during the 2020 AFL Second Preliminary Final match with the Brisbane Lions at The Gabba in Brisbane, Australia, on October 17. Michael Willson/AFL Photos/Getty Images

Police in the Australian state of Victoria plan to use drones to ensure that members of the public are following social distancing rules during the Australian Football League (AFL) Grand Final on Saturday.

The game, between Victoria-based clubs Geelong and Richmond, will take place at The Gabba in Brisbane, Queensland and is expected to host a 30,000 crowd, according to the AFL’s official website.

The AFL final is one of the most watched televised sporting events in the country. Victoria is easing lockdown measures that were put in place to stop the spread of Covid-19, but indoor gatherings are still banned in Melbourne, the state’s biggest city. No more than two households, up to 10 people, can gather outdoors in public spaces.

Assistant Commissioner Luke Cornelius of Victoria Police said drones give authorities ” a real-time appreciation of crowd numbers, crowd behavior.”

“It allows us to adopt policing tactics which are most appropriate to ensure that what’s occurring at that location remains Covid safe,” Cornelius said of the drones at a news conference Thursday.

The annual AFL grand final is traditionally played in Melbourne on the last Saturday of September but was moved this year to Brisbane — more than 1,000 miles away — because of the pandemic.

1 hr 32 min ago

Tokyo airport to open Covid-19 testing center that returns results in 2 hours

From CNN’s Yoko Wakatsuki in Tokyo

A woman walks past the departure board at Narita airport near Tokyo, on April 3.
A woman walks past the departure board at Narita airport near Tokyo, on April 3. Kyodo News/Sipa USA

Tokyo’s Narita Airport will open a Covid-19 testing center next month that will return results within two hours.

International passengers arriving at Terminal 1 and 2 will be routed to a testing reception center, where they will take a PCR test. Those who test negative will be issued with a certificate.  

The test and certificate cost $380. Asahiko Tamura, the president of Narita Airport, said the center will open on November 9.

“We believe this will be an important facility towards the resumption of international travel,” Tamura said at a news conference on Thursday.

1 hr 57 min ago

Germany reports fresh single-day high in new Covid-19 cases

From CNN’s Samantha Beech

A medical worker takes a nasal swab at a coronavirus testing center in Cologne, Germany, on October 15.
A medical worker takes a nasal swab at a coronavirus testing center in Cologne, Germany, on October 15. Martin Meissner/AP

Germany identified a new high of 11,287 cases of Covid-19 in a single day, the country’s center for disease control, the Robert Koch Institute (RKI), reported Thursday. Another 30 people died from the virus.

More than 392,000 coronavirus cases have been diagnosed in Germany since the pandemic began, killing 9,905 people, according to the RKI.

Germany is one of several countries throughout Europe battling a new wave of Covid-19 cases.

2 hr 34 min ago

Brazilian senator dies of Covid-19

From CNN’s Flora Charner in Atlanta

Brazilian Senator Arolde de Oliveira died Wednesday from complications related to Covid-19, according to a statement published on his official Twitter account. He was 83. 

Oliveira died from multiple organ failure caused by Covid-19, the statement said. He had been hospitalized for more than 15 days in Rio de Janeiro, according to CNN affiliate CNN Brasil. 

Oliveira is the first member of the Brazilian Congress to die from coronavirus.   

Oliveira, a conservative senator from Rio de Janeiro state with close ties to President Jair Bolsonaro, served in Congress for more than 35 years. He was in his first term in the Senate after being elected in 2018. He had previously served nine consecutive terms in the lower house of Congress.  

The state of Rio de Janeiro declared three days of mourning in honor of Oliveira, according to a statement from the governor’s office.    

3 hr 19 min ago

Rheumatoid arthritis drug falls short as treatment for hospitalized Covid-19 patients in three studies

From CNN’s Andrea Kane

Tocilizumab, a repurposed rheumatoid arthritis drug once considered a promising treatment for hospitalized patients with Covid-19, generally did not increase patients’ chances of survival or help them get better faster, according to three trials published this week.

However, a fourth trial did find the drug increased the chances of survival, but because it was an observational study, the results are considered less definitive.

Three of the trials were published Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association and the other was published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine.

While this leaves the picture for tocilizumab use a bit muddy, the studies taken together show the drug isn’t a magic bullet that should be used in all hospitalized patients with Covid-19, but they leave the door open for possible use in specific patient groups.

“It is possible that forthcoming results from other randomized trials will help us identify specific groups of people who will benefit. However, growing evidence supports current guidelines, which recommend against tocilizumab use outside of clinical trials,” Dr. Jonathan Parr told CNN.

Read the full story:

Rheumatoid arthritis drug falls short as treatment for hospitalized Covid-19 patients in three studies

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