The White Home is doing the correct factor in terms of combating the Covid-19 Delta variant, says Gottlieb

The Biden government is taking the right approach in tackling the highly contagious Covid-19 Delta variant by deploying response teams to vulnerable communities, said Dr. Scott Gottlieb on Thursday.

“I think the government is doing the right thing when it comes to changing its strategy,” Gottlieb, the former FDA chief under former President Donald Trump, told CNBC’s “The News with Shepard Smith” about the grassroots approach new government.

Gottlieb explained that the targeted response can help teams focus on vaccinating the communities prone to Covid and the Delta variant.

“Right now we need to move to a grassroots strategy and try to put resources into local communities so that local groups can encourage people to get vaccinated, put the vaccines in the hands of doctors, and find ways to get more vaccines to get into the hands of small providers who can encourage their patients to vaccinate, “said Gottlieb.

The Delta variant is driving a sharp spike in new Covid cases across the country and currently accounts for about 25% of the new cases sequenced in the US. Officials believe it will become the dominant strain in the country, dwarfing the currently dominant alpha variant.

Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, attributed the increase in part to delayed vaccination rates. The CDC director added that about a third of all counties across the country have so far vaccinated less than 30% of their population. She said most of them are in the South and Midwest.

Disclosure: Scott Gottlieb is a CNBC employee and a member of the board of directors of Pfizer, genetic testing startup Tempus, health technology company Aetion Inc., and biotechnology company Illumina.

Xi seizes the possibility to guide China within the path to energy

Chinese communist leader and Chinese President Xi Jinping spoke at the celebration for the 100th founding anniversary of the Chinese Communist Party on July 1, 2021 in Beijing, China.

Lintao Zhang | Getty Images News | Getty Images

BEIJING — One hundred years since the founding of China’s Communist Party — which it says was born out of a secret meeting on a boat — President Xi Jinping now stands a chance to lead the country to becoming the world’s largest economy.

Achieving that level of growth will require China to propel itself past looming challenges: the so-called middle income trap, lack of innovation and a rapidly aging population. That’s according to analysts, mostly looking in from abroad.

For Xi, his eyes are already on the next hundred years, and an unfulfilled dream of the “great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation” which he reiterated at centenary celebrations for the party this week. Xi also holds the top political position of the general secretary of the ruling Communist Party’s central committee and heads China’s military commission.

“He has iron in his soul, more than [former President] Hu Jintao, who ascended the ranks without experiencing the trials and tribulations that Xi endured,” the late founder of modern Singapore, Lee Kuan Yew, told American foreign policy experts Graham Allison and Robert D. Blackwill in 2012, just before Xi officially became president.

The 68-year-old is the son of an early Communist leader who rose to vice premier, then suffered political persecution for 16 years under the party’s dominating founder Mao Zedong.

Xi himself spent about seven years working in the countryside as a teenager during the Cultural Revolution, which Mao used to regain his power and eliminate his political rivals.

Xi’s political career

Xi had a stint as a village party secretary, studied at Tsinghua University’s chemical engineering school, then worked his way up through government positions across the country, notably in Fujian province and Shanghai, according to state media.

Meanwhile, the architect of China’s economic reforms, Deng Xiaoping, spearheaded an economic restructuring that allowed individuals and even foreign businesses to take ownership from the state. Many credit those changes for helping lift hundreds of millions of Chinese out of poverty, and turning China into an economy that now ranks only second to the U.S.

The key factors that really drove China’s phenomenal growth have either ended or declined in performance.

Tony Saich

Professor, Harvard Kennedy School of Government

“When you think about the centenary of the party, you think not so much about the party as about the economic progress of the last 30 years,” said Dmitri V. Trenin, director of the Carnegie Moscow Center.

“Most people here bank on a continuing progress and even higher achievements in the years ahead. Clearly history doesn’t work that way,” he said. “There are successes. There are also failures.”

By 2007, Xi was a member of China’s top leadership group and president of the central school for training Communist party leaders. He officially became president in 2013, and launched a sweeping anti-corruption campaign.

In consolidating his power, Xi abolished term limits in 2018, while stepping up the party’s role in private business.

‘Middle-income trap’

However, China’s economic growth began to slow in the last several years, albeit remaining at relatively high rates compared to other major economies.

“The key factors that really drove China’s phenomenal growth have either ended or declined in performance,” said Tony Saich, professor at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government.

He pointed to China’s aging population and the inability to keep relying on foreign direct investment.

Xi’s challenge is how to “get financial resources to those parts of the economy that are more productive,” said Saich, who authored “From Rebel to Ruler: One Hundred Years of the Chinese Communist Party.”

Privately run businesses contribute to most of China’s growth and jobs, while the financial system is dominated by state-owned banks that prefer to lend to state-owned enterprises. Beijing frequently mentions the financing problem in policy statements, although it’s less clear how significant the moves are in practice.

Meanwhile, as risks rise from tensions with trading partners like the U.S., Xi has revamped calls for boosting domestic consumption and building up technology at home.

That kind of innovation will be harder to achieve than GDP goals of the past, said Yuen Yuen Ang, assistant political science professor at the University of Michigan. Innovation is “inherently uncertain and cannot be planned from the top.”

But such new drivers of growth will be critical for the long term.

“The most challenging task for China’s leadership is to avoid the middle-income trap,” Bonnie Glaser, director of the Asia program at the German Marshall Fund of the U.S., said in an email. “If its governance system fails to achieve that goal, there could be domestic instability.”

She was referring to the theory that once a country has grown rapidly due to a large force of cheap labor, its economy could stagnate and fail to sustain higher wages for workers, and greater growth.

There’s always danger when there’s a very powerful authoritarian figure, because when he chooses to use power it could have very detrimental effects on the country.

Ann Lee

Author of “What the U.S. can learn from China.”

Xi’s individual association with policy particularly raises the stakes for ensuring growth, Rana Mitter, professor of the history and politics of modern China at the University of Oxford, said in an email.

The Chinese leader has labeled “Xi Thought” on directives ranging from “socialism with Chinese characteristics” to “diplomacy.” It’s common for official documents to start with the line: “Under the strong leadership of the Communist Party of China Central Committee with Comrade Xi Jinping at its core.”

Future challenges

Next year, the ruling party will hold its 20th National Party Congress which will provide signals on whether Xi will hold onto power beyond the two terms of his recent predecessors.

“There’s always danger when there’s a very powerful authoritarian figure, because when he chooses to use power it could have very detrimental effects on the country,” said Ann Lee, a former professor at Peking University and author of “What the U.S. can learn from China.”

“Thus far, since he’s taken power,” she said, “I don’t think he’s used it to necessarily enhance his own wealth for selfish reasons, but more for nation-building at this point.”

China’s growing economic clout has raised new challenges, including greater opposition from the U.S. President Joe Biden’s administration has criticized China over human rights issues in Xinjiang, Tibet and Hong Kong — matters Beijing considers part of its internal affairs, along with Taiwan.

Within China, disparities between central and local government slow policy implementation, while some question the leadership’s direction.

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Among the country’s academic thinkers, there’s a rethinking of the Chinese experience outside of the political revolution, and a desire to combine some kind of democracy, said David Ownby, professor of history at the Université de Montréal and founder of “Reading the China Dream,” a website that translates articles from Chinese intellectuals.

But for most people in China, their rise in prosperity over just a generation or two is sufficient for now. In many respects, the party under Xi has adeptly responded to and controlled majority opinion, while using centralized power to swiftly direct resources to containing the pandemic, for example.

Analysts widely expect China to overtake the U.S. and become the world’s largest economy in the next decade, if not sooner.

Chinese leaders “may become their own worst enemies if they turn too self-confident and develop hubris,” Trenin said. “They are not there yet.”

Seek for collapsed Florida apartment continues

A sad family awaits at the site while a team of rescue workers work during a rescue operation of the Champlain Tower, which partially collapsed on June 30, 2021 in Surfside, Florida, USA.

Tayfun Coskun | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

Search and rescue operations in a Florida condo collapse resumed Thursday after a one-day shutdown, Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said at a press conference Thursday evening.

The decision to resume operations was made around 4:45 p.m. Thursday after civil engineers said conditions were safe enough, Levine Cava said. Operations were suspended Thursday morning over concerns that the rest of the building could collapse.

“I am grateful for your hard work in getting us back to search and rescue as quickly as possible,” said Levine Cava. “Of course, we continue to assure that we are doing everything we can to protect our first aiders.”

The death toll remained unchanged through Thursday, with 18 confirmed deaths and 145 missing, according to Levine Cava.

While search and rescue is the authorities’ top priority, plans to demolish the building are currently underway, Levine Cava told reporters.

Miami-Dade Fire Rescue chief Alan Cominsky said all task force leaders, division group leaders, and heavy equipment operators had been briefed of a search resumption plan with security measures.

Authorities are restricting access to parts of the collapse zone that raise safety concerns, Levine Cava said. Technologies such as cameras and drones are used to search inaccessible areas of the building.

A team of engineers are also conducting tests and evaluations to safely expand the search area, she added.

Levine Cava and other authorities also thanked President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden for visiting Surfside early Thursday, noting that Biden offered comfort to families affected by the collapse.

Kevin Guthrie, director of the Florida emergency management department, added that Biden has pledged to cover 100% of reimbursements for local governments facing deficits due to the breakdown.

Emergency Management Director Charles Cyrille also briefed on Tropical Storm Elsa, which continues to move rapidly through the Caribbean Sea. Cyrille told reporters that the State Department of Emergency Management continues to monitor the storm and that contingency plans are in place.

Cyrille said “Miami-Dade County is not in imminent danger,” but urged citizens to be prepared with disaster packages and evacuation plans.

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Cominsky, the chief of the fire department, said the decision to cease operations Thursday morning was based on “additional concerns about building stability” identified by subject matter experts.

These concerns included 15 to 12 inches of movement, a large pillar hanging from the building that could fall and damage the support columns in the underground car park, and slight movement in the concrete floor slabs on the south side of the structure that “could lead to additional failure” . of the building, “says Cominsky.

In the last few days there have been increasing indications that the 40-year-old apartment building had already suffered considerable structural damage in 2018.

A newly discovered video, captured the night of the collapse, shows water pouring into the Champlain Towers parking garage.

On Wednesday evening, the National Institute of Standards and Technology announced it had launched a federal investigation into the causes of the building collapse.

“We are going in with an open mind,” said Judith Mitrani-Reiser, deputy head of the materials and support systems department at NIST, at a press conference near the collapse site on Wednesday.

“Whenever a building collapses, we want to understand how the building was designed, built, modified and maintained,” she said.

Several lawsuits have been filed on behalf of the victims’ families, some of which are still missing.

But the question of who, if anything, was responsible for the breakdown is unlikely to be resolved anytime soon.

James Olthoff, the director of NIST, told the Miami Herald the federal investigation will not attempt to assign the blame for the collapse.

“This is a kind of fact-finding, not troubleshooting, type of investigation,” he told the Herald. “It will take time, possibly a few years.”

Correction: This story has been updated to correctly describe Tropical Storm Elsa.

Toyota leads US gross sales for GM, anticipated to turn into America’s top-selling automaker

Toyota Motor outperformed General Motors in the US for the first quarter and is expected to be America’s best-selling automaker.

The Japanese automaker reported sales of 688,813 vehicles in the US from April through June on Thursday. That compares to GM at 688,236 vehicles during the second quarter. Toyota exceeded analysts’ expectations, while GM slightly missed forecasts.

The shock was caused by a global chip shortage that has significantly hampered vehicle production. Japanese automakers, especially Toyota, weathered the crisis better than their American competitors.

“You’ve been defying gravity for the past few months,” said Charlie Chesbrough, senior economist at Cox Automotive. “We see that they have very low inventory levels and yet their sales have held up pretty well. … We are really surprised at Toyota’s strength and have had a decent quarter compared to some of the competition.”

The only way Toyota won’t take on the cloak as the best-selling automaker is if Ford Motor, reporting Friday morning sales, significantly beats analyst’s sales expectations of 645,000 vehicles during the quarter. Ford previously said it expects to lose half of its production in the second quarter due to the chip problem.

The last time GM wasn’t the best-selling automaker for a quarter in the US was when Ford outperformed them during the Great Recession in the third quarter of 1998, Edmunds reports.

According to Jessica Caldwell, Edmunds Executive Director of Insights, Toyota is known for looking far into its supply chain and having more experience managing lower inventory levels. She assumes that there could be major fluctuations in the US market share this year due to the shortage of parts.

“I would definitely expect a small change in market share,” she said. “Toyota has done really well, the Asian brands have done pretty well overall.”

In May, Reuters reported that Toyota was stockpiling semiconductor chips, which are vital to modern vehicles, and that chip scarcity had no major short-term impact.

Toyota declined to comment specifically on sales successes, but released the following statement: “We are grateful to our loyal customers for showing their safety and trust in Toyota and Lexus vehicles, the best brand in terms of safety and quality in the Minds of our customers. And as part of our continuous improvement philosophy, we keep finding better ways to do things and ultimately make better products that our customers love and trust. “

Try Colton Underwood’s Completely NSFW Nude Photograph Shoot

After telling his truth on national television, Colton Underwood exposes everything.

The former Bachelor lead actor posed for a sexy nude photo shoot with a star photographer Damon Baker (whose other hot topics are included Post Malone, Dylan Sprouse and Lili Reinhart). Now the fans see him as they have never seen him before.

Colton, 29, posted his thirst belt on Instagram and wrote, “A little different. A bit better. A little wiser. ”

The black and white images showed the shirtless star holding a leather jacket over his bare crotch while the other hand rested behind his head. Other pictures showed his hairy chest, toned arms, chiseled abs and ear piercing. At some point he drew on his cigar and winked seductively at the camera.

Damon teased him, “I loved our first date.”

He took the pictures in the designer’s house Nicola Formichettiwho revealed more images on their page on Thursday July 1st. It appears the trio shared an inside joke about a disco ball prop used to create speckled lighting, with Damon commenting on “that sexy disco ball”. Colton added, “I’m coming back for the disco ball.”

GM’s income within the second quarter is up 40%, however is barely under analysts’ expectations

DETROIT – General Motors ‘US vehicle sales in the second quarter were slightly below analysts’ expectations as a persistent shortage of semiconductor chips impacted vehicle production and dealer inventories.

The Detroit automaker reported second-quarter sales of 688,236 vehicles on Thursday, 39.7% more than a year earlier, as the coronavirus pandemic caused Americans to seek shelter and temporarily close car dealerships. According to forecasts by the car research companies Edmunds and Cox Automotive, analysts expected GM’s sales to increase by around 40% to 43%.

“Consumer demand for vehicles is also strong, but limited by very low inventory levels. We expect demand to remain high through the second half of the year and through 2022,” said Elaine Buckberg, GM’s chief economist, in a statement.

All-new Chevrolet cars will be on display on the sale lot at Stewart Chevrolet on May 14, 2021 in Colma, California.

Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

GM said it ended the second quarter with just 211,974 vehicles in stock, a 37% decrease from 334,628 at the end of the first quarter. Before the pandemic affected vehicle production, the automaker’s inventory was around 616,000 units by the end of 2019.

GM is among the first major automakers to report second-quarter sales on Thursday. Overall, analysts estimate that automakers sold about 4.5 million vehicles in the US in the second quarter – an increase of 52 to 53% compared to the second quarter of 2020.

The sales results of other automakers are slightly below the analysts’ expectations.

Hyundai Motor reported sales of 240,005 vehicles in the second quarter, an increase of 69% over the subdued second quarter of 2020. Sales were below Cox Automotive’s forecast of 74%.

“The situation is just extremely complicated and we are trying to manage and work through it as best we can,” Randy Parker, senior vice president of national sales at Hyundai Motor America, told CNBC. “I think we’re bottoming out in terms of availability, so July and August will be our toughest months … we hope things will improve in the third and fourth quarters.”

Toyota Motor North America reported sales of 688,813 vehicles in the second quarter, up 73% year over year. That was in line with Edmunds’ forecast, but below the nearly 76% increase expected by Cox.

While the sales rebound from the depths of the pandemic is impressive, the pace of sales is slowing this year. Deutsche Bank analyst Emmanuel Rosner expects sales of 15.7 million vehicles in June, compared to 17.1 million vehicles in May and 18.6 million vehicles in April. Others like Cox Automotive forecast a sales rate of around 16.4 million in June.

“Market demand is there, but inventory is not,” said former Ford CEO Mark Fields, a senior advisor to TPG Capital, during an interview on CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” Thursday. “It’s the old supply and demand.”

The low inventory levels have led to record prices for new vehicles. According to a Cox Automotive, new car inventory was historically low in early June, 43% lower than the same period in 2020 and 54% lower than the same timeframe in 2019.

Fields said the unprecedented low inventory levels could last at least 15 months for the next year. He said it won’t be a “buyers market” for some time.

Other automakers reporting June and / or second quarter sales include:

  • Stellantis (formerly Fiat Chrysler) sold 485,312 vehicles in the second quarter, up 32.2%.
  • Kia Motors reported sales of 68,486 units in June, up 43.1% year over year and 378,511 vehicles for the first half, up 43.7%.
  • According to its own information, Porsche sold 18,958 vehicles in the second quarter, an increase of 55.5% compared to the previous year.
  • Nissan Motor sold 298,148 vehicles in the second quarter, up 68.1%.

Trump Group CFO Allen Weisselberg pleads not responsible to tax crimes

The Trump Organization’s long-time chief financial officer Allen Weisselberg pleaded not guilty Thursday to tax-related crimes that include scheme to defraud and grand larceny in a Manhattan court, where the company also was hit with related criminal charges.

A 15-count indictment says the Trump Organization and Weisselberg devised a scheme to compensate Weisselberg and other company executives in an “off the books” manner, in which they “received substantial portions of their income through indirect and disguised means.”

Weisselberg himself had the rent, utilities and garage expenses paid for his apartment on Riverside Drive on Manhattan’s Upper West Side paid for by the Trump Organization without that compensation being reported to tax authorities, and without the required payment of taxes on the benefits, the indictment says.

And that charging documents says Weisselberg and the company also schemed to “conceal his status as a New York City resident and enabled Weisselberg to avoid the payment of New York City income taxes.”

Weisselberg has another residence on Long Island, New York, but the indictment says that since 2005, Weisselberg “spent most of his days in New York City,” which would make him a city resident for tax purposes.

Allen Weisselberg, chief financial officer of Trump Organization Inc., center, walks towards a courtroom at criminal court in New York, U.S., on Thursday, July 1, 2021.

Stephanie Keith | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Weisselberg personally “avoided taxes” on compensation valued as high at $1.76 million as part of the scheme “orchestrated by the most senior executives” at the Trump Organization, which is owned by former President Donald Trump, a prosecutor said.

Assistant Manhattan District Attorney Carey Dunne said in court that Weisselberg’s crimes were part of a “sweeping and audacious illegal payment scheme.” 

The indictment against the Trump Organization and Weisselberg said the scheme lasted from March 2005 through the end of this June.

“This case is not about politics, this investigation which is ongoing, is proper,” Dunne said.

The Trump Organization and related entities were charged with Weisselberg with scheme to defraud in the first degree, fourth-degree conspiracy, criminal tax fraud in the third- and fourth-degree, and falsifying business records.

Outside of court after the arraignment, Trump Organization lawyer Alan Futerfas told reporters, “The allegations in the indictment are just that, they are allegations.”

“These charges are going to be vigorously contested,” Futerfas said.

Cyrus Roberts Vance Jr. District Attorney of New York County and New York State Attorney General Letitia James arrive in court for the hearing of Allen Weisselberg, former US President Donald Trumps company chief financial officer at the criminal court in lower Manhattan in New York on July 1, 2021.

Timothy A. Clary | AFP | Getty Images

Weisselberg, 73, was taken into the courtroom in handcuffs by authorities while wearing white mask.

Weisselberg’s attorney told a judge that the defense team objected to the claims of prosecutors.

A special grand jury issued the indictment on Wednesday against Weisselberg and the Trump Organization.

Manhattan DA Cyrus Vance Jr.’s office has been investigating the Trump Organization for several years. In recent months, investigators from New York state Attorney General Letitia James joined his probe.

James was in attendance with Vance in the courtroom.

Last year, Vance won a legal battle that allowed him to obtain years of ex-President Trump’s tax records and other financial documents from his long-time accounting firm.

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The Trump Organization, in a statement, criticized Vance for bringing the case.

“Allen Weisselberg is a loving and devoted husband, father and grandfather who has worked at the Trump Organization for 48 years,” a spokesperson for the company said in a statement.

“He is now being used by the Manhattan District Attorney as a pawn in a scorched earth attempt to harm the former President,” the spokesperson said.

“The District Attorney is bringing a criminal prosecution involving employee benefits that neither the IRS nor any other District Attorney would ever think of bringing. This is not justice; this is politics.”

Trump’s former personal lawyer Michael Cohen has repeatedly met with Vance’s investigators to assist them with their probe.

Weisselberg’s former daughter-in-law Jennifer Weisselberg also has given prosecutors information. Her ex-ex-husband Barry Weisselberg also works for the Trump Organization.

This is breaking news. Check back for updates.

1,000 counties within the U.S. have vaccination protection of lower than 30%

Members of FEMA greet the public as they make their way into the high school to be vaccinated at a FEMA run mobile Covid-19 Vaccination clinic at Biddeford High School in Bidderford, Maine on April 26, 2021. clotting.

Joseph Prezioso | AFP | Getty Images

About 1,000 counties in the United States have vaccination coverage of less than 30%, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday.

The counties in question are mostly located in the Southeast and Midwest and are most vulnerable to Covid infection, according to CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky. The agency is already seeing increasing rates of disease in these counties due to further spread of the more transmissible delta variant, Walensky said.

The delta variant currently makes up about 25% of sequenced new cases in the U.S., and officials say they expect it to become the dominant strain in the country, eclipsing the currently dominant alpha variant.

In some counties, delta variant rates are as high as 50%, according to the CDC. “We expect to see increased transmission in these communities unless we can vaccinate more people,” Walensky said.

Zip codes with the highest rates of vaccine hesitancy are located in states like North Dakota, Idaho and Alabama, according to the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, an independent global health research center at the University of Washington.

“Preliminary data over the last six months, suggest 99.5% of deaths from Covid-19 in the states have occurred in unvaccinated people … the suffering and loss we are now seeing is nearly entirely avoidable,” Walensky said.

Tina Lawson exhibits Beyoncé’s singing expertise with a studio clip (video)

Roommate, if you know anything about Tina Lawson, chances are she doesn’t play when it comes to her talented daughters Beyoncé and Solange! Following Trick Daddy’s campaign last week to discredit Beyoncé’s SANGing skills, Tina posted a flashback clip of the superstar stunt in the studio! In the 30-second video, Beyoncé can be heard mimicking a guitar solo with only her voice during a session with producer DJ Swivel.

“I’ve always been impressed when she does that,” wrote Tina in her caption. “She also does the same with other instruments !!!!”

DJ Swivel, whose real name is Jordan Young, is a Toronto-born “producer, mixer and songwriter” according to his official website. In 2012 he won a Grammy Award for his work with Beyoncé on their album ‘4’ and followed suit with work on their ‘Beyoncé’ album.

On Tuesday Tina posted the clip of Beyoncé’s studio session for the song “I Care”. It’s not clear where the clip came from, but as soon as it was posted on Tina’s Instagram account, it started circulating online. Unfortunately for avid fans, the video is just a screen capture of the song mixing technology and not a glimpse of the Houston talent.

The clip is titled “Beyoncé’s Engineer (DJ Swivel shares vocals from her ‘I Care’ studio session” at the top of the video. Another caption at the bottom of the video reads “Her voice is INSANE.” DJ Swivel is supposed to be heard Speaking of which.

“A guitar solo that she imitates with her voice, something I’ve never heard before, but um, let’s see if we can do it,” said DJ Swivel.

After the brief sound of a guitar solo, Beyoncé effortlessly takes over with her singing. She starts out vigorously and then turns her voice up a few steps to defeat the sound – which obviously shows her range. After a few seconds, applause from unknown sources can be heard in the voiceover. The clip ends with DJ Swivel paying the star a well-deserved compliment.

“She’s killing it,” he said. “Yup.”

Check out Tina’s video below:

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New Covid wave has arrived in Europe, WHO says

Scotland fans arrive at King’s Cross Station on June 17, 2021 in London, England. Soccer games, taking place during the Euros, have been blamed for a rise in Covid cases numbers.

Rob Pinney | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images

A new wave of coronavirus cases could soon arrive in Europe, the World Health Organization warned Thursday, highlighting that a decline in the number of infections in the region has now come to an end.

“A 10-week decline in the number of Covid-19 cases in the 53 countries in the WHO European region has come to an end,” Hans Kluge, the WHO’s regional director for Europe, warned in a press briefing.

“Last week the number of cases rose by 10% driven by increased mixing, travel, gatherings and an easing of social restrictions,” he said.

The rise in cases comes against a backdrop of a “rapidly evolving situation,” Kluge said, given the new delta strain, which was dubbed a variant of concern by the WHO in May.

Millions remain unvaccinated in Europe, Kluge warned, with protection against the delta variant provided, for the most part, by having two doses of the Covid vaccines on offer. Kluge reiterated what the data has already shown, that the delta variant is far more transmissible than the alpha variant (which itself was more transmissible than previous strains).

Read more: The fast-spreading delta Covid variant could have different symptoms, experts say

“Delta overtakes alpha very quickly … and is already translating into increased hospitalizations and deaths,” Kluge said. He said the delta variant would be dominant in the WHO European region by August, while vaccinations would still not have caught up.

“By August, the WHO European Region will be ‘delta dominant,'” he noted, adding that 63% of people are still waiting for their first shot, while restrictions on public life are likely to be lifted by next month. The U.K., for example, which has a high vaccination rate but also a large number of cases caused by the delta variant, plans to end restrictions on July 19.

Read more: The Covid delta variant has ‘exploded’ in the UK — and it could be a blueprint for the U.S.

Kluge said that three conditions were now in place for “a new wave of excess hospitalizations and deaths” before the fall: new variants, a deficit in vaccine uptake and increased social mixing.

“There will be a new wave in the WHO European region unless we remain disciplined, and even more so when there is much less rules in place to follow,” he warned.

Medical staff member Mantra Nguyen installs a new oxygen mask for a patient in the Covid-19 intensive care unit (ICU) at the United Memorial Medical Center in Houston, Texas.

Go Nakamura | Getty Images News | Getty Images.

Rise in infections

Kluge’s comments come amid a worrying rise in Covid infections across Europe despite efforts to curtail travel from high-risk regions.

Others are now following the U.K., with France, Germany, Italy, Portugal and Russia among a group of countries seeing an increasing number of Covid cases being caused by the delta variant, particularly among younger, unvaccinated or not yet fully vaccinated people.

Read more: Europe wants to stop the Covid delta variant. But experts say it may already be too late

Increased mixing, particularly given the delayed UEFA Euro 2020 soccer tournament that’s currently being held across the Continent, has not helped prevent the spread of the variant with gatherings and crowds as matches are being played.