Dozens of people have been arrested after protesters clashed with police in Australia's largest city. Meanwhile, the US has bought 200 million additional vaccines as a backup. Follow DW for more.
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In Paris, police estimate 11,000 marched against a bill that would mandate a special pass to enter restaurants and bars and also make vaccines obligatory for health care workers. Large rallies were also held in other French cities while lawmakers debated the measures in Senate, the upper house of the French parliament. The bid had already passed the lower house of parliament on Friday.
The majority of French adults are fully vaccinated and the special pass has broad public support. However, members of France's far right and the "yellow vests" clashed with the police in Paris in protest of the measures, with police using tear gas water cannons to disperse the crowd.
Thousands of people took to the streets of Australian cities, including Sydney, to protest COVID-induced curbs as the country battles another surge of the coronavirus.
Nine News reported that 57 people were arrested and charged in Sydney after the demonstration there turned violent. Large crowds broke through barriers and one group charged at mounted police officers, throwing several potted plants and bottles.
The demonstrators flouted curbs on non-essential travel and public gatherings soon after authorities said the measures could remain in place until October.
The Greater Sydney area has been in lockdown for the past four weeks as the wider state of New South Wales posts record numbers of new infections.
Protesters also took to the streets in Melbourne and a car protest rally has been planned in Adelaide.
Asia
Vietnam has announced a 15-day lockdown in the capital, Hanoi, amid a spike in coronavirus cases in the southern region. The lockdown order bans gatherings of more than two people in public, days after authorities suspended all outdoor activities in the city.
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Southeast Asian countries struggle to curtail COVID surge
A devastating third coronavirus wave is wreaking havoc in the region as the delta variant takes hold. Many countries, with their meager and inadequate public health resources, have been unable to control the situation.
Image: Wisnu Agung Prasetyo/ZUMA/picture alliance
Third wave
COVID infections have risen exponentially in Southeast Asia in the past few months. Countries such as Laos, Thailand and Vietnam had avoided large-scale outbreaks in 2020, but they are now struggling to cope with the devastating new wave. Indonesia, for instance, has been hit hard by a third wave, with the number of deaths also rising in the country.
Image: Agung Fatma Putra/ZUMA/picture alliance
Chaos and devastation in Indonesia
As of Sunday, Indonesia had reported 73,582 COVID-related deaths and more than 2.8 million confirmed cases since the start of the pandemic. Last week, the country surpassed India and Brazil as the world's leader in new infection rates. Experts say the actual number of cases could be much higher. Citizens are desperately searching for oxygen cylinders and hospital beds.
Image: Timur Matahari/AFP/Getty Images
Delta at large
Indonesia's health care system and hospitals are struggling to keep up with an influx of new COVID patients. With a population of some 270 million, the country was severely hit by the outbreak after the Eid celebration in May, which saw millions of people travel to celebrate the Ramadan. That outbreak has been made worse, as cases surge during the spread of the highly transmissible delta variant.
Image: Wisnu Agung Prasetyo/ZUMA/picture alliance
From good to worse
In 2020, Vietnamese officials were praised for efficiently containing the coronavirus spread in the country. But, with the delta variant, which was identified in India, taking hold in the region, the number of infections is on the rise in the country. The government has now put the entire southern region in a two-week lockdown, as confirmed COVID-19 cases exceeded 3,000 for the third day in a row.
Image: Luke Groves/AP/picture alliance
Anger against authorities
Thai protesters are calling for Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha to step down over alleged mismanagement of the COVID-19 pandemic. The demonstrations are taking place as the kingdom registers record levels of coronavirus infections, with hospitals under severe strain. Thailand has reported nearly 90% of its total number of cases and 95% of its deaths since the pandemic began since April.
Thailand's tourism sector has also been hit badly by the pandemic. With Bangkok and its surrounding provinces struggling to deal with the COVID-19 surge, the government is pushing ahead with its plans to reopen the popular resort island of Phuket in a bid to salvage the economy.
Image: Sirachai Arunrugstichai/Getty Images
Slow vaccine rollout
The Thai government has been slow to procure vaccines. The Southeast Asian country began vaccinating front-line workers in February and kicked off a mass vaccination campaign in June by administering locally produced Oxford-AstraZeneca shots and importing the Chinese-made Sinovac doses. The vaccination drive has so far been slow and erratic.
Image: Soe Zeya Tun/REUTERS
Desperate measures
Malaysians, too, are struggling amid COVID lockdowns. Some of them have come up with a novel way to ask for help; they are flying white flags outside their homes to signal distress. The #benderaputih — or white flag — campaign has gained momentum on social media. The country has been under a nationwide lockdown since June 1 to curtail a surge of COVID infections.
Image: Lim Huey Teng/REUTERS
COVID and the coup
The military coup has disrupted people's access to health care facilities in Myanmar. Many doctors have refused to work in hospitals to show their opposition to the junta. The UN has warned that the country can become a "superspreader state" because of increasing infections and a slow vaccination drive.
Image: Santosh Krl/ZUMA/picture alliance
Herd immunity, a distant dream
Like other Southeast Asia countries, the Philippines is facing a limited vaccine supply and a slow vaccine rollout. Health experts say the country may be among the last ones in the region to reach herd immunity against the virus. At the current pace of vaccination, authorities might take two or more years to vaccinate at least 75% of the population.
Image: Dante Diosina Jr/AA/picture alliance
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China is testing all residents in a southwestern county near Myanmar after a spike in COVID infections. Authorities have announced the closure of all businesses, schools and markets in the Yunnan province’s Jiangcheng County on Monday and Tuesday while testing is carried out.
Traveling in and out of the county will be prohibited.
In Japan, organizers of the Tokyo Olympics have reported 17 new Games-related COVID cases, bringing the total number of infections since July 1 to 123. The organizing committee said a foreign athlete was among the newly reported cases.
The Tokyo area is under a coronavirus state of emergency as the Games proceed despite heavy public opposition.
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Europe
Germany has reported 1,919 new cases of the virus, taking the country’s total to 3,754,511, according to data from the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) for infectious diseases. With 28 deaths reported, the death toll has risen to 91,520.
Croatia and Montenegro have announced stricter COVID rules along the coast of the Adriatic Sea to prevent a rise in infections from ruining the summer tourism season.
Croatia is set to restrict the number of people at gatherings next week while Montenegro has temporarily shut down nightclubs and discotheques.
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Americas
The United States is buying 200 million additional doses of the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine to inoculate younger children and possibly provide booster shots to vaccinated adults, the White House has announced.
Half of these doses will be delivered by the end of the year, and the rest by April 2022.
The country has also been shipping vaccine doses from Pfizer, Moderna, Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca to other countries. White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said 22 million doses were shipped this week alone.
A fall in the number of coronavirus deaths has led to a degree of optimism in Brazil as several states roll back restrictions. However, there have been major concerns over the Delta variant after Rio de Janeiro recorded its first deaths from the highly contagious variant.
“It is expected that the Delta variant will soon become dominant in the city," Rio city health secretary Daniel Soranz said at a press conference.
Latin America and the Caribbean have reported a total of more than 40 million cases since the first COVID infections were recorded last year.