Another 5.2 million Americans filed for unemployment benefits in the week ending on April 11.
In total, 22 million Americans have filed first-time claims since mid-March as the coronavirus pandemic is forcing businesses to close and lay off workers.
By Julia Hollingsworth, Adam Renton, Rob Picheta and Fernando Alfonso III, CNN
From CNN’s Anneken Tappe
Another 5.2 million Americans filed for unemployment benefits in the week ending on April 11.
In total, 22 million Americans have filed first-time claims since mid-March as the coronavirus pandemic is forcing businesses to close and lay off workers.
From CNN’s Yoko Wakatsuki
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has declared that Japan's state of emergency will be extended nationwide through May 6 in further attempts to curb the spread of coronavirus infections.
The state of emergency previously applied to seven urban prefectures, including Tokyo. Abe said his decision comes after seeing the rapid hike of infections outside these areas.
Abe wants to minimize the human flow during the golden week, a string of national holidays from the end of April through May 6.
He also announced he was considering cash handouts of 100,000 yen (approximately $925) for each citizen, instead of the previous plan of 300,000 yen (approximately $2,800) per low-income family.
Some context: On Wednesday, public broadcaster NHK reported that a team of experts set up by Japan’s Health Ministry estimated more than 400,000 people could die of Covid-19 in Japan if nothing is done to contain the virus.
According to a tally from Johns Hopkins University, Japan has 8,626 reported cases of Covid-19 and 178 deaths.
From CNN's Adrienne Vogt
The scramble to find successful treatments to fight coronavirus is disjointed and chaotic, according to Dr. Derek Angus, chair of critical care medicine at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.
“No,” Angus told CNN when asked if experts have any sense of what has been working in clinical trials. “Look, that sounds depressing to say I don't know.”
“There are two million people already who have this disease. If even one in 10 has been able to participate in a trial, we could have gone through about 100 different drugs by now and known definitively which ones worked or not. But as it is, at this point … we have no idea which one is the best,” Angus said.
Angus, who is leading a Covid-19 trial that’s testing multiple therapies, said the disorder is at a global level and noted that there aren’t enough tests right now to practice effective public health.
“We've got plenty of ideas about what drugs might work, but we need to test these drugs in trials. Otherwise, we're bungling along not knowing what works,” Angus said. There are 94 trials registered for testing the drug hydroxychloroquine, he added.
“I’ve never heard of any drug needing 94 separate trials in the same disease,” he said. “If you're trying to do lots of little trials, that's not as efficient or as useful as trying to do large coordinated trials. We've had over two million confirmed cases of Covid-19, mainly in North America and Europe. And yet, barely more than a few thousand of these two million patients have been enrolled in clinical trials."
From CNN’s Brian Fung
Amazon told investors on Thursday that it has suspended more than 6,000 seller accounts on its platform from around the world for price gouging on essential items during the pandemic.
In his annual letter to shareholders, Bezos said the company has also removed more than 500,000 listings from Amazon’s website for price gouging. And, he said, Amazon has ramped up its reporting of price gougers to the authorities.
"To accelerate our response to price-gouging incidents, we created a special communication channel for state attorneys general to quickly and easily escalate consumer complaints to us,” Bezos wrote.
Some context: In a blog post last month, Amazon said it’s suspended 3,900 sellers on its US website alone.
But Amazon has battled rising criticism from policymakers over the availability of critical goods such as hand sanitizer and toilet paper as more people shop for essentials from home.
The company received probing letters in March from US lawmakers — and attorneys general representing nearly three dozen states and the District of Columbia. The attorneys general in particular accused Amazon of failing to prevent price gouging, despite efforts to apply automated and manual reviews of its platform.
From CNN’s Aleks Klosok in London
The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) has suspended the 2020 edition of the Indian Premier League (IPL) until further notice due to the evolving Coronavirus pandemic.
The lucrative eight-team T20 cricket tournament was scheduled to begin in India on March 29 and end on May 24.
Some context: This is the second time the BCCI has been forced to defer the tournament. Last month, just before the Indian government put the country in a three-week lockdown, the board pushed the start date to Wednesday 15 April.
“The health and safety of the nation and everyone involved in our great sport remains our top priority and as such, the BCCI along with the Franchise Owners, Broadcaster, Sponsors and all the Stakeholders acknowledge that the IPL 2020 season will only commence when it is safe and appropriate to do so,” BCCI secretary, Jay Shah, said in a statement on Thursday.
On Tuesday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi extended the nationwide lockdown until May 3.
From CNN’s Aleks Klosok in London
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) and Tokyo 2020 organizers have said they will explore all opportunities to reduce the cost of the summer games following its postponement until 2021 due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Speaking at a press conference on Thursday via videolink, John Coates – who heads up the IOC Coordination Commission for Tokyo 2020 – said the postponement provided an opportunity to assess “what are the must haves and what are the nice to haves.”
“Do we need to make revisions for hospitality, for the sponsors, the broadcasters and the National Olympic Committees? Many of the broadcasters may not have as big of a presence here because of the economic downturn,” he said. “We are going to see if we can find more savings on the basis not of what are nice to haves but what are must haves. I’m sure we will succeed greatly in reducing costs.”
Coates also praised Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe for taking the decision to postpone the Games and said he believed Abe hoped it would lead to an economic stimulus in the country.
“These Games can be how you kick-start the economy again […] PM Abe is a very, very smart man. When he put it to the IOC to postpone, he had in mind the positive economic stimulus that it would provide for Japan. There will be a lot of cities and countries around the world wishing for a similar opportunity,” he added.
When asked by journalists about the extra costs associated with the postponement of the games, Coates confirmed that the IOC would pick up those costs and vowed to protect the various stakeholders involved in the Olympic movement.
“The IOC is certainly facing some very significant costs related to the Olympic movements. There are additional costs to our stakeholders. We will be bearing those costs of the Olympic movement," Coates said.
A new road map for planning for next year’s Games is due to be established by May 2020.
From CNN's Jon Passantino
Elon Musk responded Thursday morning after the California governor’s office said ventilators promised by the Tesla CEO to the state’s hospitals to treat patients with the coronavirus had not been delivered.
“Please fix this misunderstanding,” Musk said to Gov. Gavin Newsom on Twitter.
On Wednesday, Brian Ferguson, the Deputy Director for Crisis Communication at Newsom’s Office of Emergency Services told CNN that it was speaking to hospitals in the state every day and to date had “not heard of any hospital system that has received a ventilator directly from Tesla or Musk.”
On his Twitter account early Thursday, Musk shared a screenshot of a late March email exchange between one of his employees and an official at the Los Angeles County Department of Health services and indicating they had received ventilators. It is not clear from the email exchange whether any California hospitals had received ventilators.
In another post, Musk shared a message from a California hospital executive thanking him for the gift of ventilators.
CNN reached out to the California governor’s office early Thursday seeking clarification.
The French navy has launched inquiries into the cluster of Covid-19 cases onboard the Charles de Gaulle aircraft carrier, navy prefecture Christine Ribb said during a Thursday press conference in Toulon.
On Wednesday, the French Ministry of Armed Forces announced that 668 of the 1,767 sailors on board the vessel had tested positive for Covid-19.
“We have two inquiries underway: an epidemiological enquiry headed by the army health service and the chief of state of the navy ordered an inquiry so that light can be shed on the facts as calmly as possible," Ribb said.
“The objective for us is to shed light on what has happened so that we can understand what has happened, how it took place, so we can fuel our thoughts for the future," Ribb said, adding that around 20 sailors are currently in hospital, including one in ICU facilities.
Christian Martinez, the national coordinator of the medical and psychological services for the military, said more than 10 doctors have been mobilized to help treat patients, including general navy doctors and specialist doctors.
“Symptomatic people are being confined with closer surveillance than those who are not symptomatic,” Martinez said.
From CNN’s Mick Krever in London
Research into blood donors in the Netherlands suggests that around 3% of the Dutch population may have developed antibodies against Covid-19, according to the country's government.
Jaap van Dissel, the director of the Dutch center for infectious disease control, told parliament on Thursday that the research was done by using data from the blood bank Sanquin.
Researchers compared antibodies found in blood plasma donors to the antibodies found in recovered Covid-19 patients. That research found coronavirus antibodies in about 3% of blood donors.
“This is still underway, and hopefully it will also soon be published in an international journal,” he said. But if you extrapolate, “about 3% of the Dutch people have developed antibodies against the coronavirus.”