January 6 coronavirus news

By Joshua Berlinger, Adam Renton, Zamira Rahim, Angela Dewan and Hannah Strange, CNN

Updated 12:00 a.m. ET, January 7, 2021
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5:45 a.m. ET, January 6, 2021

Denmark bans entry for travelers from South Africa over variant fears

From CNN's Antonia Mortensen in Italy

Denmark has banned travelers from South Africa from entry and is discouraging travel to the African nation, due to a new Covid-19 variant first detected there.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Denmark now advises against all travel, including business travel, to the whole of South Africa, according to a press release published Tuesday night.

The variant has a pattern of mutation which troubles scientists and appears to make the virus more easily transmitted. Another variant first detected in the UK has prompted similar global concern.

5:30 a.m. ET, January 6, 2021

US states call in National Guard as country hits daily Covid-19 death toll record

From CNN's Christina Maxouris

Funeral director Steven Correa moves the casket of someone said to have died from Covid-19 in preparation for burial at Continental Funeral Home in East Los Angeles, California, on December 31.
Funeral director Steven Correa moves the casket of someone said to have died from Covid-19 in preparation for burial at Continental Funeral Home in East Los Angeles, California, on December 31. Patrick T. Fallon/AFP/Getty Images

The US reported its highest daily Covid-19 death count ever Tuesday -- a grim milestone that comes as state leaders work urgently to combat a slow pace of vaccinations.

More than 3,770 American deaths were reported in one day -- more than two dozen above the country's previous record, set less than a week ago. The country also topped 21 million infections Tuesday and set a hospitalization record, with more than 131,100 Covid-19 hospitalized patients nationwide, according to the COVID Tracking Project.

As numbers climb, US governors are now taking new measures to get the distributed vaccines into arms faster, including mobilizing National Guard members and training more volunteers to administer vaccines.

Read more:

5:18 a.m. ET, January 6, 2021

Beijing negotiating with WHO as expert team tries to enter China to probe origins of Covid-19

From CNN's Beijing Bureau

China says that it remains in close contact with the World Health Organization (WHO) about finalizing arrangements for a visit to Wuhan by an international panel of experts who will investigate the origin of Covid-19.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on Tuesday that two scientists on the United Nations (UN) team had already left their home countries for Wuhan when they were told that Chinese officials had not approved the necessary permissions to enter the country.

"I am very disappointed with this news," Tedros told a news conference in Geneva on Tuesday, in a rare direct rebuke.

The WHO said on Tuesday that arrangements had been jointly agreed with China in advance of the trip.

WHO officials have long been negotiating with Beijing to allow a team of global scientists access to key sites to investigate the origin of the virus -- first detected in Wuhan in December 2019.

The scientists' visit was agreed between China and the WHO in October, and the experts and their Chinese counterparts had been in touch via zoom.

"Perhaps there is some misunderstanding," Hua Chunying, spokesperson for China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said at a press briefing Wednesday.

Hua added: “According to my understanding, the two sides are still in close communication about details relating to the specific dates and arrangements for the international expert group to come to China."

"We hope that through the communication between the two sides, we can finalize the arrangements as soon as possible and continue to promote cooperation."

Hua also said that China "has been maintaining good and close communication with WHO." 

The spokesperson added that Beijing was still working on creating "good conditions" for the international expert team to come to China to "carry out cooperation on tracing the origin of the virus."

"In order to ensure that the international expert group that comes to China can work smoothly, it is needed to fulfill the necessary procedures and make relevant specific arrangements. The two sides are still negotiating about this," Hua said.

Read more:

4:49 a.m. ET, January 6, 2021

Germany records second highest daily death toll from Covid-19

From CNN's Claudia Otto and Nadine Schmidt in Berlin

Germany has recorded its second highest daily death toll from Covid-19, according to its national agency for disease control and prevention.

The Robert Koch Institute said Wednesday that a further 1,019 people had died, bringing the total fatality count to 36,537.

The all-time high daily death toll was reported on December 30 when 1,129 fatalities were recorded.

An additional 21,237 people were registered as having coronavirus, bringing the total number of cases in Germany to 1,808,647.

The spiraling numbers come a day after Germany's government announced plans to extend the country's national lockdown until the end of the month.

The lockdown was due to end on January 10.

Germany will also further tighten restrictions on movement and contact in order to curb cases.

4:31 a.m. ET, January 6, 2021

Ireland Covid-19 hospital admissions surpass first wave peak

From CNN's Sarah Dean

Ireland now has more people hospitalized with Covid-19 than during the peak of the first wave, the CEO of the Health Service Executive Paul Reid said Wednesday on Twitter.

Reid tweeted: “With 921 people in hospital, we've now exceeded the peak level of the 1st wave (881).75 in ICU. Healthy people are getting very sick. Everyone gets how serious this is now. Let's all do what's needed, turn this around, save lives, whilst the vaccine arrives. We have to.”

On Tuesday, Ireland recorded 5,325 new daily coronavirus cases and 17 virus-related deaths. 

4:19 a.m. ET, January 6, 2021

UK vaccination target is "Herculean" but can be achieved, minister says

From CNN's Sharon Braithwaite

People line up for vaccinations at the NHS London Bridge Vaccination Centre 1 on December 30, 2020 in London, England.
People line up for vaccinations at the NHS London Bridge Vaccination Centre 1 on December 30, 2020 in London, England. Hollie Adams/Getty Images

Britain's target of vaccinating more than 13 million priority candidates against coronavirus by mid-February is "Herculean" but can be achieved, the UK health minister responsible for the program's deployment, Nadhim Zahawi, told Sky News on Wednesday.

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Tuesday that he hoped the country could vaccinate the four groups it has identified as top priority by the middle of next month, describing the number of people in those groups as “somewhat higher than 13 million.”

Asked if this target is achievable, Zahawi said it is an "Herculean effort."

"It is a stretching target no doubt. Very stretching target," he said adding that he's "confident" that with the plan that the NHS have put together "we will deliver this."

Progress so far: The NHS has administered more than 1.3 million vaccine doses since December 8, Zahawi said, adding that one in four 80-year-olds have already had their first shot. "And in a couple of weeks' time, those 25% of 80-year-olds will be protected, and of course will then get their second jab as well, so it is a Herculean effort," he said.

The minister also said that there will be a "massive acceleration" in the numbers of vaccinated people in the next few days, as the NHS gets more vaccination sites operational.

4:16 a.m. ET, January 6, 2021

Czech Republic reports more than 17,000 new Covid-19 cases in new daily record

From CNN's Tomas Etzler in Prague, Czech Republic

A man waits outside a sampling point for Covid-19 testing in Prague, Czech Republic on January 3.
A man waits outside a sampling point for Covid-19 testing in Prague, Czech Republic on January 3. Gabriel Kuchta/Getty Images

The Czech Health Ministry identified 17,278 cases of Covid-19 on Tuesday, a new record for the number of cases recorded in a single day.

Cases are spiking in the Czech Republic despite strict anti-Covid measures that have been enacted throughout the country. A 9 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew is in place and most shops, services and schools are closed.

At least 776,967 cases have been confirmed in the Czech Republic, killing 12,436 people. There are 7,001 Covid-19 patients being treated in hospital. Some 63,183 people have recovered.

3:32 a.m. ET, January 6, 2021

The Netherlands administers its first Covid-19 vaccine dose

From CNN's Mick Krever

Healthcare worker Sanna Elkadiri, left, was the first Dutch recipient of a shot of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine at a mass vaccination center in Veghel, Netherlands on January 6.
Healthcare worker Sanna Elkadiri, left, was the first Dutch recipient of a shot of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine at a mass vaccination center in Veghel, Netherlands on January 6. Piroschka van de Wouw/Pool/AP

The first dose of a Covid-19 vaccine was administered in the Netherlands on Wednesday, according to national broadcaster NOS.

The first person to receive it was Sanna Elkadiri, 39, a care home worker in Veghel, NOS reported.

Dutch Health Minister Hugo de Jonge called it a “crazy moment."

"Finally, after 10 months in crisis mode, we are starting to end this crisis here. But it will really take a while before we have the misery behind us," he said.

Around 269,000 care home workers are being invited to receive their vaccinations as a first step, the National Institute of Health and the Environment said on Tuesday.

Slow start: The Dutch government has been criticized for what some saw as a slow start to it's Covid-19 vaccination program. The European Union officially started its vaccination campaign on December 27, days after approving the Pfizer/BioNTech coronavirus vaccine on December 21.

4:49 a.m. ET, January 6, 2021

He was skeptical of Covid-19. Now he's urging others to wear their masks from his hospital bed

From CNN's Amanda Jackson

A man who tested positive for the coronavirus after Christmas has posted several videos on social media warning others to wear their masks and learn from his mistake.

"I didn't think masks would make that much of a difference," Chuck Stacey told CNN on Tuesday. "I was wrong."

Stacey is currently in a Florida hospital for the second time since testing positive on December 27, 2020.

The 50-year-old told CNN when the pandemic started he equated the virus to a really bad flu and didn't take many precautions to protect himself.

"I admit it I was wrong," he said. "This has been brutal. I never knew that the human body could hurt so bad."

Read more of Stacey's story: