Massive fire destroys, damages more than 3,500 rental cars near Florida airport
The fire burned 15 acres in an area where extra rental cars are parked to service the Southwest Florida International Airport. Witnesses saw and heard multiple small explosions, flames jumping high in the air and showers of sparks. The cars weren't occupied at the time of the fire. At around 8 p.m. Friday, the fire spread, and the flames got higher even as two helicopters dropped water and firetrucks emptied their tanks.There were 3,516 cars destroyed or damaged by the fire, and 3,850 were undamaged, according to Vicki Moreland, communication director for the airport.
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FILE - In this file photo taken on Thursday, May 9, 2019, Russian President Vladimir Putin walks to attend a military parade marking 74 years since the victory in WWII in Red Square in Moscow, Russia. Spring is not turning out the way Russian President Vladimir Putin might have planned it. A nationwide vote on April 22 was supposed to finalize sweeping constitutional reforms that would allow him to stay in power until 2036, if he wished. But after the coronavirus spread in Russia, that plebiscite had to be postponed an action so abrupt that billboards promoting it already had been erected in Moscow and other big cities. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, File)
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In this photo taken on Tuesday, April 7, 2020, Russian President Vladimir Putin, during a meeting at the Novo-Ogaryovo residence outside Moscow, Russia. Spring is not turning out the way Russian President Vladimir Putin might have planned it. A nationwide vote on April 22 was supposed to finalize sweeping constitutional reforms that would allow him to stay in power until 2036, if he wished. But after the coronavirus spread in Russia, that plebiscite had to be postponed an action so abrupt that billboards promoting it already had been erected in Moscow and other big cities.(Alexei Druzhinin, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP, File)
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FILE - In this Thursday, May 9, 2019 file photo, Russian President Vladimir Putin walks to attend a military parade marking 74 years since the victory in WWII in Red Square in Moscow, Russia. Spring is not turning out the way Russian President Vladimir Putin might have planned it. A nationwide vote on April 22, 2020 was supposed to finalize sweeping constitutional reforms that would allow him to stay in power until 2036, if he wished. But after the coronavirus spread in Russia, that plebiscite had to be postponed an action so abrupt that billboards promoting it already had been erected in Moscow and other big cities. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, File)
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FILE - In this Tuesday, May 7, 2019 file photo, Russian soldiers march along Red Square carrying the Victory in the WWII Flag during a rehearsal for the Victory Day military parade in Moscow, Russia. The parade will take place at Moscow's Red Square on May 9 to celebrate 74 years of the victory in WWII. Spring is not turning out the way Russian President Vladimir Putin might have planned it. A nationwide vote on April 22, 2020 was supposed to finalize sweeping constitutional reforms that would allow him to stay in power until 2036, if he wished. But after the coronavirus spread in Russia, that plebiscite had to be postponed an action so abrupt that billboards promoting it already had been erected in Moscow and other big cities. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, Pool, File)
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FILE - In this Thursday, May 9, 2019 file photo, Russian troops march during the Victory Day military parade to celebrate 74 years since the victory in WWII in Red Square in Moscow, Russia. Spring is not turning out the way Russian President Vladimir Putin might have planned it. A nationwide vote on April 22, 2020 was supposed to finalize sweeping constitutional reforms that would allow him to stay in power until 2036, if he wished. But after the coronavirus spread in Russia, that plebiscite had to be postponed an action so abrupt that billboards promoting it already had been erected in Moscow and other big cities. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, File)
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FILE - In this Monday, Dec. 9, 2019 file photo, French President Emmanuel Macron, right, welcomes Russian President Vladimir Putin wave at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France. Spring is not turning out the way Russian President Vladimir Putin might have planned it. A nationwide vote on April 22, 2020 was supposed to finalize sweeping constitutional reforms that would allow him to stay in power until 2036, if he wished. But after the coronavirus spread in Russia, that plebiscite had to be postponed – an action so abrupt that billboards promoting it already had been erected in Moscow and other big cities. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus, File)
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FILE - In this Wednesday, March 25, 2020 file photo, people walk past a billboard reads "Out country, our constitution, our decision" in a street in Moscow, Russia. Spring is not turning out the way Russian President Vladimir Putin might have planned it. A nationwide vote on April 22, 2020 was supposed to finalize sweeping constitutional reforms that would allow him to stay in power until 2036, if he wished. But after the coronavirus spread in Russia, that plebiscite had to be postponed an action so abrupt that billboards promoting it already had been erected in Moscow and other big cities. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, file)
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In this photo taken on Tuesday, March 24, 2020, Russian President Vladimir Putin wearing a protective suit enters a hall during his visit to the hospital for coronavirus patients in Kommunarka, outside Moscow, Russia. Spring is not turning out the way Russian President Vladimir Putin might have planned it. A nationwide vote on April 22 was supposed to finalize sweeping constitutional reforms that would allow him to stay in power until 2036, if he wished. But after the coronavirus spread in Russia, that plebiscite had to be postponed an action so abrupt that billboards promoting it already had been erected in Moscow and other big cities.(Alexei Druzhinin, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP, File)
MOSCOW (AP) — Spring is not turning out the way Russian President Vladimir Putin might have planned it.
Coronavirus live updates: 'Virus decides' when to reopen US, Fauci says; No travel for Good Friday, Easter; Deaths surpass 16,000
New York reported record-breaking number of deaths, travelers are being cautioned to stay home for Good Friday, and more news about the coronavirus."The virus kind of decides whether or not it's going to be appropriate to open," he said on CNN, warning that the country could "prematurely" end social distancing measures and then "you're right back in the same situation.
A nationwide vote on April 22 was supposed to finalize sweeping constitutional reforms that would allow him to stay in power until 2036, if he wished. But after the coronavirus spread in Russia, that plebiscite had to be postponed – an action so abrupt that billboards promoting it already had been erected in Moscow and other big cities.
Now under threat is a pomp-filled celebration of Victory Day on May 9, marking the 1945 defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II.
The holiday has become the most important on Russia's calendar, and this year is the 75th anniversary, with world leaders invited to a celebration highlighting the country’s exceptional role in history. Every year, thousands gather in Moscow, including many elderly veterans proudly wearing their medals.
'Got my blood boiling': Florida nursing homes ask governor for immunity from coronavirus lawsuits
Florida is reporting more than 18,000 confirmed coronavirus cases in the state. The state's Agency for Health Care Administration said Saturday that the industry’s letter had been received and will be reviewed. "The state is evaluating all options to assist health care workers and facilities on the frontlines of the response to COVID-19, although there has been no final decision on this particular request," said communications director Katie Strickland.A recent USA TODAY analysis of federal inspection data found that a majority of U.S.
Military units have already rehearsed the traditional Red Square parade, drilling outside Moscow, and leaders such as France’s Emmanuel Macron and India’s Narendra Modi had promised to attend.
It would seem impossible to have such a gala now, with much of Russia and the world locked down to stop the spread of the virus.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said last week no decision has been made on whether to postpone it but authorities are considering “options," one of which is to hold it without the veterans, a group especially vulnerable to the virus. Peskov added the Kremlin would understand if foreign leaders decided not to come due to the pandemic and added the celebration would take place even if it doesn’t happen on May 9.
Initially underestimated by Russian authorities, the pandemic has posed an unexpected challenge for Putin, whose political standing now depends on whether he can contain the damage from it.
Arizona coronavirus update: 3,962 confirmed cases, 142 known deaths as of Wednesday
Arizona cases of COVID-19 now approach 4,000, with 142 known deaths, according to numbers posted by the Arizona Department of Health Services on Wednesday.Arizona's total identified cases rose to 3,962, according to the most recent state figures. That's an increase of 156 confirmed cases, or 4%, since Tuesday when the state reported 3,806 identified cases and 131 deaths.
On March 24, Putin was shown donning a yellow hazmat suit to visit a hospital for infected patients.
Officials then indefinitely postponed the vote on the constitutional reforms that would have allowed Putin to serve two more six-year terms after 2024. The amendments already have been approved by lawmakers but the government wanted nationwide balloting to give the changes a democratic veneer. Campaigns promoting the vote had already kicked off in dozens of Russian regions.
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In preparation for the vote and Victory Day, Russia’s state news agency Tass had begun releasing parts of a three-hour interview with Putin, with the 67-year-old leader talking about what he had done for the country in the past 20 years and what more needs to be accomplished. But Tass suspended daily extracts of the interview, saying it was no longer relevant to an audience more concerned about the coronavirus.
The outbreak has completely reset the Kremlin’s political agenda, said Nikolai Petrov, a senior research fellow in Chatham House’s Russia and Eurasia Program.
Coronavirus live updates: US deaths hit 40,000 as NY begins mass antibody testing campaign; cash for small businesses coming
In Monday's coronavirus news, lockdown tensions grow as Americans seek normalcy. Some passengers from a luxury cruise are getting off, 15 weeks later.A driver displays an alternate opinion as she passes protesters demonstrating at the Tennessee state capitol to speak out against the state's handling of the COVID-19 outbreak on April 19 in Nashville, Tenn. Tennessee is under a stay-at-home order due to the coronavirus outbreak except for essential personnel.
“Everything that was happening before (the outbreak) has basically been wiped out,” Petrov told The Associated Press. “That whole political agenda (of constitutional reform), that had been unfolding since mid-January is over.”
He added that for the moment, “I think we can forget about the constitutional amendments.”
The coronavirus crisis presents many difficulties for Putin, whose approval ratings — steadily dropping in the past two years — reached 63% in March - the lowest since 2013.
It comes as the prices of oil, Russia’s main source of income, plummeted amid a price war with Saudi Arabia, causing a sharp drop in the ruble. The pandemic brought with it the prospects of more economic devastation.
As much of Russia went into lockdown, which Putin sugarcoated by describing it as “nonworking days,” many business operations came to a halt, prompting fears of a mass shutdown by companies and leaving millions unemployed.
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The statue of Christ the Redeemer is lit up with the image of a medical worker tribute to medical workers during an Easter Sunday event, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on April 12.
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People in cars attend Easter Sunday services at the Daytona Beach Drive-in Christian Church as a way to practice social distancing, on April 12, in Daytona Beach, Florida. Florida's stay-at-home order exempts religious services, but Governor Ron DeSantis has advised against attending crowded religious gatherings.
Arizona coronavirus update: 5,064 confirmed cases, 187 known deaths as of Monday
Arizona cases of COVID-19 now exceed 5,000, with 187 known deaths, according to numbers posted by the Arizona Department of Health Services on Monday.Arizona's total identified cases rose to 5,064, according to the most recent state figures. That's an increase of 135 confirmed cases, or 2.7%, since Sunday when the state reported 4,929 identified cases and 184 deaths.
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A woman wearing a protective face mask lights a paper lantern as she attends a celebration in memory of those who died due to the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in San Giorgio Ionico, Itay, on April 12.
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Pallets containing personal protective equipment, are unloaded from a FedEx cargo plane, on April 12, at Manchester-Boston Regional Airport, in Manchester, England. The cargo plane, carrying about 91,000 pounds of personal protective equipment arrived at the airport in Manchester from Shanghai, China.
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A priest blesses people in their window after the Easter Sunday service was closed in Arras, France, on April 12.
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A policeman wearing a coronavirus helmet distributes pamphlets to raise awareness about the COVID-19 coronavirus at a residential area, in Chennai, India, on April 12.
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People applaud from their balconies in support of healthcare workers and police officers, in Ronda, Spain, on April 12.
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A policeman salutes healthcare workers outside the Gregorio Maranon Hospital in Madrid, Spain, on April 12.
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A person runs past posters in Manchester, England, on April 12.
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A priest gives a blessing and holy communion to a patient during Easter in Sant'Orsola Hospital on April 12 in Bologna, Italy.
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Yandex.Eda food delivery service employees in Moscow, Russia, on April 12. Russian President Vladimir Putin has expanded non-working period till April 30, to prevent the spread of the novel coronavirus.
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La Scala philharmonic cellist Marcello Sirotti performs in the courtyard of his apartment building, in Milan, Italy, on April 12. Musicians from the La Scala Philharmonic Orchestra called for people to play instruments from their windows and balconies on Easter Sunday.
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Women sing in front of a church in Schleife, Germany, on April 12.
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Noel Brandon known as DJ IAMNOEL plays his set on a balcony in downtown San Diego, California on April 11.
These US citizens won't get coronavirus stimulus checks — because their spouses are immigrants
She works as a film producer and her small business has ground to a halt, forcing her and her husband to eat red beans and rice most nights, scramble to find small-business loans and apply for medical assistance for their two children. Kitchen workers prepare bag lunches at Centro Hispano Daniel Torres to be distributed at Olivet Boys and Girls Club to help feed children in Reading, Pennsylvania on April 17.
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Pastors wear mask as they pray during a Easter worship as South Koreans take measures to protect themselves against the spread of coronavirus (COVID-19) at the Church on April 12 in Seoul, South Korea.
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People sit at picnic tables despite warnings not to at Marourbra Beach on April 12 in Sydney, Australia.
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Soldiers and policemen arrest a man who stopped to pray outside a closed church, amid government orders for everyone to stay home to avoid spreading the coronavirus, as Filipinos mark Easter Sunday on April 12 in Manila, Philippines.
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Commuters wear face masks aboard a bus in Havana, on April 11. Cuba hit out at the United States on Friday over its nearly 60-year-old embargo against the island nation, which Havana described as "even more cruel" given the suffering caused by the new coronavirus pandemic.
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Lawyer Jessica Pride drives her husband, dressed as the Easter Bunny, as they try to bring some joy to the kids in their neighborhood during the pandemic, in Solana Beach, California, on April 11.
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A man gestures from his hotel room as he prepares to leave the Crown Promenade Hotel after spending two weeks in forced quarantine in Melbourne, Australia, on April 12. Health authorities will stagger the release throughout the day of the international arrivals who have completed their mandatory isolation period.
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Police, wearing protective face coverings direct the entrance and exit of customers at a popular market in Lima, Peru, on April 11.
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Pope Francis leads the Easter vigil Mass in St. Peter's Basilica with no public participation at the Vatican, on April 11.
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A woman places flowers outside Residence Herron, a seniors' long-term care facility, following a number of deaths since the outbreak, in the suburb of Dorval, in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, on April 11.
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A boy plays tennis outside his house before the curfew, in La Somone near Thies, Senegal, on April 11.
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A hare runs along grounded Lufthansa planes at the airport in Frankfurt, Germany, on April 11. Due to the pandemic, Lufthansa had to cancel 95 percent of its flights.
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A worker carries water on the fishermen dock during a quarantine throughout the country, as the government undertakes steadily stricter measures, in La Libertad, El Salvador, April 11.
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Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro visits a temporary field hospital, amid the coronavirus disease outbreak, in Aguas Lindas, state of Goias, Brazil, on April 11.
McConnell says Congress has reached deal to replenish halted coronavirus small business loan program
The Paycheck Protection Program, which provides loans to small businesses, was halted Thursday after it allocated all of its initial $349 billion.The nearly half-trillion deal will provide more funds to the Paycheck Protection Program, which was halted last week after it ran out of money.
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Iranian women, wearing personal protective equipment, look at a cell phone at a shop in Mashhad, on April 11.
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A woman carries her shopping and an Easter egg across Piazza della Rotonda in central Rome, on April 11, during the country's lockdown.
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A worker walks along the corridors leading to wards at the Leishenshan Hospital, which was constructed in a parking lot from prefabricated modules in two weeks in Wuhan in central China's Hubei province, on, April 11, as the city dealt with a rush of patients in the early days of the coronavirus outbreak. The hospital closed on April 9 but still has 14 patients, mainly elderly with underlying complications.
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People stand in queue keeping social distance beside a Covid-19 awareness scarecrows placed by Chennai municipality at a market during the lockdown as a preventive measure, in India, on April 11.
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Several workers prepare boxes of cherry Granada-La Palma farming cooperative in Motril, Spain, on April 11. The company has implemented several measures to protect more than 4,000 of its workers and cooperative members from coronavirus with separation panels, shoe disinfection and temperature controls.
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A medical staff in protective gear collects a swab sample from a resident of Ha Loi village, in Hanoi, Vietnam, on April 11.
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Passengers of an Aeroflot charter flight for Russian evacuees from Phuket arrive at Sheremetyevo International Airport in Russia on April 11. On March 27, the Russian government ordered an international flight ban amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, with the exception of charter flights to evacuate Russian citizens from abroad.
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A disinfection squad uses a drone to spray disinfectant in the streets of Cannes, France, on April 10.
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Medical staff in protective clothing board Australian cruise ship Greg Mortimer at the port in Montevideo, Uruguay on April 10 to attend to its passengers before transporting them to hospital during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak.
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A sign showing a parking lot at Green Lake Park is closed due to the coronavirus outbreak is seen on April 10, in Seattle. As a further measure to stop group gatherings and exercise where social distancing isn't being practiced, City of Seattle officials plan to close the entire park and more than a dozen others over the Easter weekend to try and continue slowing the spread of the coronavirus.
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One of the Firmino brothers disinfects the alleys of Santa Marta Slum during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on April 10.
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A group of men play "Jews of Masatepe" during the procession ''The Chained'' in which residents chase and capture people dressed as Judas to chain and drag them along the streets as punishment for betraying Jesus Christ, as part of the activities of Holy Week, in Masatepe, Nicaragua, on April 10, while most of the week's celebrations were cancelled worldwide as a precautionary measure against the spread of the new coronavirus, COVID-19.
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Scott Fong practices rock climbing on a staircase outside his home as his partner Claire Brady video chats with her family in place of their annual gathering on Good Friday, as 40 million Californians continue to shelter in place due to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Redwood City, California on April 10.
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A person plays piano inside a Ming's Piano truck at a car park, on April 10, in Hong Kong, China. In attempt to keep their business during the COVID-19 pandemic, Ming’s Piano, a music school with 12 teachers and about 200 students, has hired three trucks to deliver lessons at students' doorsteps.
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A man buys an oxygen cylinder at a factory in Guayaquil, Ecuador, on April 10, during the novel coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic.
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Artisan Claudia de Paz works on a pinata depicting the coronavirus at her workshop, as the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, in Guatemala City, Guatemala on April 10.
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An image of Queen Elizabeth II and quotes from her broadcast to the nation in relation to the coronavirus epidemic are displayed on screens in Piccadilly Circus in London on April 10.
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Despite most sports being canceled around the world, a fan attends a football match between FC Neman and Belshina in Grodno, Belarus, on April 10.
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Alye Gunduz, 93, greets health officials and patients as she is discharged from the hospital following her treatment for coronavirus in Istanbul on April 10.
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Mohamad Nurjaman, 31, puts a ring on Ugi Lestari Widya Bahri, 24, during their wedding ceremony in Tangerang, Indonesia, on April 10.
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Chaplains bearing a cross give a blessing to the medical staff at Rome's San Giovanni Hospital on Good Friday on April 10.
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A volunteer tries out a protective suit for health workers at International Islamic University Malaysia in Gombak, Malaysia, on April 10.
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Special Task Force personnel wearing protective gear spray disinfectant outside the Presidential Secretariat as security personnel stand guard in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on April 10.
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Visitors at Sydney Fish Market have their temperature checked before being allowed access on April 10, in Sydney, Australia. New measures are implemented for Easter weekend, including additional crowd control to limit how many people can be on-site at one time.
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A woman and a child in protective suits at Wuhan Tianhe International Airport after the lockdown was lifted in Wuhan, China, on April 10.
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A sign of support hangs on the windows of The Village of Humber Heights retirement home in Toronto, Canada, on April 9.
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People attend a Holy Thursday Mass held by Father Fabio Vassallo in a nearly empty church, with people replaced by drawings done by children of members of the congregation decorating the pews, as Italy celebrates Easter under lockdown, in Catania, Italy, on April 9.
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Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., center, speaks with reporters outside the Senate chamber on Capitol Hill in Washington, on April 9. Senate Democrats on Thursday stalled President Donald Trump's request for $250 billion to supplement a "paycheck protection" program for businesses crippled by the coronavirus outbreak, demanding protections for minority-owned businesses and money for health care providers and state and local governments.
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Armed Forces of Malta soldiers in protective clothing stand near rescued migrants on a military vessel after it arrived in Senglea in Valletta's Grand Harbour, after an outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Malta on April 10.
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Slideshow by photo servicesThe Chamber for Trade and Industries, a government-backed business association, predicted 3 million companies could go out of business and 8 million people — almost 11% of Russia’s working population — could end up jobless.
A weakening economy and worsening living conditions, widely seen by analysts as the driving force behind Putin’s souring ratings, have already become the dominating fear among Russians. With the crisis still unfolding, it is likely to hurt his standing even more, said Denis Volkov, a sociologist with the independent Levada polling center.
When people start fearing things getting worse “then the ratings start plummeting,” Volkov told the AP.
The Kremlin’s response to the crisis has raised questions at home and abroad.
Domestically, Putin has been widely criticized for paying little attention to the epidemic at first, and then for distancing himself from it by delegating difficult decisions on lockdowns to regional governments and the Cabinet.
Some in the West have questioned the low number of official virus cases in Russia and dismissed its widely publicized effort to send planeloads of medical aid to Italy, the U.S., Serbia and other countries as a PR stunt.
Putin sought to reassure the nation in a TV address on April 8, but part of his message comparing the coronavirus to invaders from the 10th and 11th centuries brought mockery on social media instead.
“Our country went through many serious challenges. It was tormented by the Pechenegs and the Cumans, and Russia got through all of it. We will defeat this coronavirus bug, too,” Putin said.
Social media users pointed out that not only did Putin use this line in 2010, he might have borrowed it from an anecdote from the 19th century.
“The risks of him (Putin) looking out of touch are very real,” Samuel Greene, director of the Russia Institute at the King’s College London, told the AP.
Putin used to be able to regain control of the political agenda by shifting the focus from domestic hardships to Russia’s geopolitical grandeur, rallying people around the 2014 annexation of Crimea or fighting what he called terrorists in Syria. But this time, as Russia is forced to confront a truly global crisis, that tactic seems much harder.
“There can be nothing that would interest people more than the hardship they are going through and will continue to go through for a long time,” said Petrov.
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Follow AP coverage of the pandemic at http://apnews.com/VirusOutbreak and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak
McConnell says Congress has reached deal to replenish halted coronavirus small business loan program .
The Paycheck Protection Program, which provides loans to small businesses, was halted Thursday after it allocated all of its initial $349 billion.The nearly half-trillion deal will provide more funds to the Paycheck Protection Program, which was halted last week after it ran out of money.