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Florida Site of GOP Convention Orders Wearing of Masks


Volunteers load food into bags at a food and mask distribution site put on by the Miami Marlins baseball organization, June 29, 2020, outside Marlins Park stadium in Miami.
Volunteers load food into bags at a food and mask distribution site put on by the Miami Marlins baseball organization, June 29, 2020, outside Marlins Park stadium in Miami.

The Florida city where President Trump is scheduled to accept the Republican nomination for his re-election bid voted Monday to require masks in public and indoor spaces. The U.S. is seeing about 40,000 new confirmed cases per day, and states such as Texas and Florida are backtracking, clamping down on bars, restaurants and beaches.

The city of Jacksonville, Florida, where mask-averse President Donald Trump plans to accept the Republican nomination in August, ordered the wearing of face coverings Monday, joining the list of state and local governments reversing course to try to beat back a resurgence of the coronavirus.

Less than a week after Mayor Lenny Curry said that there would be no mask requirement, city officials announced that coverings must be worn in "situations where individuals cannot socially distance."

Children wear face masks as they pick out fireworks at Wild Willy's Fireworks tent in Omaha, Neb., June 29, 2020, ahead of the 4th of July holiday.
Children wear face masks as they pick out fireworks at Wild Willy's Fireworks tent in Omaha, Neb., June 29, 2020, ahead of the 4th of July holiday.

White House spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany said the president's advice is to "do whatever your local jurisdiction requests of you."

Trump has refused to wear a mask on recent trips to states and businesses that require them.

In recent weeks, the Republicans moved some of the convention pageantry to Jacksonville after Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper of North Carolina objected to the holding of a large gathering in Charlotte without social-distancing measures.

The Jacksonville order came on the same day that the head of the World Health Organization warned that the pandemic is "not even close to being over" and is accelerating.

"The worst is yet to come," said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu. "With this kind of environment and condition, we fear the worst."

Health authorities have recorded more than 10 million confirmed infections and a half-million deaths globally, including 2.5 million cases and 126,000 lives lost in the United States. The U.S. is seeing a surge in confirmed cases, especially in the South and West, with about 40,000 per day.

Experts say the actual numbers, both in the U.S. and globally, are probably far higher, in part because of testing limitations and the large number of people without symptoms.

Places such as Texas, Florida and California are backtracking, closing beaches and bars in some cases and ordering the wearing of masks.

Indian youngsters play cricket in barricaded street during the reimposed lockdown in Gauhati, India, June 29, 2020.
Indian youngsters play cricket in barricaded street during the reimposed lockdown in Gauhati, India, June 29, 2020.

Elsewhere

India set another record with a one-day total of 20,000 newly confirmed infections. Several Indian states reimposed partial or full lockdowns after the total number of cases jumped by nearly 100,000 in one week to about 548,000.

In China, nearly 8.3 million out of about 21 million have undergone testing in recent weeks in Beijing after an outbreak centered on a wholesale market. The country reported just 12 new cases Monday, including seven in Beijing.

South Korean authorities reported 47 new cases as they struggled to curb outbreaks that have spread from Seoul to other regions. Officials said they are preparing to impose stronger social-distancing measures — including banning gatherings of more than 10 people, shutting schools and halting professional sports — if the daily increase in infections doubles more than twice in a week.

In the Philippines, a Southeast Asian coronavirus hot spot with more than 35,000 confirmed infections, local officials came under fire for allowing a street parade and dance during a weekend religious festival to honor St. John the Baptist despite prohibitions against public gatherings.

The European Union is preparing a list of 15 countries whose citizens will be allowed to visit the bloc beginning Wednesday, Spain's foreign minister, Arancha Gonzalez Laya, told the Cadena SER radio network. Because of the resurgence in the U.S., America may not be on that list.

"This is not an exercise to be nice or unfriendly to other countries. This is an exercise of self-responsibility," she said.

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