A pop-up stall selling masks for 75 yen ($0.70) each on the street near Okachimachi station in Tokyo. #転売 #マスク #COVID19 #Tokyo #Japan pic.twitter.com/KrRnABiVSt
— Jeffrey J. Hall 🇯🇵🇺🇸 (@mrjeffu) April 23, 2020
I'm a student in Shenzhen.Every student have to get a free testing before they go to school.We can get two free masks a day too.
— Li Yuanpeng (@LYPShenzhen) April 23, 2020
#COVID19 🇲🇾 Bagi anda yang perlu ke tempat kerja, elakkan 3C bagi memutuskan rantaian COVID-19 di tempat kerja.
— KKMPutrajaya (@KKMPutrajaya) April 22, 2020
𝐂rowded Places☑️
𝐂onfined Spaces☑️
𝐂lose Conversation☑️#KitaTeguhKitaMenang #COVID19malaysia pic.twitter.com/PKBOWU1g8d
I bet there'll be a shortage of cardboard soon in Japan, considering also the increasing use of this material in public offices and airports https://t.co/6korOxJO3O
— Antonio Hermosín G. (@ant_hermosin) April 22, 2020
As of today, 1,525 people have donated RM461,735 to #MakanKongsi and we have given out 63 small grants totalling RM372,959 to 35 dedicated partners who are working daily since the start of the #MCO to ensure that the most vulnerable communities do not go hungry. pic.twitter.com/Nbl8wz3Pc4
— BERSIH 2.0 (@bersih2) April 22, 2020
KKM telah mengesan sejumlah kes positif #COVID19 yang melibatkan rakyat #Malaysia yang baru pulang dari
— KKMPutrajaya (@KKMPutrajaya) April 21, 2020
luar negara.
Perkara ini telah dijangka, memandangkan lebih
daripada 180 buah negara di seluruh dunia telah terkesan akibat pandemik COVID-19. pic.twitter.com/XCZrimE8KG
Kriteria sebelum menamatkan PKP.
— KKMPutrajaya (@KKMPutrajaya) April 21, 2020
1. Kemampuan mengawal sempadan daripada kes import
2. Kemampuan mengawal dan merawat pesakit positif (2,041) drpd menjangkiti org lain
3. Kemampuan sistem kesihatan kita (makmal dan wad)
4. Kemampuan kita melindungi golongan berisiko tinggi.
Cardboard & Plastic: At one of Tokyo's Ward offices, cardboard windows with plastic sheet have been set up in hopes of preventing the spread of new coronavirus infections.
— AFP Tokyo (@AFPTokyo) April 21, 2020
There have been 186 deaths recorded so far and 11,118 cases in Japan. 📸Kazuhiro Nogi @AFP @AFPphoto pic.twitter.com/W4W0UuS7NA
Trend kes #COVID19 di Malaysia.
— KKMPutrajaya (@KKMPutrajaya) April 20, 2020
Selepas 14 April, jumlah keseluruhan kes discaj lebih tinggi berbanding kes aktif atau kes masih dirawat.
Kes baharu dijangka meningkat dlm tempoh 2 minggu akan datang hasil pengesanan kes yg sedang giat dijalankan. @DrAdhamBaba pic.twitter.com/pNvTv6OabW
NZ is moving from Level 4 lock down to Level 3.
— Khalid Karim loves Korea RTK not Kpop (@khalidkarim) April 20, 2020
The process is clearly defined.
Contrary to what many thinks..lifting MCO is not going back to normal yet.
Hope Govt issues detailed guidelines soon pic.twitter.com/FxLgeLxzZ2
Somebody made a game where you play as Tokyo Governor Koike Yuriko and have to run/fly around a city, scolding people who aren't following social distancing rules. #COVID19 #Japan #Tokyo #gaming https://t.co/5gLH5zr6zY
— Jeffrey J. Hall 🇯🇵🇺🇸 (@mrjeffu) April 20, 2020
Are we close to victory? #stayathome #covid19
Posted by Bro, don't like that la, bro on Isnin, 20 April 2020
HAPPENING NOW: Washington State #protest Governor Inslee’s lockdown order on the steps of the Washington State Capitol Building in Olympia. #OPENAMERICANOW pic.twitter.com/Sxo2SgdMYn
— Danli Wang (@danli_wang) April 19, 2020
Do COVID-19 death rates by age suggest a path to staying open in a second wave?
— Elad Gil (@eladgil) April 19, 2020
We need to reopen society cautiously. Once open, what do we do when there is a second epidemic wave?https://t.co/MQqTVLrX28 pic.twitter.com/DDudh8TEpi
socially distant protests are so interesting (israel) pic.twitter.com/8uV8zSBj0F
— Paul McKellar (@pm) April 19, 2020
The Swedish approach allows us to measure the cost of building herd immunity using partial and voluntary measures rather than a full shutdown.
— Naval (@naval) April 19, 2020
Drop your preconceived notions, ignore the narratives, and dispassionately track the data. pic.twitter.com/BYicI7wyiC