Minggu, 15 Maret 2020

Dueling U.S., U.K. travel restrictions and advisories strain transatlantic relations - NBC News

LONDON — Amid a worsening coronavirus epidemic, the U.S. and the U.K. engaged in a political tit for tat Sunday after Britain advised its citizens against all but essential travel to the U.S. hours after the White House announced it would expand a European travel ban to include the United Kingdom and Ireland.

With 1,140 people testing positive for the virus, 21 dead and up to 10,000 suspected cases, the British government has called for a national effort to fight the spread of the epidemic similar to the one which helped the country through the Second World War.

"Our generation has never been tested like this," health minister Matt Hancock wrote in right-leaning newspaper The Sunday Telegraph, calling the coronavirus "the biggest public health emergency in a generation."

But travel restrictions imposed by the U.S. are adding more strain to the so-called "special relationship" between the United States and Britain.

Follow live updates of the coronavirus crisis

The U.K. and Ireland were initially left off the list when President Donald Trump banned nationals from 26 countries in Europe, where the growing pandemic has shifted, from coming to the U.S. earlier this week. But on Saturday night, Vice President Mike Pence confirmed that the ban will be extended to include the two nations as of Tuesday morning.

The initial exclusion of the U.K. was praised by Brexit supporters as evidence that the bilateral relationship between the two nations was thriving.

“The UK is now being treated as an independent country,” tweeted one of Trump’s most famous supporters in the U.K., Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage.

The transatlantic alliance, nurtured by presidents and prime ministers for decades, has endured some of its toughest tests since President Donald Trump took office in 2016.

With economic uncertainty hanging over Britain after its departure from the European Union, a process known as Brexit, Prime Minister Boris Johnson needs the U.K.'s old ally more than ever to forge a new free trade deal.

But the news of the U.K. inclusion on the travel ban seems to have caught British authorities off guard.

“This is a decision for the U.S.,” U.K.’s foreign office said in a statement Sunday. It was followed by a directive from the U.K.'s Foreign Office advising against all but essential travel to the whole of America “due to restrictions put in place by the U.S. government.”

Downing Street said Trump and Johnson spoke on the phone Saturday night to discuss the pandemic, “agreeing on the importance of international coordination,” without weighing in on the travel ban or whether the U.K .was given any advance warning about now being included in it.

Earlier this week, Britain stepped up its response to the outbreak, moving to the so-called "delay" phase, with Johnson calling coronavirus “the worst public health crisis for a generation” and warning families they would "lose loved ones before their time.”

But some have criticized his government for not implementing more of the measures taken in other European countries, such as increasing social isolation, shutting schools and banning mass gatherings.

On Sunday, the British government looked poised to escalate its efforts, saying it will introduce powers to force people into quarantine if necessary and would in the days ahead advise all people aged over 70 to self-isolate.

‘Panic and confusion’

The ban on travel from the U.K. and Ireland left many Americans left scrambling to get home.

Despite assurances from Vice President Pence that U.S. citizens in either country could still get home, many were caught off guard.

Americans Chyna Barrett and Ethan Smith spent two days in limbo and an extra $1,000 to get home to San Francisco, California after they heard about the European ban while on vacation in Portugal. They heard about the U.K. being added to the ban when they got to London.

March 14, 202001:47

“It’s a massive relief,” Barrett, 22, told NBC News at Heathrow Airport Saturday after they secured their flights home.

“I am not sure if I agree with the bans or not, but I feel as though the sudden announcements caused a lot of panic and confusion in a lot of travelers. It’s a global pandemic and not limited to any one place,” the operations coordinator added.

But not everyone is eager to leave.

Sarah Philpott, who is on a study abroad program in London from Hollins University in Virginia, said she is staying put in the U.K., awaiting further instructions from her school.

She called the extension of the European travel ban to the U.K. “unnecessary.”

“I think every country is doing their best,” Philpott, 21, said. “I know most people are not going to travel needlessly, and I think it’s causing a lot of havoc to ban all of Europe when it’s not like all of Europe has many cases.”

Alex Holmes and Nikolai Miller contributed.

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2020-03-15 15:45:10Z
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Coronavirus: UK deaths double in 24 hours - BBC News

Ten more people in the UK have died in the last 24 hours after testing positive for coronavirus, bringing the total number of deaths to 21.

The UK government's chief medical adviser said the patients were all in "at-risk" groups from across England.

The total number of confirmed cases in the UK has reached 1,140 while 37,746 people have been tested.

It comes as the government revealed plans to boost the number of NHS beds and ventilators to treat people.

British manufacturing companies are to be tasked with increasing the production of ventilators and other medical equipment, while the NHS could also buy up thousands of beds in private hospitals.

In a conference call with manufacturers on Monday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson will urge them to join a "national effort" to tackle the virus.

Downing Street says it has already been working with suppliers in the UK and abroad to increase the nation's supply of ventilators.

Earlier, the Labour Party and GMB union called for the government to use empty beds in "plush private hospitals" to ease the pressure on the NHS.

It comes as Prof Chris Whitty, the UK government's chief medical adviser, warned that facilities for people needing oxygen and critical care beds would be the parts of the NHS that will come under pressure first as the scale of the outbreak increases.

Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump decided to suspend all travel between the US and the UK and Ireland.

A No 10 spokesman said Mr Johnson had since spoken to Mr Trump, and set out the "science-led approach" the UK is taking.

During their conversation, the two leaders also agreed on the "importance" of international collaboration to fast-track the development of a vaccine.

It comes as France ordered non-essential locations used by the public to close, and asked citizens to go out as little as possible. Several European countries have closed their borders or shut their airports.

US vice president Mike Pence said the ban would begin at midnight on Monday eastern standard time (04:00 GMT), following a "unanimous recommendation" from health experts.

The US has already banned travel from 26 European countries.

Of the latest deaths in the UK, eight were men aged over 80 and all were in "at-risk" groups.

They were being treated in hospitals in Buckinghamshire, Birmingham, Wolverhampton, Leicester, London and Chester.

Prof Whitty said: "I understand this increase in the number of deaths linked to Covid-19 will be a cause for concern for many. The public should know every measure we are taking is seeking to save lives and protect the most vulnerable."

Most of the confirmed UK cases are in England. There have been 121 confirmed cases in Scotland, 60 in Wales and 34 in Northern Ireland.

What do I do if I...

Have symptoms: If you are experiencing a new, continuous cough and/or a fever - defined as a temperature of above 37.8C - you should self-isolate at home for at least seven days, according to guidance released on Friday by Public Health England (PHE).

People with mild symptoms who are self-isolating at home are not currently being tested. All hospital patients with flu-like symptoms are being tested.

Live with or been in close contact with a positive case: The seven day isolation period now applies to everyone regardless of where you might have travelled or if you have had close contact with a confirmed case.

Read more here.

People who are self-isolating with mild symptoms are no longer being tested for the virus. The government said on Friday it estimated the true number of UK cases to be around 5,000 to 10,000.

The PM has been meeting with officials at Downing Street to discuss the pandemic.

A mother and her newborn baby are among the latest confirmed to have the virus in England.

Medics are trying to confirm whether the baby, who was tested at North Middlesex Hospital, was infected during birth or before, according to the Sun newspaper.

The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists said there was no evidence the virus can be passed on from pregnant women to babies before birth, but that due to how little is known about the new virus it would continue to update its guidance.

Government advice adds there is "no clinical evidence" to suggest the virus can be transmitted through breast milk.

"Infection can be spread to the baby in the same way as to anyone in close contact with you," it says.

The increase in deaths is obviously alarming for the public - as well as being a tragedy for the families involved.

What we don't know is the extent to which coronavirus played a role in their deaths.

We only know they had it when they died.

Every patient death announced in the coronavirus outbreak in the UK has been a person who has had underlying health conditions.

That is a term that covers a range of different illnesses from heart disease and diabetes to asthma.

There is certainly transmission of the virus within hospital - on Thursday three quarters of those patients with coronavirus in intensive care had not been abroad to an affected country.

They may have caught it in the community and the Covid-19 illness they developed lead to their admission or they could have caught it in hospital when they were already ill.

There are more than 1,500 deaths a day in the UK on average and what is certain is that growing numbers of people who die are going to have tested positive for coronavirus.

People visiting elderly and vulnerable relatives have been reminded to take extra care, after the government released new advice.

Care home providers should ask anyone who is "generally unwell" not to visit, the advice says.

Meanwhile, government sources said mass gatherings might soon be banned in the UK to ease pressure on emergency services. It is thought a ban could take effect as early as next weekend.

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Events still set to go ahead include the Grand National in April, the 75th anniversary VE Day commemorations and Chelsea Flower Show in May, and Glastonbury Festival in June.

The increase in cases in the UK comes as people continue to stockpile food and household items. The government has said there was "no need" for people to do so but has also relaxed restrictions on delivery hours for shops to make sure they remain stocked.

Online supermarket Ocado has taken its app offline due to "performance issues driven by continued high demand" while the website has crashed for many users.

Former MP Luciana Berger called for members of the public to "look out for" each other after she said she witnessed a man in a London supermarket refusing to give an elderly lady one of his packets of pasta.

She said the incident, which she posted about on Twitter, was "very upsetting".

Meanwhile British holidaymakers face being stranded abroad as Spain is set to begin a two-week state of emergency, with bars, restaurants, shops and activities all closed.

Seven Jet2 planes heading to Spain were turned around in mid-air as the airline cancelled all flights to the mainland, Balearic Islands and the Canary Islands. The firm says it has suspended all holidays and flights to all of Spain for at least a week.

The Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) has advised against all but essential travel to parts of Spain as well as the whole of Poland.

The Polish government is closing all its borders for 10 days at midnight. Some non-Polish nationals - such as spouses or children of Polish nationals - will still be allowed to enter the country,

All flights to and from Poland by airlines in the Ryanair group have been cancelled from midnight on Saturday to midnight on 31 March.

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In other developments:

  • Benefit claimants who can't attend reassessments or job centre appointments because they are self-isolating or are infected by coronavirus will not be sanctioned provided they make this clear in good time, the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) says
  • British couple David and Sally Abel, who both tested positive for the virus on board the quarantined Diamond Princess cruise ship, have returned to the UK, after recovering in a Japanese hospital
  • Brittany Ferries is stopping its services from Portsmouth to Le Havre, in France, and to Spain. Its sailings from Poole will be for freight only and will not take any passengers
  • All Apple stores outside of what the tech giant calls "Greater China" - that is China, Macau, Hong Kong and Taiwan - have been closed for two weeks. The tech giant reopened all 42 of its Chinese stores on Friday after they were closed for a month, causing a huge drop in iPhone sales
  • Catholic churches are preparing for the possibility they might have to suspend the celebration of Mass
  • Most of the world's major sporting events have been postponed or cancelled because of the pandemic, including the Edinburgh Marathon and the London Landmarks Half Marathon.
  • Bath's annual half marathon is going ahead on Sunday despite local MP Wera Hobhouse saying it should be cancelled. Organisers said it is "now too late to cancel or postpone the event"
  • The National Education Union has written to the prime minister to ask why the government has decided not to shut schools to help reduce the spread of the virus and asking for "fuller disclosure" of the models it has used during its decision-making process

Have you been affected by the coronavirus? Share your experiences by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.

Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist. You can also contact us in the following ways:

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2020-03-15 14:59:59Z
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Singapore Says U.K. Is Not Trying to Contain the Coronavirus - Bloomberg

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Singapore Says U.K. Is Not Trying to Contain the Coronavirus  Bloomberg
https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMicGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJsb29tYmVyZy5jb20vbmV3cy9hcnRpY2xlcy8yMDIwLTAzLTE1L3Utay1ub3QtdHJ5aW5nLXRvLWNvbnRhaW4tY29yb25hdmlydXMtc2luZ2Fwb3JlLW1pbmlzdGVyLXNheXPSAXRodHRwczovL3d3dy5ibG9vbWJlcmcuY29tL2FtcC9uZXdzL2FydGljbGVzLzIwMjAtMDMtMTUvdS1rLW5vdC10cnlpbmctdG8tY29udGFpbi1jb3JvbmF2aXJ1cy1zaW5nYXBvcmUtbWluaXN0ZXItc2F5cw?oc=5

2020-03-15 14:29:50Z
CAIiEGLC9hzQVVj7TKup_M7215kqGQgEKhAIACoHCAow4uzwCjCF3bsCMIrOrwM

U.S. expands coronavirus travel restrictions to include U.K. and Ireland - The Washington Post

The White House announced Saturday that its sweeping travel restrictions will be expanded to include the United Kingdom and Ireland, as countries around the globe struggled to intensify efforts to combat the spread of the deadly coronavirus.

The United States is limiting travel from 28 nations across Europe, though U.S. citizens and legal permanent residents are exempted. The announcement came as other countries sought to lock down their borders to contain the pandemic that surged across Asia and now claims Europe as the latest epicenter.

The number of confirmed cases climbed past 2,200 in the United States, with more than 50 dead, and health officials scrambled to ramp up testing that they expect will yield thousands of more infections. A day after he declared a national emergency, a designation that could free up $50 billion to fight the outbreak, President Trump said the administration is considering limiting domestic travel.

“If you don’t have to travel, I wouldn’t do it,” said Trump, who made a surprise announcement that he was tested for the novel coronavirus Friday night. On Saturday evening, his physician said the test came back negative.

Health officials continued to warn Saturday that the worst is yet to come and urged hospitals to prepare for waves of sick patients that could overwhelm the nation’s health-care system.

“We have not reached a peak,” Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said during a news conference. “We will see more cases, and we will see more suffering and death, predominantly … among the vulnerables in our society.”

[Sign up for our daily Coronavirus Updates newsletter to track the outbreak. All stories linked within the newsletter are free to access.]

One stunning new projection from the Kaiser Family Foundation is that 41 percent of U.S. adults — more than 105 million people — have a “higher risk of developing serious illness” if infected with the coronavirus because of their age or underlying health conditions.

As cases decline in China, the origin of the outbreak, countries in Europe are emerging as the world’s new hot spots, especially Italy and Spain.

Italy announced that health officials confirmed nearly 3,500 new cases in 24 hours, a 20 percent increase from Friday and that nation’s largest daily increase yet. Italy has more than 21,000 confirmed cases, despite the fact that the country has been in a lockdown since Monday.

Spain announced 1,500 new cases Saturday, and the government ordered all 47 million residents to stay in their homes except to buy essential goods or go to work, medical appointments and banks. Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez told the nation in a televised address that the restrictions will remain in place for an initial 15-day period but could be extended. The move was so abrupt that several airplanes en route from England turned around midflight to avoid landing in the country.

In Russia, Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin said the nation had closed its land border with Poland and Norway after already closing its border with China. Poland, Denmark and the Czech Republic also sought to seal off their borders, and France ordered all nonessential businesses to close, including restaurants and cafes.

The U.K. and Ireland were not included in the initial travel restrictions from Europe that Trump announced Wednesday. But since then, both have seen an increase of cases, and Britian’s death toll nearly doubled Saturday, to 21. The White House said the travel restrictions will go into place at midnight Monday. They do not cover cargo shipments.

The effectiveness of such measures continues to be debated, however, and they run counter to the World Health Organization’s recommendations. Critics say they can cause some people to travel more surreptitiously, divert vital resources and hamper the international cooperation needed to fight the virus.

“Travel restrictions can cause more harm than good,” World Health Organization Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has stressed.

Additional travel restrictions will further hit the airline industry, which is facing enormous losses because of the pandemic. White House officials are considering offering low-interest loans or tax deferrals to airlines to help them survive the downturn.

In yet another sign that virtually no facet of society — from museums to sporting events to religious services — will go unscathed, restaurants across France braced for their last meals and customers as part of the government’s closure order. For a country that thrives on food, wine and leisurely afternoons spent alfresco at sidewalk cafes, the government acknowledged it was an extreme measure. But officials said they had no choice because too many people appeared to be ignoring earlier advice about social distancing and staying home.

Israel banned all gatherings of more than 10 people. The United Arab Emirates said it will stop issuing visas to all foreigners except diplomats. And amid the season of Lent, one of the most significant holy seasons for Christians, the Catholic Archdiocese of New York announced it was canceling all Masses beginning Sunday.

Across the United States, health officials moved to limit visits to nursing homes because of their extremely vulnerable population. During the news conference Saturday, Vice President Pence urged people to “look after seniors with serious underlying health conditions and make sure that every American around them is practicing the best kind of hygiene, the best kind of measures to ensure that they’re not exposed.”

The new report by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that although “the majority of people who become infected are expected to be asymptomatic or recover without needing special treatment,” there is an “increasing concern for adults who have a higher risk of developing serious illness if they are infected.” Prime among them: individuals 60 or older as well as those with underlying health conditions such as heart and lung disease, cancer and diabetes.

U.S. Surgeon General Jerome M. Adams on Saturday urged hospitals to “PLEASE CONSIDER STOPPING ELECTIVE SURGERIES,” which he said could bring potential cases of the virus into health-care facilities while occupying precious resources and space needed to treat people with the crisis.

The day began with a rare showing of bipartisanship in Congress, when House Republicans and Democrats overwhelmingly passed a bill that would allocate billions of dollars for paid sick leave, unemployment insurance, free testing and other steps to help the country grapple with the virus.

Hours after the bill passed the House, 363 to 40, Trump, who on Friday had criticized congressional Democrats for not doing enough on the bill, praised the uncommon demonstration of unity.

“Good teamwork between Republicans & Democrats as the House passes the big CoronaVirus Relief Bill,” he tweeted. “People really pulled together. Nice to see!”

The bill now moves to the Senate, which is expected to pass it in coming days.

The pandemic’s toll continues to reverberate.

New York, which has been hit particularly hard by the virus, reported its first death, as did Virginia and Louisiana. The Pentagon announced that 10 servicemembers had tested positive for the virus along with one Defense Department civilian and two contractors.

Georgia became the second state, after Louisiana, to delay its presidential primary for at least two months. Supermarket chains shortened their hours to allow them to sanitize their stores and restock inventories: Harris Teeter said it will close its stores at 9 every night; Publix said it will close its stores daily at 8 p.m.

Apple said it will close stores globally, including more than 250 in the United States, while simultaneously reopening stores in China that had been shuttered for weeks.

“I think it’s fine if they do it, and I think it’s frankly, it’s good that they do it. I think what Apple did is fine,” Trump said. “And we want to keep people away for just a little while, just keep them away.”

That appeared to mark a shift from Trump’s tone earlier in the crisis, when he batted away questions about broad economic disruption by saying that the U.S. economy is the world’s mightiest.

Angela Fritz, Colby Itkowitz, Lateshia Beachum, William Wan, Kim Bellware, Hannah Knowles, Yasmeen Abutaleb and Loveday Morris in Berlin; Pamela Rolfe in Madrid; Dan Lamothe, Missy Ryan, Steve Hendrix in Jerusalem; James McAuley in Paris; and Tim Craig in New York City contributed to this report

Read more

With unprecedented force and speed, a global recession is likely taking hold

Trump is breaking every rule in the CDC’s 450-page playbook for health crisis

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2020-03-15 06:11:15Z
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Pence Announces New Travel Bans on United Kingdom and Ireland as Coronavirus Pandemic Spreads - The Daily Beast

Vice President Mike Pence said Saturday that new travel bans would be implemented on the United Kingdom and Ireland as the novel coronavirus pandemic spreads.

At a White House press conference with President Trump, the vice president said the ban would take effect from midnight Monday, but that U.S. citizens, permanent residents and their families would be allowed to return to the country through 13 airports where the Department of Homeland Security has established enhanced entry screening capabilities. Pence also encouraged individuals returning from those countries to self-quarantine for two weeks.

The decision came after the U.S. restricted travel from Europe earlier this week in the wake of growing coronavirus outbreaks in several major European countries. Last week, the World Health Organization declared Europe the new “epicenter” of the coronavirus epidemic.

By Saturday, more than 145,000 infections and over 5,400 deaths had been recorded worldwide. The United States has confirmed at least 2,112 cases and 47 deaths, according to the Associated Press.

Travel to the U.S. will now be restricted from China, Iran and 28 European countries including the U.K. Ireland, Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland.

The United Kingdom had initially been spared when Trump announced in a Wednesday evening address that he would be banning European travel. However, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been criticized at home for his government’s slow response to the coronavirus. He initially balked at the kind of mass closures and restrictions that many other European countries have taken, though the government indicated that it would likely ban mass gatherings beginning next week.

Other European countries have taken more serious steps to attempt to slow the spread of the virus. Both Spain and Italy have announced national lockdowns of businesses and restricted most travel inside their countries, while at least ten countries have begun enforcing border closures.

“We’re using the full power of the government to defeat the virus,” Trump said on Saturday.

House lawmakers approved legislation to counter the escalating coronavirus outbreak early on Saturday morning, capping two days of negotiations between Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and the Trump administration. The bill provides expanded paid sick leave and unemployment insurance for those dealing with the virus, offers free testing for all, and increases Medicaid funding for local health care systems.

While Republicans initially had misgivings with proposals in the bill, GOP leaders claimed credit for forcing changes, and ultimately an overwhelming number in both parties voted in favor of the package.

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2020-03-14 20:07:35Z
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Sabtu, 14 Maret 2020

Trump says UK and Ireland now included in European travel restrictions - CNN

Speaking from the White House briefing room, President Donald Trump also said he was considering restrictions on travel within the United States, though didn't specify details of the potential domestic bans.
The ban on foreign nationals entering the US from Britain or Ireland will begin at midnight on Monday, Vice President Mike Pence said. He added the decision had been made with the unanimous support of the President's health team.
It comes on top of restrictions on entry into the US from 26 countries in Europe that Trump announced on Wednesday. That ban went into effect at midnight on Friday, but only after the original announcement sparked chaos at European airports as Americans sought ways to return home before it went into place.
Trump extends travel ban and takes coronavirus test
Like that ban, US citizens and their family members will be exempt. Unlike Trump's address to the nation, where he announced the initial European restrictions, Pence was explicit in saying that American citizens would still be able to return to the US.
Cargo from Britain and Ireland will also be exempt.
"They have had a little bit of activity, unfortunately, so we are going to be looking at that, actually we already have looked at it and that is going to be announced," Trump said Saturday during a news conference with his coronavirus task force at the White House.
Chad Wolf, the acting homeland security secretary, said US citizens traveling back from the UK or Ireland would be subject to self-quarantine.
The UK's exclusion from the initial travel restrictions raised questions because the case count in that country is higher than in other nations that were included. The White House said it wasn't included because it's not part of the Schengen Zone, where travelers can cross borders without checks.
Seeking to explain Britain's exclusion Thursday, Trump cited the country's "very strong borders," which he said helped keep the spread low.
"They don't have very much infection at this point, and hopefully they'll keep it that way," Trump said.
Americans face a weekend at home as government declares coronavirus emergency
Still, the number of cases in the UK has surged this week. No phone calls between Trump and his British counterpart Boris Johnson have been announced, though the men are expected to partake in a video conference of G-7 leaders early next week.
Trump did meet in the Oval Office on Thursday with the Irish Taoiseach Leo Varadkar, who was visiting Washington for annual St. Patrick's Day diplomacy.
Varadkar said in remarks then that Ireland was in a "slightly different position" than other European nations because US Customs and Border Protection operates in some Irish airports and has asked travelers to the US which countries they have recently visited.
Coronavirus: Which countries have travel bans?
Asked in that meeting whether he could say that "Irish citizens (would) always be welcome to America throughout the coronavirus pandemic," Trump did not hint at the restrictions he announced two days later.
"Always," Trump said.

Some domestic travel restrictions under consideration

Trump and Pence said Saturday that the administration is considering some domestic travel restrictions, specifically with regard to certain areas hard hit with the coronavirus.
The President did not provide any specifics or a possible time frame.
"We're working with the states, and we're considering other restrictions," Trump told reporters.
"We are considering a broad range of measures," Pence said during the briefing, adding that no decisions have been made yet.
There have been internal discussions about restricting travel in some way to areas in Washington state and other places considered hot spots for the virus. It's unclear how far along they are in implementing them however, people familiar with the matter told CNN.
There are preliminary conversations about halting some air or train travel between some major US cities as a potential additional step going forward.
Homeland Security, Customs and Border Protection and Department of Transportation officials have discussed possibilities with the coronavirus task force, according to a person familiar with the matter.
Some flights have already slowed to those places and there's an expectation that if other hotspots pop up, flights would similarly slow down due to lack of demand, which might mean they don't need to put formal restrictions in place.

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2020-03-14 19:33:56Z
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Trump administration to extend European travel ban to include UK and Ireland - Fox News

The Trump administration will extend its European travel ban to include the U.K. and Ireland as part of continuing efforts to combat the coronavirus pandemic, President Trump said Saturday, before saying he was also looking at the possibility of domestic travel restrictions as well.

“We are looking at it very seriously, yeah, because they’ve had a little bit of activity unfortunately,” he said when asked in the White House briefing room about reports that the European travel ban would be extended. “So we’re going to be looking at that -- we actually already have looked at it and that is going to be announced.”

Asked if he was considering any domestic travel restrictions, Trump said: "Yes, specifically from certain areas, yes we are."

"We're working with the states and we're considering other restrictions, yes," he said.

Vice President Mike Pence confirmed later in the briefing that the travel from U.K. and Ireland would be suspended as of midnight Monday night EDT. He said it was after the unanimous recommendation from health experts at the White House.

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Pence emphasized that Americans currently abroad will be allowed to return home, but will be tested for the virus on their return through certain, limited airports. Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf said that it specifically applies to foreign nationals who have been in the U.K. or Ireland in the last 14 days and that it does not apply to U.S. citizens, legal permanent residents and foreign diplomats. It also does not apply to cargo.

Wolf also said that major cruise lines have agreed to suspend outbound trips for 30 days, that smaller lines had followed suit, and that in some limited cases the government had given orders to "a small handful" to not sail. Those restrictions began late Friday, he said.

As for whether the administration is considering travel restrictions within the U.S., Pence referred back to Trump's remarks and said "we're considering a broad range of measures, but no decisions have been made yet."

Trump announced late Wednesday that travel from Europe would be restricted for 30 days -- but he initially exempted the U.K. and Ireland. The Department of Homeland Security went on to clarify that the ban affects most foreign nationals who were in Europe’s passport-free “Schengen Area” within 14 days prior to traveling to the U.S.

On Saturday, officials did not explicitly say whether the U.K. and Ireland ban would be subjected to the same 30-day timeframe as the broader ban.

The area in question consists of 26 countries, including France, Italy, German, Greece, Austria, Belgium, Switzerland, Norway, and Sweden. The Trump administration had slapped a travel ban on foreign nationals who had visited China and Iran last month.

“The U.K. basically has got the border, strong borders and they're doing a very good job, they don't have much infection and hopefully they'll keep it that way,” he said when asked why the U.K. had been exempt.

U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson is a close ally of Trump, who has in turn supported Johson's push to take Britain out of the European Union. Critics had questioned whether Britain’s exemption was politically motivated.

The move also provoked anger from European leaders, who said they weren’t consulted and that the global pandemic requires “cooperation rather than unilateral action.”

“The European Union disapproves of the fact that the U.S. decision to impose a travel ban was taken unilaterally and without consultation,” EU Council President Charles Michel and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a statement. “The European Union is taking strong action to limit the spread of the virus.”

In a sign of the increasing measures being taken across the country to protect the public from the coronavirus, all members of the media had their temperatures taken before the briefing -- and one journalist was turned away. Trump said he had his temperature taken as well, and also said he had been tested for the virus.

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"I also took the test," Trump said. "I decided I should based on the press conference yesterday people were asking that I take the test."

Asked about his temperature, Trump told reporters on his way out it was "totally normal." Trump said his coronavirus test has been sent out to a lab and the results will take one or two days.

Fox News' Marisa Schultz contributed to this report.

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2020-03-14 17:59:58Z
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