KEY FACTS
2:36 p.m. The NHL says it has had no positive COVID-19 test results in its first two weeks in secure zones in Edmonton and Toronto.
10:13 a.m. The head of the World Health Organization predicted that the number of people infected by the coronavirus will hit 20 million this week.
9:10 a.m. Windsor-Essex will move into Stage 3 of reopening on Wednesday
The latest coronavirus news from Canada and around the world Monday. This file will be updated throughout the day. Web links to longer stories if available.
3:42 p.m. The Hockey Hall of Fame has postponed its 2020 induction ceremony due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The ceremony was originally scheduled to take place Nov. 16 in Toronto.
The 2020 class of forward Jarome Iginla, winger Marian Hossa, defencemen Kevin Lowe and Doug Wilson, Canadian womens goaltender Kim St. Pierre and longtime general manager Ken Holland was announced by the Hockey Hall of Fame in June.
In a release Monday, the hall said rescheduling plans for the induction celebration will be addressed at its board of directors meeting on Oct. 29.
Hockey Hall of Fame chair Lanny McDonald said the most likely scenario is to postpone the ceremony to November 2021, either by waiving the 2021 election or combining the 2020 and 2021 classes.
McDonald said the hall has ruled out a virtual induction ceremony.
3:28 p.m. Maple Leaf Foods says 23 employees at its meat processing plant in Brandon, Man. have tested positive for COVID-19.
But neither the company nor Manitoba public health officials believe transmission is happening within the workplace.
Manitoba chief public health officer Dr. Brent Roussin says there is a cluster of 64 cases in Brandon, east of Winnipeg, and that there is evidence of some community transmission.
He says imposing stricter regional restrictions is on the table, but theres nothing specific in the works right now.
United Food and Commercial Workers Local 832, which represents 2,000 Maple Leaf workers in Brandon, has called for the plant to be shut down until the spread is under control.
Maple Leaf vice-president Janet Riley says the workplace is safe and theres no reason to suspend operations.
Simply put, based on all the evidence, COVID-19 is not being spread at our plant, she said in an emailed statement.
It is important to note that 144 members of our Brandon plant team have tested negative for COVID-19.
Manitoba reported 16 new cases on Monday, bringing the provincial total to 558.
3:08 p.m. Antonio Banderas says he has tested positive for COVID-19 and is celebrating his 60th birthday in quarantine.
The Spanish actor announced his positive test in an Instagram post on Monday. Banderas said he would spend his time in isolation reading, writing and making plans to begin to give meaning to my 60th year to which I arrive full of enthusiasm.
I would like to add that I am relatively well, just a little more tired than usual and hoping to recover as soon as possible following medical instructions that I hope will allow me to overcome the infection that I and so many people in the world are suffering from, wrote Banderas.
Earlier this year, Banderas was nominated for the Academy Award for best actor for his performance in Pedro Almodvars Pain & Glory.
3:08 p.m . Mississippi legislators have returned to the state capitol for the first time since a coronavirus outbreak in early July hospitalized several legislators and killed one person.
Mississippis state health officer, Dr. Thomas Dobbs, said Monday that 49 total legislators tested positive in the outbreak more than one-fourth of the entire body.
Lawmakers left the building July 1 after working there throughout the month of June, many without wearing masks or following social distancing regulations. The first cases in the group were confirmed in the early days of July.
The health officer said at least four legislators were hospitalized and three required intensive care. Dobbs said that at least 12 others, including lobbyists and staff, were infected, including one non-legislator who died.
Among those who tested positive in the heavily Republican body are the GOP presiding officers, House Speaker Philip Gunn and Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann.
2:36 p.m. The NHL says it has had no positive COVID-19 test results in its first two weeks in secure zones in Edmonton and Toronto.
The league says it administered 7,245 tests in its second week, from Aug. 2-8, with no positive results.
In the first week, from July 27 to Aug. 1, the league says it had no positive results in 7,013 tests.
Testing is done daily on all 52 members of each teams travelling party.
Eight of 24 teams have now been eliminated and have exited the secure zones.
Players and staff in the secure zones are separated from the general public and no fans are in attendance at games.
2 p.m. Mayor John Tory, at todays COVID-19 news conference from City Hall, says the total number of cases in Toronto is now 15,532, an increase of 18 new cases.
1:52 p.m. Quebecs updated back-to-school plan requires students in Grade 5 and up to wear masks in all common areas of school buildings, except classrooms.
Education Minister Jean-Francois Roberge said today the governments new strategy aims to make communication between teachers and students as easy as possible.
Roberge says each classroom will be its own bubble, and students will not be required to maintain a two-metre distance with their classmates.
And while all elementary and high school students will be expected to return to school at the end of the month, children with significant health problems will be offered a remote learning option.
Roberge says in order to protect children from harm, schools need to fully reopen in order to offer students the ability to properly socialize and learn.
Quebec reported one new death in the past 24 hours attributed to COVID-19 and 98 new cases of the virus the lowest daily number of cases since July.
1:42 p.m. The British government is laying off 6,000 coronavirus contact tracers and deploying the rest to work in local teams, in an acknowledgment that the centralized track-and-trace system is not working well enough.
The U.K. has been criticized for failing to keep track of infected peoples contacts early in the pandemic, a factor that contributed to the countrys high death toll of more than 46,500, the most in Europe.
Since May the country has rapidly set up a test-and-trace system to try to contain the outbreak, recruiting thousands of staff in a matter of weeks. But the system, which relies on telephone call centres, has failed to reach more than a quarter of contacts of people who have tested positive for the virus.
Some frustrated local authorities have set up their own contact-tracing networks, which have proved more effective because they know communities better and can go door-to-door if needed.
The national test-and-trace program said Monday it was officially adopting that localized approach. Some 6,000 contact tracers will be laid off this month, and the remaining 12,000 will work with local public health authorities around the country.
The government also abandoned plans to create a contact-tracing phone app, but says it will be reintroduced in some form in the near future.
1:42 p.m. Greeces culture ministry is closing down the Museum of the Ancient Agora, a major archaeological site in central Athens, for two weeks after a cleaner there was diagnosed with COVID-19.
A ministry statement Monday said the museum would be comprehensively disinfected, while the actual site of the Ancient Agora, which was the administrative, political and social centre of the ancient city, will remain open.
Greek sites and museums are open to visitors, with the wearing of masks obligatory in museums.
The closure also comes as Greece has announced 126 new confirmed coronavirus cases in the last day, bringing the countrys total to 5,749, and one more death for a total death toll of 213 amid a spike in daily infections.
Of the new cases, 17 were migrants who arrived on the eastern Aegean island of Lesbos who arrived from the nearby Turkish coast.
The government announced new measures Monday to curb the spread, including orderings bars, restaurants and cafes in several regions to shut between midnight and 7 a.m. Other measures include requiring those arriving in the country from land borders, as well as those flying in from several European countries, to have proof of a negative coronavirus test.
12:20 p.m. Ontario reported 115 new cases of COVID-19 on Monday, ending a seven-day stretch with fewer than 100 new infections a day.
It was a sharp increase from 79 new cases Sunday and 70 on Saturday as health officials keep a close watch on daily tallies with most of the province in Stage 3, where the risk of spread is higher if people do not take proper precautions such as physical distancing and wearing face coverings.
Health Minister Christine Elliott cautioned against reading too much into a one-day jump in the case count.
While a slight uptick and an end to our steak, we shouldnt lose sight of the fact that thanks to your efforts the trend in the province remains downward, she said on Twitter as Premier Doug Fords government allowed Windsor-Essex to move to Stage 3.
Over the weekend, the active number of cases across the province dropped below 1,000 for the first time since the virus peaked and now sits at 994, the Ministry of Health said in its daily status report based on figures reported by health units at 4 p.m. the previous day.
Eighteen of Ontarios 34 public health units had no new cases and 10 regions had fewer than five new infections. The highest numbers were 20 in Ottawa, 19 in Peel and 16 in Toronto.
Read more from the Stars Rob Ferguson: Ontario ends weeklong streak of COVID-19 cases below 100
12:18 p.m. The federal Liberals are defending their decision to have the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. oversee a rent-relief program for small businesses struggling during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The opposition Conservatives have questioned why the CMHC, rather than the Canada Revenue Agency, was asked to run the Canada Emergency Commercial Rent Assistance program, given the revenue agency manages several other pandemic-related support programs.
Finance Minister Bill Morneaus spokeswoman Maeva Proteau says the CMHC was considered the best fit because it deals with mortgages and understands Canadas real estate market.
She says going with the Crown corporation was seen to be fastest because it could make payments to businesses without requiring new legislation, which would have further delayed the rent program.
The CMHC later contracted mortgage firm MCAP to administer the rent program another choice the Tories have questioned, since an executive vice-president at the company is married to Katie Telford, chief of staff to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
The Prime Ministers Office says Telford followed proper ethical procedures when it came to the governments dealings with MCAP, while the Liberals and CMHC say the $84-million contract was awarded independent of any political involvement.
12 p.m. From the most romantic spots along the Seine to popular shopping streets, residents and visitors in Paris were required to wear face masks in some outdoor areas of the French capital starting Monday amid an uptick in reported coronavirus cases.
Police are authorized to issue a 135-euro ($159) fine to people who do not follow the new public health requirement.
One location covered by the measure is the banks of the Canal Saint-Martin, among the citys most popular outdoor spots for lunch or an aperitif with friends.
In the morning when there is nobody on the canal, I think it is a bit of a drastic measure, lawyer Helene Rames said after the face mask rule took effect.
But it is true that at night and on the weekends, you can see many young people here close to each other, which is scary, she added. If its for the health of our elders then lets wear it.
11:56 a.m. Thailand is making plans to allow at least 3,000 foreign teachers to enter the country, even as it continues to keep out tourists and tightly restricts other arrivals to guard against new coronavirus infections.
Attapon Truektrong, secretary-general of the Private Education Commission, said Monday that those who have registered include teachers returning to their jobs after leaving during the pandemic, as well as newly employed teachers.
The teachers, who come from countries including the Philippines, New Zealand, the United States and Britain, will have to be quarantined for 14 days after arrival. Thailand barred scheduled passenger flights from abroad in early April
Thailand hosts many international schools and there is a general shortage of qualified teachers of English and other non-Thai languages.
11:56 a.m. Students have begun returning to some Florida university campuses as the state reports its lowest number of new daily cases in more than a month.
Classes for new students started Monday at Stetson University. Students moved into dormitories over the weekend at the DeLand campus as well as at the University of Central Florida in Orlando.
In Orange County, public school students started the school year with two-weeks of online learning. At the end of the month, they will get to choose between continuing with virtual learning or going to in-person classes.
Meanwhile, Florida reported 4,155 new coronavirus cases on Monday, the smallest daily caseload increase since the end of June.
11:56 a.m. The number of day-to-day increases in new COVID-19 infections in Italy dropped significantly on Monday. But frequently numbers provided by the Health Ministry on Mondays tend to be on the low side, reflecting often incomplete reports from regional public health offices during the weekend.
Still, the 259 cases nationwide registered in the 24-hour period ending on Monday evening was a steep decrease from the 463 infections registered on Sunday.
Outstripping northern Lombardy, the region which had by far suffered the brunt of the pandemic, were Emilia-Romagna, also in the north, and Lazio, the south-central region which includes Rome.
Lazio health authorities said at least nine of its latest 38 cases were confirmed in tourists who returned from vacations on the Mediterranean islands of Malta and Spains Ibiza. Sicily and Puglia, two southern Italian regions popular for its beaches, also registered more cases than in Lombardy.
11:56 a.m. The incoming president of the United Nations General Assembly has praised Pakistan for quickly containing the coronavirus, saying the South Asian nations handling of the pandemic is a good example for the world.
The Turkish diplomat Volkan Bozkir made his comment Monday at a news conference in the capital, Islamabad.
Bozkir was recently elected as the president of the 75th session of the U.N. General Assembly.
Upon his arrival in Islamabad, he met with the countrys prime minister, Imran Khan, who wants international financial institutions and rich nations to give a debt relief to poor countries whose economies have badly been affected by the new virus.
Bozkirs visit comes amid a steady decline in COVID-19 deaths and infections in Pakistan.
Pakistan reported its first confirmed case of coronavirus in February and in March it imposed a nationwide lockdown, which has gradually been lifted in recent weeks. Pakistan on Monday reported 15 fatalities from coronavirus in the past 24 hours, raising its total COVID-19-related fatalities to 6,097.
11:56 a.m. Veterans who werent given military funeral rights when they were buried during the coronavirus pandemic have been given a final salute at the Fargo National Cemetery.
United Patriotic Bodies and Fargo Honor Guard volunteers were at the cemetery Saturday when three rifle volleys were fired and taps were played individually for 14 different families of veterans.
United Patriotic Bodies Cmdr. Jason Hicks says the salute is an honour and a duty to those who sacrificed for their country.
Gary Varberg came to the cemetery to honour his brother, Roger Nelson. KVLY-TV reported that the two served in Iraq together and decades in the National Guard.
Nelson was just one of the many veterans who wasnt given military rights and honours when he was buried during the global pandemic.
This means we get to say our final goodbye to our brothers and sisters, Fargo Honor Guard Chaplain Russel Stabler said.
11:56 a.m. The family of a fourth worker who died from the coronavirus during an outbreak at Tyson Foods largest pork processing plant is suing the company over his death.
The lawsuit says that Isidro Fernandez, of Waterloo, Iowa, died April 26 from complications of COVID-19, leaving behind a wife and children.
The lawsuit is similar to one filed in June by the same lawyers on behalf of the estates of three other deceased Waterloo employees.
The lawsuits allege Tyson put employees at risk by downplaying concerns and covering up the outbreak to keep them on the job. They allege the company failed to implement safety measures, allowed some sick and exposed employees to keep working, and falsely assured the public that the plant was safe.
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