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There are fears the coronavirus death toll in the United Kingdom could surpass those in Spain and Italy as the number of UK deaths passes 10,000.
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UK death toll tops 10,000
The death toll from COVID-19 in the United Kingdom has risen to 10,612 after a recorded daily rise of 737, the health ministry said.
The two previous daily increase figures were both above 900. On previous weekends since the outbreak began, figures have dipped, which can reflect longer delays in registering deaths.
While the number of new cases and hospitalisations in the nation appears to have plateaued, deaths are still rising.
Virus death tolls in Italy and Spain have been on a downward slope, and there are growing fears that the UK will end up being the country with the most virus deaths in Europe.
However, in some positive news Health Minister Matt Hancock says the NHS has not been overwhelmed and that there are 2,295 spare critical care beds.
"Today marks a sombre day in the impact of this disease as we join the list of countries who have seen more than 10,000 deaths related to coronavirus," Mr Hancock said.
"At the start of this crisis people said that the NHS would be overwhelmed. And we've seen the risk of that elsewhere but not here."
Saudi Arabia extends curfew
Saudi Arabia extended a nationwide curfew until further notice due to coronavirus, after the kingdom reported more than 300 new infections on each of the last five days.
Saudi Arabia placed its capital Riyadh and other big cities under a 24-hour curfew last week, locking down much of the population.
Residents are allowed to leave their houses only for essential needs inside their residential area, elsewhere, the curfew which began on March 23 runs from the hours of 3pm to 6am.
The country has recorded 4,462 infections with 59 deaths, the highest among the six Gulf Arab states where the total surpassed 14,000 with 96 deaths.
Saudi Arabia has halted international flights, suspended the year-round umrah pilgrimage, and closed most public places.
Liverpool great returns home after COVID-19 scare
Liverpool great Kenny Dalglish has expressed "immense gratitude" to National Health Service staff after returning home from the hospital following his coronavirus diagnosis.
The 69-year-old former Celtic, Scotland and Liverpool striker was hospitalised on Wednesday for treatment on gallstones and subsequently tested positive for COVID-19 despite not showing symptoms.
Dalglish won eight league championships and three European Cups across spells as player and manager for Liverpool, while also guiding Blackburn to the Premier League title in 1994-95.
"Thank you for all of your well wishes over the last few days. I'm delighted to be back home with the family after receiving brilliant care from the NHS, which we appreciate now more than ever," Dalglish said in a statement on Liverpool's club website.
Dalglish has gone into self-isolation at home and urged the public to do everything possible to slow the spread of the virus.
Boris Johnson released from hospital
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been discharged from a London hospital where he was treated in intensive care for COVID-19.
Mr Johnson was admitted to St Thomas' Hospital on April 5 with a persistent fever and cough and was moved to intensive care two days later after his conditions "worsened".
His condition stabilised after he spent three nights in ICU.
Mr Johnson released a video on Twitter shortly after his release from hospital, saying it was "hard to find words to express my debt".
"I want to pay my own thanks to the utterly brilliant doctors, leaders in their fields … who took some crucial decisions a few days ago for which I will be grateful for the rest of my life," Mr Johnson said.
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Topics: covid-19, diseases-and-disorders, infectious-diseases-other, respiratory-diseases, united-kingdom, saudi-arabia