Global coronavirus death toll eUK and French death tolls jump by 980 and 987, respectively, as Italy extends weeks-long lockdown until May 3.
The worldwide death toll from the new coronavirus has surpassed 101,000 amid about 1.6 million cases and more than 372,000 recoveries, according to the Johns Hopkins University tally.
Italy has registered the highest number of COVID-19 deaths, more than 18,800 as of Friday, while the United States has reported the majority of confirmed infections, nearly half a million.
However, the number of newly hospitalised patients in the hardest-hit state of New York has dropped to a one percent increase.
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Here are the latest updates:
Friday, April 10
23:08 GMT - Buyers jam stores in Turkey after curfew announcement
People rushed into the streets in parts of Turkey, forming long lines outside grocery stores minutes after the government announced a two-day curfew in 31 cities to help curb the spread of the coronavirus, the Associated Press news agency reported.
Just hours before the curfew came into effect, people were seen queuing outside stores in panic, many ignoring social distancing rules, the private DHA news agency reported.
Fighting erupted in at least one district in Istanbul, the Halk TV television station reported.
22:50 GMT - IMF to lend Albania $190.5m
The International Monetary Fund says it is helping Albania with $190.5 million to cope with the impact of the coronavirus pandemic.
A statement on Friday said the money would address its urgent balance of payments resulting from the ongoing global outbreak of the COVID-19 causing "significant losses and disruptions to Albania’s economy."
20:46 GMT - Uruguay to repatriate Australians, New Zealanders from cruise ship
Uruguay on Saturday will repatriate 112 Australians and New Zealanders from a cruise ship that has been stranded in the La Plata River near capital Montevideo since March 27, the government of the small South American country said.
The operation is to begin Friday evening when the ship is scheduled to dock in the Port of Montevideo. The Greg Mortimer is an Antarctic cruise ship operated by Aurora Expeditions.
The passengers, most of whom have tested positive for the coronavirus, are to be bussed to a special airport terminal with strict health controls. They are scheduled to board a Melbourne-bound charter flight in the early morning hours of Saturday.
20:16 GMT - Coronavirus death toll passes 1,000 in Brazil
Brazil, the hardest-hit Latin American country in the coronavirus pandemic, passed the mark of 1,000 deaths, the health ministry said.
The ministry's latest figures gave a toll of 19,638 confirmed COVID-19 cases, with 1,056 deaths.
19:10 GMT - Senegal bans layoffs during coronavirus crisis
Senegal's government said in a statement that companies will be forbidden to sack employees during the pandemic, except in cases of gross negligence, starting from April 14.
Firms will also have to choose options such as reducing working hours or opting for shift work instead of temporarily suspending employees.
19:05 GMT - Turkey orders 48-hour curfew in 31 cities
Turkey's interior ministry said it imposed a two-day lockdown in 31 cities, including Istanbul and Ankara, starting at midnight.
18:58 GMT - Google and Apple join forces against coronavirus
Tech giants Apple and Google announced they would join forces to develop an app for tracking coronavirus infections using existing Bluetooth and encryption technology.
The app will rely on Bluetooth to determine distances between phone users and encryption to ensure data security, the companies said.
"Privacy, transparency, and consent are of utmost importance in this effort," the companies said in a statement published on Google's blog site.
18:26 GMT - As Spain bans Easter events, Catholics make face masks
Religious associations in the small southwest town of Aznalcazar were already in the thick of preparations when news arrived that Spain's tens of thousands of traditional Easter processions were likely to be banned for the first time in nearly 90 years, as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.
"We had bought pretty much everything we needed, right down to the cloth for the uniforms for the penitentes" - the hooded and cloaked worshippers in the processions, Lola Diaz Montero, of Aznalcazar's Brotherhood of Saint James, told Al Jazeera.
"We'd started cancelling Masses for Lent ... before the state of alert was declared in the middle of March. Then the news came through that all the processions were going to be stopped too."
Read more here.
17:55 GMT - Italy to extend lockdown until May 3
Giuseppe Conte, prime minister of hard-hit Italy, said he had taken the "difficult" decision to extend a weeks-long lockdown until May 3.
"We are extending the restrictions until May 3," he said in an address to the nation. "It is a difficult but necessary decision for which I assume full political responsibility,
Italy's world-topping coronavirus death toll stood at 18,849 as of Thursday.
17:52 GMT - Spain to hand out masks as people return to work
The Spanish government has announced plans to hand out out masks at metro and train stations on Monday as some companies re-open after a two-week "hibernation" period.
Spain on March 30 had toughened its nationwide lockdown, suspending all non-essential activities until after Easter. The measure particularly targeted the construction and manufacturing sectors.
Health Minister Salvador Illa said the masks will be distributed in metro or interurban train stations "where usage is recommended" and where work will resume after the Easter weekend "on Monday or Tuesday".
But there would be no further easing of the lockdown, with Illa saying such measures would be enough to avoid "a resurgence of cases".
17:39 GMT - France reports 987 deaths
France confirmed 987 more COVID-19 deaths registered in hospitals and nursing homes in a day, bringing the total toll to 13,197.
Speaking to reporters, top health official Jerome Salomon said a child aged under 10 infected with COVID-19 died, but the causes of the death were "multiple".
In encouraging news, Salomon said there were now 62 fewer people in intensive care, continuing a trend first seen on Thursday.
17:06 GMT - Moscow to introduce passes for travel around the city
Moscow's mayor Sergei Sobyanin said the city would begin to gradually introduce a system of passes next week to monitor and regulate residents' movements during a partial lockdown aimed at stopping the spread of the coronavirus.
Speaking on a state television channel, Sobyanin said that the passes would be introduced in stages. The first would focus on creating permits for those travelling to work.
17:02 GMT - Turkey's coronavirus death toll rises to 1,006
Turkey's confirmed cases of coronavirus increased by 4,747 and 98 people died in the last 24 hours, taking the total death toll from the disease to 1,006, Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said.
The total number of recovered cases stood at 2,423, with 281 recoveries in the last 24 hours, and the number of tests carried out in that time was 30,864, Koca said on Twitter.
Turkey's total confirmed cases stood at 47,029, he added.
16:26 GMT - New York sees first slight drop in intensive care unit patients
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said the number of coronavirus patients in intensive care units across the state dropped in the last day, offering a glimmer of hope that the surge in critical care hospitalizations might be leveling off.
Cuomo said there were 17 fewer patients in the state's intensive care units on Thursday than a day prior, a decrease in that figure "for the first time since we started this ... journey", Cuomo said at a news briefing.
New York City is burying some of its dead in a mass grave as the city’s daily death toll from the #coronavirus epidemic reaches grim new records.
"That's the first time we've seen a negative number, so that's good," he said.
New York City is burying some of its dead in a mass grave as the city’s daily death toll from the #coronavirus epidemic reaches grim new records.
"That's the first time we've seen a negative number, so that's good," he said.
![A municipality worker in a protective suit feeds street cats at Sultanahmet Square, as the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues in Istanbul, Turkey, April 9, 2020. [Umit Bektas/Reuters] Spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Istanbul](https://www.aljazeera.com/mritems/Images/2020/4/10/4479fc5baaf74157910ce40dbea89d36_18.jpg)
![A man wearing a protective face mask walks along the street, as the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, in Moscow, Russia April 10, 2020. [Shamil Zhumatov/Reuters] A man wearing a protective face mask walks along the street in Moscow](https://www.aljazeera.com/mritems/Images/2020/4/10/dda8ef9d142c4be88c0ad89632899d47_18.jpg)





![Roya TV news director Mohamad al-khaldi, left ( bold guy) and General Manager and owner Fares Sayegh [Courtesy: Roya TV] Roya TV news director Mohamad al-khaldi, left and General Manager and owner Fares Sayegh](https://www.aljazeera.com/mritems/Images/2020/4/10/17c2b85c36164ce38a6b5dc907aabcf2_18.jpg)

![City health workers spray disinfectant at a bus terminus during a 21 day nationwide lockdown to limit the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Harare, Zimbabwe, April 1, 2020. [Philimon Bulawayo/Reuters] City health workers spray disinfectant at a bus terminus during a 21 day nationwide lockdown to limit the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Harare](https://www.aljazeera.com/mritems/Images/2020/4/9/95968a6b1d3746cc8be9f89538b2e48e_18.jpg)


![A worker wearing a protective face mask following an outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) carries meat at a local food market, also known as bazaar, in Almaty, Kazakhstan March 20, 2020. [Pavel Mikheyev/Reuters] A worker wearing a protective face mask carries meat at a local food market in Almaty](https://www.aljazeera.com/mritems/Images/2020/3/21/3e690a476e024e84a29cfff358ce9e0b_18.jpg)








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