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| - Here are the latest developments in the coronavirus crisis: Most of the UK takes a major step towards normality with people being allowed to eat and drink inside pubs, cafés and restaurants. Cinemas, museums and sports venues also open their doors for the first time in months despite concerns over the spread of a more contagious variant of the disease. A major cyclone packing ferocious winds and threatening a destructive storm makes landfall in western India, disrupting the country's response to its devastating virus outbreak. Germany will ditch its Covid vaccine priority list and start offering jabs to all adults from June 7, Health Minister Jens Spahn says. The EU's drug agency approves the storage of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine in fridges for up to a month, in a move that should boost its rollout across the bloc. Nobel Peace Prize laureate and retired archbishop Desmond Tutu is among South Africa's first seniors to receive jabs as the country launches a massive immunisation drive targeting around five million people aged over 60 by the end of June. G7 and EU nations can afford to donate more than 150 million vaccines to countries in need without compromising their own objectives, UNICEF says. Separately the United States says it will release an additional 20 million doses of Covid vaccine to other countries, bringing the total being shipped out to 80 million. The World Economic Forum says it has called off its planned annual gathering of global political, economic and business leaders, which had been set for August in Singapore. Italy approves a new curfew allowing people to circulate in the evenings one hour longer, until 11 pm, after the country saw its lowest coronavirus deaths in months. Disneyland Paris, Europe's biggest tourist attraction, says it will reopen on June 17 as France eases virus restrictions. And the Moulin Rouge will be high-kicking its way back on stage in September, after the longest shut down in more than a century. Berlin authorities agree to lift Covid curbs for 2,000 people to attend Union Berlin's final game of the Bundesliga season against RB Leipzig on Saturday. The pandemic has killed at least 3,381,042 people worldwide since the virus first emerged in late 2019, according to an AFP compilation of official data. The United States is the worst-affected country with 585,970 deaths, followed by Brazil with 435,751, India with 274,390, Mexico with 220,433 and Britain with 127,679. burs-eab-jmy/cdw
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