E3: UK coronavirus live: London hospital declares 'critical incident' due to surge in patients

All the day’s developments as the government discusses new London clampdown on pubs, cinemas and gyms

M&S, Lidl, Aldi, Danone and Coca-Cola European Partners have partnered with donations platform Neighbourly to create the Neighbourly Community Fund, funnelling funds directly to community organisations helping those most at risk during coronavirus crisis.

The partners have already committed a combined total of almost £500,000 to the fund, to provide immediate micro-grants to community organisations that are helping the people most affected by the outbreak, including the elderly, those on low incomes and people at risk of food insecurity.

Calling all local charities and good causes in need of funds!

Did you know you can set up a fundraising page to encourage online donations via the Neighbourly platform?

Here's how https://t.co/gy9vrHIPNn #CommunityResponse #viralkindness pic.twitter.com/p7E9WQyHKh

Northwick Park Hospital has declared a “critical incident” due to a surge in patients with coronavirus, the Health Service Journal reports.

In a message to staff seen by the HSJ, the hospital in Harrow said it has no critical care capacity left and has contacted neighbouring hospitals about transferring patients who need critical care to other sites.

A further 39 people who tested positive for coronavirus have died, bringing the total number of confirmed reported deaths in England to 167, NHS England said.

The patients were aged between 50 and 99 years old and had underlying health conditions.

WhatsApp is in talks to set up a dedicated NHS chatbot to allow people to access basic information about the coronavirus pandemic, sources with knowledge of the discussions have told the Guardian, as the messaging service seeks to shed its growing reputation as a hub for disinformation about the pandemic.

Any NHS chatbot is likely to follow the same pattern as the one the World Health Organization launched on Friday, which gives people access to up-to-date information about the virus, and emoji-laden guidance on how to combat its spread, through the messaging service.

Related: WhatsApp in talks with NHS to set up coronavirus chatbot

The government needs to introduce food rationing urgently to prevent key workers and disadvantaged families going hungry, leading food experts have said in a letter to the prime minister today.

Tim Lang, a former government adviser and professor of food policy at London’s City University, said a major food crisis was rapidly unfolding. Rationing is already taking place unofficially in supermarkets but in a way that takes no account of people’s need, he has told Downing Street along with fellow authors, Prof Erik Millstone of Sussex University, and Prof Terry Marsden of Cardiff University.

I am aware of at least one London borough where the food bank has alerted the council of serious shortages despite an 80% rise in visitors.

We have more demand than ever, and some of it is different demand – people who can’t go to food banks or might be self-isolating, people who might have eaten at a lunch club for the elderly before. Government needs to instruct industry to keep supplying us.

Parking app JustPark has launched a nationwide appeal to increase the number of free parking spaces near hospitals by allowing the general public to list spaces for free via their app.

The @NHS needs your help! Surging demand for hospital car parks could make it difficult for NHS staff and to park. If you live near a hospital you can list your driveway with JustPark for free to help alleviate the problem:https://t.co/Y7cyGB2jbT#parkingforhealthcare #Covid_19

When Boris Johnson says we’ll turn the Covid-19 tide in 12 weeks, it’s just another line for the side of a bus, writes columnist Marina Hyde.

It has been quite something to watch Johnson’s smirk kick back in, live on air, even while people are asking him about the soon-to-break ventilator crisis in intensive care.

Related: When Johnson says we'll turn the tide in 12 weeks, it's just another line for the side of a bus | Marina Hyde

Television channels are scrambling to commission new programmes suitable for a stay-at-home audience, with Channel 4 today announcing that it has commissioned Jamie Oliver to present a daily show providing tips for cooking simple recipes in a crisis.

The programme, entitled Keep Cooking and Carry On, will be broadcast every weekday next week at 5.30pm – with Oliver pledging to teach people “how to make the most from kitchen staples and how to be creative with whatever ingredients they’ve got at home”.

The Department for Education has announced more details on how assessments will replace the cancelled A-levels and GCSE exams in England this year, with pupils to be told their grades before the end of July.

The DfE says the exam regulator Ofqual will set grades using national criteria, with each student’s individual grades then ratified by their teachers. Pupils will have the option of sitting an exam early in the next academic year.

The statement reads:

The government’s priority is now to ensure affected students can move on as planned to the next stage of their lives, including going into employment, starting university, college or sixth form courses, or an apprenticeship in the autumn.

This means ensuring GCSE, A and AS level students are awarded a grade which fairly reflects the work that they have put in. There will also be an option to sit an exam early in the next academic year for students who wish to.

I can only imagine how distressing the cancellation of exams has been for students, parents and teachers. My priority now is to ensure no young person faces a barrier when it comes to moving onto the next stage of their lives.https://t.co/KiIslZMfHu

The government is investigating a sharp rise in the number of coronavirus deaths in the West Midlands, with one of the region’s NHS trusts reporting nine deaths from the illness, the highest number for any trust in the country.

The health secretary, Matt Hancock, confirmed this morning that the government was looking “very, very closely” at why a hotspot seems to have emerged in the region, where 28 deaths have been recorded so far. The majority of deaths have been of elderly and at-risk patients.

Related: Sharp rise in number of coronavirus cases in West Midlands

Following suit, Aldi has announced a recruitment drive to hire 9,000 new workers, including 4,000 permanent jobs, to help keep shelves filled during the coronavirus outbreak.

The supermarket added that all nappies and paper products, including toilet and kitchen roll, will now be restricted to two items per customer. All other products will remain restricted to four items per customer, with a few exceptions.

We’re recruiting like never before. Please help us connect with those who need to find work. https://t.co/XArWl9DWbi pic.twitter.com/eCeEl73AIc

The government has banned the parallel export of 80 crucial medicines – including adrenaline, insulin, paracetamol and morphine – to protect supplies during the coronavirus outbreak.

The government describes parallel exporting as “when companies buy medicines meant for UK patients and sell on for a higher price in another country, potentially causing or aggravating supply problems”.

Car giant Jaguar Land Rover is to suspend production at its UK plants because of the coronavirus crisis.

The company said production will be temporarily halted over the course of next week, with the intention to resume on 20 April, subject to review of the “rapidly-changing circumstances.”

Jaguar Land Rover confirms temporary suspension of production at UK manufacturing facilities. https://t.co/d8gzz9dmt3 pic.twitter.com/vVTZLHFkvu

Farnborough International Airshow, which had been due to take place in July, has been cancelled.

It is with regret that we announce the Farnborough International Airshow 2020, due to take place in July, is cancelled. Read more here: https://t.co/aq9QhWxHF2 pic.twitter.com/RafkqiNtm8

Hotel Chocolat is the latest retailer to announce all NHS workers will get a 50% discount in stores on presentation of their staff pass during the coronavirus crisis.

All performances at “major commercial” West End theatres are cancelled until 26 April, according to the Society of London Theatre.

The Society of London Theatre has issued further updates for theatregoers, as it announces closures of venues until April 26. https://t.co/vof3ureSY9 pic.twitter.com/E3qwG92BQ9

The leader of Cornwall council, Julian German, and the Cornish MP Steve Double have asked people not to travel to the far south west of England.

Politicians and doctors fear an influx of people to Cornwall from London and other cities could put pressure on the health service in the area – and spread the virus.

It is important that everyone follows the advice laid out by the government to slow and stop the spread of this virus and do everything we can to support our essential public services, especially our NHS.

That includes avoiding non-essential travel.By anyone’s assessment a holiday at this time is not essential. So therefore, regrettably we are asking people not to come on holiday to Cornwall at this time.

Asda has announced plans to hire more than 5,000 temporary employees who have lost their jobs due to Covid-19.

The supermarket is working with more than 20 companies nationally to bring in staff from industries including food and travel.

Here’s some more on the publication of the scientific evidence that has been supporting the government’s response to the coronavirus pandemic.

Among the guidance laid out by the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies SAGE, is that social distancing measures may be needed for most of the year.

The government was today actively discussing a new clampdown on London with pubs, cinemas and gyms possibly being ordered to close to stop the spread of the Covid-19 pandemic.

An announcement could be made within hours, after crisis planners became increasingly concerned that too many people were continuing to ignore social distancing advice, making the spread of the virus more likely.


Giving her daily briefing, Scotland’s first minister, Nicola Sturgeon, said that it was not helpful to use words like “lockdown”, which only confused the public, but added that “it should not be assumed that what we are asking people to do now will not become stricter in the future”.

There are 56 new cases in Scotland overnight but no change in the number of deaths.

The number of Scots who have been diagnosed with coronavirus has grown by 56 since yesterday to 322. Scotland’s first minister Nicola Sturgeon revealed the new total during a briefing on the outbreak.

Schools across Scotland will close today as part of an effort to combat the spread of the disease.

Agencies recruiting seasonal workers to pick the fruit and vegetables that will help feed the nation have issued an urgent call for British people to sign up to work.

Normally, 99% of the 80,000 workers come from abroad, mostly from eastern Europe. But travel restrictions and anxieties about the coronavirus pandemic have led many workers to cancel.

We urgently need a UK labour force who can help harvest crops to feed the nation. At a time when international travel is restricted and people are panic buying due to the coronavirus, it is crucial that growers can provide enough British produce to our supermarkets and local shops.

We are aware that there are many people facing sustained periods away from their usual employment or studies and Hops can offer paid positions.

Growers that rely on seasonal workers to pick, pack and grade our fruit and veg are extremely concerned. The industry is already working hard to promote available roles on farms locally, recognising that this could help those who unfortunately find themselves out of work. We are urging the government to address this situation as soon as possible and to implement any solution as a matter of urgency.

This crisis highlights the vulnerability of our globalised food system. We demand immediate and significant government action to ensure everyone can access healthy, affordable food; to secure our food supply; and to guarantee people and small businesses get the help they need to survive this crisis.

National Express is advising passengers to check online before they travel as it introduces an extensive reduction to its timetable with effect from 00:01 Tuesday 24 March 2020.

This follows the news yesterday that the coach operator will be temporarily running limited services across its scheduled national network in response to the impact of the coronavirus.

We will do our best to let customers know about the changes but strongly advise that if they still intend to travel, to check the National Express website before they start their journey.

For any passengers that turn up to find their service no longer running, we will accept their ticket on any available alternative service or accommodate their travel by other means.

A Scottish hotel has sacked more than a dozen members of staff over the coronavirus outbreak, making them homeless, our Scotland correspondent, Libby Brooks, reports.

The workers at the Coylumbridge hotel near Aviemore received a letter yesterday informing them management was “taking the latest government advice” and that staff employment had been terminated, with those who live at the hotel complex asked to leave the premises immediately.

Related: Scottish hotel sacks 12 staff over coronavirus making them homeless

The Guardian’s editor-in-chief, Katherine Viner, has written to readers about how we aim to cover the coronavirus crisis, emphasising the value of expertise, scientific knowledge and careful judgment in our reporting.

She writes:

With you, we are trying to face this unsettling moment with fortitude, and we’re remembering our history – the Guardian and Observer continued to publish throughout the 1918 flu pandemic and both world wars, and we will do our best to do the same during this global coronavirus pandemic.

Related: Coronavirus: the Guardian's promise to our readers

Supermarket Lidl has announced plans to recruit 2,500 workers on four-week contracts to help keep up with high demand in stores as customers continue clearing shelves over the coronavirus outbreak.

The grocer said recruits can start immediately and will be paid at least £9.30 an hour, adding “the new hires will be responsible for working together to keep the store clean, tidy and the shelves well stocked so that customers can get the products they need”.

Police chiefs have today asked employers to give workers who volunteer as special constables paid leave during the coronavirus crisis.

The National Police Chiefs’ Council say the move will boost the number of volunteers available, with police ranks expected to be depleted by illness and self-isolation in the coming months.

Our Special Constables play a vital role in the police service, a service which will be placed under great strain over the coming months.

We appreciate that this would be placing a further burden on businesses who are already suffering the economic impact of this virus, and we do not make this appeal lightly.

The government has made public the scientific evidence from SAGE that has been supporting its response to the coronavirus pandemic.

The evidence feeding into the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies #SAGE is now live. This is supporting the government response to #COVID19 https://t.co/Ya9VYyIVeu pic.twitter.com/ImxLZSKeFg

Covid-19 patients are being turned away by Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Trust as demand for lifesaving treatment surges, the Telegraph is reporting (paywall).

The news comes as the death toll in London rose more sharply than the rest of the country, with figures revealing yesterday that four in 10 coronavirus-related deaths so far in the UK have been in London.

First details of the cuts to train services show around 50% of the timetable is expected to be cut initially, although decisions are being left to individual operators.

All train companies nationwide are expected to have new timetables published for next week available on National Rail by Sunday lunchtime, 22 March.

The message from the government is clear – travel only if you have to. The changes we are making should allow us to sustain a timetable for those who absolutely have to travel such as doctors, nurses and the emergency services.

Farmers and farmworkers have been included on a list of key workers whose children can still go to school during the coronavirus crisis.

According to Farmers Weekly: “Some pointed out the irony of farmers and farmworkers being catapulted in just two weeks from ‘unskilled workers’ in the government’s post-Brexit immigration list to ‘key workers’ in the response to the coronavirus pandemic.”

The competition watchdog has said it will clamp down on retailers using the coronavirus outbreak as an opportunity to exploit customers.

The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said the outbreak has prompted concerns that people could be exploited by companies “charging excessive prices or making misleading claims about their products”.

Related: eBay urged to clamp down on coronavirus profiteering

A letter to the chancellor calling for the introduction of a universal basic income to deal with the fallout from the coronavirus outbreak has been signed by 150 MPs.

The Labour MP for Enfield, Feryal Clark, tweeted a copy of the letter, which said the crisis “must act as a catalyst for innovative and bold solutions”.

150 cross-party MPs have written to the Chancellor calling on him to use Universal Basic Income payments to ensure everyone has money in their pockets during the #Coronavirus public health and economic crisis.

Unprecedented times call for unprecedented measures pic.twitter.com/puGWyFCnDI

Our economy has seen a fundamental shift since 2008. The number of self-employed has risen from 3.25 million to more than five million people.

The app-based driver is not paid when there is no work. Nor is the zero-hours warehouse worker, the children’s entertainer or the agency-supplied care worker.

Myself and 500 other academics and public figures are calling for #EmergencyUBI https://t.co/feP3df9pyp

One of London’s most famous live music venues which has hosted David Bowie, Adele and Amy Winehouse is to reopen on Monday as a hub for the local coronavirus response.

The Union Chapel in Islington has cancelled forthcoming performances but will become the base for the local Covid-19 task force supporting rough sleepers. It will host a food bank and an initiative to proactively contact the most vulnerable people who may be in self-isloation.

Staff including sound and lighting engineers will be asked if they want to take roles helping handle and distribute donations of food, but particularly hand sanitiser and soap which they plan to distribute to rough sleepers.

The venue, which doubles as a non-conformist church, will also periodically open bathrooms to allow rough sleepers to wash themselves regularly to reduce the risk of contracting the virus.

The food and soap collection and distribution is being operated with Islington Council, the Museum of Homelessness, and Streets Kitchen, while the venue will work with the charity Help on Your Doorstep to contact the vulnerable in isolation.

Since 1992, when first registered as a charity, Union Chapel has been home to a number of very special services and activities aimed at aiding the most in-need and disadvantaged members of our community.

These services are largely funded by the profits from the venue’s ticket sales and our events. During this crisis Union Chapel will escalate our community emergency support work, continuing to aid those in need.

The British Fashion Council, the not-for-profit organisation that promotes British design globally, has put a call out asking those with “production capacity” to help with shortages.

In times of need, the fashion industry can be of service. To help with shortages, we are working with both the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) and the Department for Health and Social Care (DHSC) who need our help in the manufacture of essential products including masks. If you are able and willing to support with the production of anything non-ventilator related please contact directly info@britishfashioncouncil.com

Imperfect Solutions — wanttohelp@yourfriendsin.nyc

A third person has died in Wales after contracting coronavirus, the chief medical officer for the country has confirmed.

They were aged 71 and had underlying health conditions, and were being treated at the Prince of Wales Hospital in Bridgend.

The Police Federation has called for officers in Northern Ireland to be tested for Covid-19 amid fears the spread of the virus could result in a skeleton workforce.

The representative body for Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) officers has also called for personal protective equipment to be made available for officers, including masks, gloves and scenes-of-crime white suits, as well as “spit and bite guards”.

We are not as well-resourced as other parts of the UK. We do not have cadets. We do not have access to military, so, we are very much left on our own.

It is therefore imperative that testing for police officers is brought in without any further delay. This will increase workforce resilience and will be a major factor in ensuring that our officers can remain at work.

There is still a lot of confusion about provision of school places for the children of key workers.

What we do know however is that the government has now clarified in its latest advice that households with at least one parent or carer identified as a critical or key worker will be able to send their children to school if necessary.

After the Department for Education issued its guidance on occupations to be classed as key workers who qualify for childcare in school over the coming weeks and months, school and business leaders have reacted with their concerns.

Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, said parents should keep their children at home if possible from Monday, and to only send them to school if there was no safe alternative:

The key worker list is extensive and schools will not be able to cope with the number of children who could potentially arrive on Monday morning. It is important that the public understands that this is not business as usual.

Schools will endeavour to do their best to provide continuity of learning for all children whether at home or in school, but the provision in school is likely to be more akin to childcare than a normal timetable.

Defining which workers are critical to the national effort is a difficult task. Today’s list will help business and individuals to plan. But the need for different jobs will change in the weeks ahead, so the list must be kept under constant review with additions where necessary.

The World Snooker Championship has been postponed until at least July, PA reports.

#Breaking This year’s Betfred World Snooker Championship has been postponed due to coronavirus, with the World Snooker Tour saying in a statement it intends to host the tournament at the Crucible in July or August pic.twitter.com/A0BITtxu9L

The installation of the next Fourth Plinth sculpture in Trafalgar Square has been postponed because of coronavirus.

Heather Phillipson’s The End - a sculpture of a whirl of cream topped with parasites - was due to be installed on 26 March.

Anywhere but Westminster is back, and needs your help covering the impact of the coronavirus outbreak across the UK.

Related: Anywhere but Westminster: we need your help covering the coronavirus

The Changing of the Guard at Buckingham Palace, St James’s Palace and Windsor Castle has been cancelled until further notice, ITV’s royal editor Chris Ship reports.

The world famous Changing of the Guard at Buckingham Palace is cancelled until further notice pic.twitter.com/L42RVqZkMA

A man has been arrested on the Isle of Man for allegedly failing to self-isolate.

The detention of the man, reportedly aged 26, came after the Crown dependency’s government announced earlier this week that everyone arriving on the island must self-isolate for 14 days, regardless of whether they have symptoms.

The coronavirus crisis could push the vulnerable ambulance service over the edge, writes NHS paramedic Jake Jones.

Coronavirus is currently having a serious impact on the ambulance service. Call numbers are soaring, interactions with patients are changing, and staff on the road and in the control centres are under acute pressure. At a time when most people are distancing themselves from others, ambulance crews are doing what they always do: going into the homes of sick and vulnerable strangers to offer help.

Related: I'm an NHS paramedic. Coronavirus could push our struggling service over the edge | Jake Jones

The Rugby Football Union has announced the end of the season for all league, cup and county rugby in England, except the Gallagher Premiership, PA reports.

#Breaking The Rugby Football Union has announced the end of the season for all league, cup and county rugby in England, with the exception of the Gallagher Premiership pic.twitter.com/9OQtPlloJa

The UK’s chief Brexit negotiator, David Frost, is self-isolating after showing symptoms of coronavirus.

The news, which was reported by various sources today and attributed to the UK government, comes after Frost’s EU counterpart, Michel Barnier, said he had tested positive for the disease yesterday.

The chief negotiators on both sides are now in isolationhttps://t.co/PKB46v9Cxl via @bpolitics

If you had any reservations about the government’s response to the crisis, Politico’s Jack Blanchard has highlighted its capacity to copy and paste is still going strong, to put your mind at ease.

Not saying the Coronavirus Bill explainer is a rush job, but pic.twitter.com/ZhNcyeN1nb

A critical care nurse has made a tearful appeal to members of the public to stop stripping supermarket shelves of food after she came off a shift and was unable to buy supplies for her family.

“Those people who are stripping the shelves of basic foods. You just need to stop it because it is people like me who will be looking after you when you are at your lowest, so just stop it,” said the nurse, named as Dawn.

Critical care nurse Dawn has pleaded for the public to "stop it" after being faced with empty supermarket shelves following a 48-hour shift. pic.twitter.com/1sQHM2U5Ba

The British Museum has seen a surge in online visitors with the Benin Bronzes and the Lewis Chessmen in the top 10 of searches.

Culture gives comfort in times of turmoil, it unites us and makes us understand what it means to be human. As the world grapples with this current crisis, I am glad that so many people are coming to the website and online collections of the British Museum.

Did you know you can #MuseumFromHome on @Google Street View?

Explore the galleries and find your favourite objects wherever you are – start a virtual visit by dropping in to Room 41 to see finds from Sutton Hoo: https://t.co/mVitUCO2Uv pic.twitter.com/nbRSvWXZmz

Sales at Wetherspoons have been falling after Boris Johnson told members of the public to stay at home and not visit pubs.

The pub chain said that sales, which had risen by 3.2% in the previous six weeks, started falling by 4.5% in the week ending March 15, as the coronavirus pandemic scared customers off.

We come into contact all day with the general public, we handle money, dirty plates, glasses, sometimes bodily fluids, and the fact we can’t wear a mask/gloves front of house is making people feel on edge. We of course are washing our hands as often as possible but it’s just bizarre we aren’t allowed to protect ourselves.

An iconic Italian deli which has served London for more than 75 years is raising money so it can supply pasta and sauce to people in need amid the coronavirus crisis, reports London’s Evening Standard.

Lina Stores, which has a site in Soho and another in King’s Cross, wants to make provisions for hospitality staff whose jobs have been cut and people in at risk groups.

Well, this is amazing. Iconic Lina Stores in Soho is raising money to supply pasta and sauce to people in need amid the coronavirus crisis, reports @EveningStandard London's Evening Standard.
Here's the Go Fund me page: https://t.co/DYLFjSfMFC pic.twitter.com/EJQI4dHlbE

Rail services in Scotland will move to a reduced timetable from Monday 23 March onwards as people follow the extraordinary advice to limit social contact and stay at home.

Network Rail Scotland and ScotRail announced they would be operating a reduced service so emergency staff can travel and emergency supplies such as medicines can be moved around the country.

BT is to remove all caps on home broadband plans to give customers unlimited data while working from home or self-isolating.

This is just the start of what we’re doing at @bt_uk in response to Coronavirus. We're here to help. Let's all look after each other.

You can read more about all the things we're doing at @bt_uk here: https://t.co/IhySBYMW07 pic.twitter.com/s6KTQwEaZw

Questions remain unanswered about how school places will remain open to the children of key workers, Paul Whiteman, the general secretary of the NAHT, the school leaders’ union, has said.

In a statement he said:

The government has made clear that every child who can be safely cared for at home should be. And their advice makes clear too that this applies to children of key workers.

For the vast majority of children and young people, school buildings will close tonight and not reopen for the foreseeable future.

"Taking up a place at school during this time of wider closure is the offer of last resort, for the minority of key workers, who have no alternative."@PaulWhiteman6 comments on school provision during #covid19UK #schoolclosuresuk https://t.co/mxO6QHbGZl pic.twitter.com/dl5seZ5KL4

The Conservative MP for Lewes, Maria Caulfield, has said she will be returning to the NHS to support efforts to tackle the coronavirus outbreak.

I will be returning to the front line in the NHS to support the fight against the Coronavirus , important we all help where we can @MattHancock https://t.co/39UFerXpkA

We’re calling on nurses and doctors who’ve recently left the NHS to return.

We need you now as part of the national effort to fight coronavirushttps://t.co/eMzDyXe11q

Good morning. As schools close to most children across the UK today, the government has published a list of key workers whose children will still be able to go to school, following some confusion over who would be classed as a “key worker” after the announcement on Wednesday. It includes doctors, nurses, midwives, teachers, nursery staff, police, transport workers and others.

Later, at the daily coronavirus press conference, the chancellor, Rishi Sunak, is set to announce an employment and wage subsidy package to try to protect millions of jobs, with many firms including Marks & Spencer and Next warning of collapse. Letters are also being sent to more than 65,000 retired doctors and nurses in England and Wales asking them to come back to help the NHS fight the outbreak. Train services across Britain are to be stripped back from Monday after Covid-19 caused a 70% drop in the number of passengers. And the Catholic Church will suspend public masses from this evening until further notice.

Related: Coronavirus live updates: California governor issues statewide 'stay at home' order as Italy deaths pass China

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