NEW YORK, July 15 — New York — once the worst coronavirus hotspot in the United States — added four states to its travel blacklist yesterday, meaning those residents must quarantine for 14 days on arrival.

The full list now stands at 22, with the addition of Minnesota, New Mexico, Ohio and Wisconsin, Governor Andrew Cuomo announced in a statement.

Delaware has been removed from the list.

The number of states on the list has nearly tripled in about three weeks — a sign of the resurgence in virus cases in several parts of the country, especially the Sun Belt.

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States are targeted based on an average rolling positivity rate of 10 per cent or higher, meaning 10 per cent of those tested are positive for Covid-19.

The list includes Florida, California and Texas — the nation’s three most populous states where the number of cases has exploded. New York is fourth in terms of population.

Until now, there has been no formal quarantine control operation.

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But from yesterday, enforcement teams will be stationed at the state’s airports to ensure that arriving travellers complete a state health questionnaire that includes their contact information.

The United States is by far the country hardest hit by the global pandemic, with nearly 3.4 million cases and more than 135,000 deaths. — AFP

Ivory Coast pays tribute after PM’s sudden death

ABIDJAN (Ivory Coast), July 15 — The West African state of Ivory Coast yesterday bid an emotional farewell to late Prime Minister Amadou Gon Coulibaly, the front-runner in looming presidential elections who died on July 8 from a heart attack.

Representatives from France and Senegal attended a ceremony at the presidential palace to honour Coulibaly, who died at age 61 after receiving heart treatment abroad.

Coulibaly was named in March as the candidate for President Alassane Ouattara’s RHDP party in October’s election, ending months of speculation that the 78-year-old incumbent would run again.

Education Minister Kandia Camara made an emotional tribute at the event to honour the “great president that he would have been”.

“Fate is cruel,” said Adama Bictogo, the executive director of the RDHP party.

“He would have been a great president. Gon Coulibaly had become part of the collective consciousness of Ivorians. The Ivorians had discovered a man who embodied humility but who had the posture of a statesman,” he said.

The president’s chief of staff Patrick Achi described Coulibaly as “the visible image of all the decisions that led to the prodigious rebirth of the country”.

One of the world’s major coffee and cocoa producers, Ivory Coast still carries the scars of a brief civil war that erupted nearly a decade ago.

In 2011, Ouattara ousted then-president Laurent Gbagbo, who refused to step down after losing elections. The months-long standoff claimed 3,000 lives and left divisions that linger today.

Coulibaly, a French-educated engineer who was appointed prime minister in 2017, had earned a reputation for hard work.

Kobenan Adjoumani, the country’s agriculture minister, noted that Coulibaly died only hours after attending a cabinet meeting.

“He died on the job. You don’t hold such ceremonies for a person if they mean nothing to the nation. He was a great servant of the state,” Adjoumani told AFP at the end of a military parade held as part of the ceremonies.

Coulibaly’s coffin, covered with the Ivorian flag, was placed on the esplanade of the presidential palace as he was posthumously awarded the Grand Cross of the National Order, the country’s highest distinction.

Ouattara, Senegalese counterpart Macky Sall and French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian attended the ceremony.

Coulibaly is to be buried in his hometown of Korhogo in the north of the country on Friday after a week of national mourning. — AFP