Trapped cruise ship worker reveals ‘horror’ of coronavirus quarantine
Business

Trapped cruise ship worker reveals ‘horror’ of coronavirus quarantine

Lucy, a 31-year-old UK native, works in entertainment on the Serenade of the Seas, which is now anchored near the port of Barbados void of its usual 2,500 passengers, and housing about 780 of its 900-person crew. "It was a horror journey, You see, initially we were told we were going into self-isolation for 72 hours, then it got extended to 14 days" she said

travel lockdown coronavirus living quarantines coronavirus-tales cruises

Fri Apr 10 - Google

Related Articles

Bank of England holds interest rate at 0.1%
Business
Bank of England holds interest rate at 0.1%

In an important announcement on Thursday, the Bank of England held interest rates steady and maintained its existing level of asset purchases, as investors watched for signs that it is anticipating a slower economic recovery. The main lending rate was kept at 0.1%, as the central bank cut rates twice from 0.75% since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic

rates coronavirus interest boe

Thu Aug 06 - CNBC
Moderna, Pfizer Start Decisive Covid Vaccine Trials, Eye Year-End Launches
Business
Moderna, Pfizer Start Decisive Covid Vaccine Trials

Moderna Inc and Pfizer Inc launched two 30,000-subject trials of COVID-19 vaccines that could clear the way for regulatory approval and widespread use by the end of this year, the companies said on Monday. The trials, both announced on Monday, are the first late-stage studies supported by the Trump administration's effort to speed development of measures against the novel coronavirus.

vaccine coronavirus

Tue Jul 28 - Ndtv
Australia expects the biggest budget deficit since World War II
Business
Australia expects the biggest budget deficit since World War II

Coronavirus pandemic has ended the three-decade growth of Australia as its budget deficit is expected to deepen significantly. The government said its budget deficit is forecast to deepen significantly to 85.8 billion Australian dollars ($61.27 billion) in the financial year that ended on June 30 and further widen to 184.5 billion ($131.78 billion) in the new fiscal year, biggest since the World War II

australia economy melbourne coronavirus

Thu Jul 23 - CNBC
India’s biggest airline to layoff 10% of staff
Business
India’s biggest airline to layoff 10% of staff

India's biggest airline IndiGo has become the latest carrier to reveal how hard it has been hit by the collapse in demand for flights due to Covid-19. The airline said it will shed 10% of its staff amid a slump in revenues. In a letter to investors, IndiGo's chief executive Ronojoy Dutta said: "It is impossible for our company to fly through this economic storm without making some sacrifices"

airline coronavirus staff indigo

Tue Jul 21 - BBC