New York’s daily virus death toll falls below 100: governor

(FILES) In this file photo taken on April 19, 2020 US President Donald Trump and US Vice President Mike Pence look on as a video plays of New York Governor Andrew Cuomo giving a press conference in an earlier breifing during a Coronavirus Task Force press briefing at the White House in Washington, DC. – The number of deaths in New York state caused by the novel coronavirus in the last 24 hours has fallen to 84, the lowest one-day total since late March, Governor Andrew Cuomo said May 23, 2020. (Photo by JIM WATSON / AFP)

WASHINGTON, United States (AFP) — The number of deaths in New York state caused by the novel coronavirus in the last 24 hours was 84, the lowest one-day total since late March, Governor Andrew Cuomo said Saturday.

“The news is good news,” Cuomo said in his daily televised briefing.

Hospitalizations, intubations and new infections were all in decline, he added.

“In my head, I was always looking to get under 100,” Cuomo said, speaking from the governor’s mansion in Albany.

“It doesn’t do good for any of those 84 families that are feeling the pain,” he added. “But for me it’s just a sign we are making real progress.”

The toll is the lowest since March 24. At the pandemic’s peak in New York in early April, state officials were reporting up to 800 deaths per day, and daily tolls repeatedly surpassed 1,000 when probable cases were included.

Parts of the state that saw fewer virus cases have already begun to ease lockdown restrictions, but they have yet to be lifted in New York City, the former virus epicenter in the US.

The city’s beaches will remain closed for this long Memorial Day weekend, which traditionally marks the beginning of the US summer season.

Beaches are being reopened elsewhere in the state and in other coastal areas, often with bathers required to observe social distancing.

Cuomo issued an unexpected order late Friday to allow public assemblies of up to 10 people “for any lawful purpose.”

He was easing an earlier order that applied only to religious services and Memorial Day celebrations, after a civil liberties group filed suit to object.

© Agence France-Presse