US President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump announced early Friday that they had tested positive for the coronavirus â after playing down [Forward to a friend]( | [Subscribe]( | [View in your browser](
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In the news today
POTUS, FLOTUS test positive for the coronavirus
[A man paints a mural of US President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump after they tested positive for the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), on a street in Mumbai, India, Oct. 2, 2020.](
Credit: Francis Mascarenhas/Reuters
With US President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump announcing early Friday that they had [tested positive for the coronavirus]( â after playing down the pandemic for months â reactions from leaders around the globe have ranged from âtold you soâ to âget well soon.â While sympathy notes were not scarce, plenty of Trump critics have lambasted the US commander-in-chief for his lack of leadership on COVID-19.
Trump, who [according to polls]( faces an increasingly uphill battle to win the Nov. 3 election, rejects accusations that his failures at the helm contributed to an American death toll that is [20% of the worldwide fatality count](. And now the 74-year-old, who is [reportedly experiencing minor symptoms](, faces a personal medical crisis with an illness that hits older, overweight and male victims particularly hard.
âThis demonstrates that [the virus spares no one](, including those who have shown skepticism,â said Gabriel Attal, a spokesman for the French government. âI wish him a swift recovery.â European Council President Charles Michel added, âCOVID-19 is a battle we all continue to fight. Every day. No matter where we live.â
Hu Xijin, editor-in-chief of Chinaâs Communist Party-controlled Global Times newspaper, tweeted, âPresident Trump and the First Lady have paid the price for his gamble to play down the COVID-19.â Comments from Taiwan were more kind. âThe government & people of Taiwan stand with the U.S. at this testing time,â Taiwanâs foreign ministry said in a statement. And Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Twitter that he wished âour friends a [full and speedy recovery](.â
What The World is following
Trump has joined other presidents and prime ministers in the small group of world leaders who [have been infected with the coronavirus](. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson had a tough bout with the disease, ending up in the intensive care unit, and Prince Charles tested positive but showed only mild symptoms. Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro came down with the virus in July. Juan Orlando Hernández of Honduras, Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus, and Prince Albert II of Monaco contracted COVID-19, in addition to the leaders of Guatemala, Bolivia and the Dominican Republic. Senior ministers in India, Iran, Israel, South Sudan, Gambia and Guinea-Bissau were also infected.
Also on Friday, French President Emmanuel Macron announced a new law combatting religious âseparatismâ with the goal of [liberating Islam in France]( from âradicalâ foreign influences. Local officials will have additional legal powers to counter extremism, alongside new investments in education focusing on Islamic culture and in social services for impoverished people. âOur challenge is to fight against those who go off the rails in the name of religion,â Macron said.
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From The World
[How the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict could spiral into bigger regional war](
[People take part in a protest by Armenian Youth Federation against what they refer to as Azerbaijan's aggression against Armenia and the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region, outside the Azerbaijani Consulate General in Los Angeles, Calif., Sept. 30, 2020.](
Credit: Mike Blake/Reuters
With Turkey backing Azerbaijan and the Armenians turning for help to Iran and Russia, the tinderbox in the South Caucasus could ignite into a larger conflagration. Simon Saradzhyan, director of the Russia Matters Project at the Harvard Kennedy School, [explains what the two sides are fighting about](.
"They're fighting over what they view as the most precious thing in the world: the land," Saradzhyan said. "I'd say that it's the worst fighting since the ceasefire, and it has the greatest potential to become a regional war because of the involvement of Turkey. ... I only see a path towards further hostilities until external powers with leverage, real leverage, intervene and convince both sides that it's time to lay down arms and negotiate."
[How one Danish energy company went from black to green in 10 years](
[Three wind turbines from the Deepwater Wind project stand off Block Island, Rhode Island, Aug. 15, 2016.](
Credit: Michael Dwyer/AP
In the last 10 years, Ãrsted, one of Denmark's largest energy companies, flipped its business model from a focus on fossil fuels to renewable energy. Their success is partly thanks to the country's progressive policies that [paved the way for a boom]( in wind energy innovation.
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Coronavirus Conversations
[Will people accept a COVID-19 vaccine?](
[A worker performs a quality check in the packaging facility of Chinese vaccine maker Sinovac Biotech in Beijing, China, Sept. 24, 2020.](
Credit: Thomas Peter/Reuters
Some health experts say a vaccine for the coronavirus may be available in the next year. However, ready acceptance of such a vaccine remains unknown.
As part of our series of conversations about the pandemic, The World's Elana Gordon [will take your questions and moderate a discussion](with Dr. Howard Koh, a professor of public health leadership at Harvard's T.H. Chan School of Public Health and the Kennedy School, today at 12 p.m. Eastern.
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Bright spot
While the price tag has not been disclosed, now you and your friends [can buy the actual hotel]( where nine-time Emmy-winning show "Schitt's Creek" was filmed in Orangeville, Ontario, Canada. Happy Friday!
[A screen grab of a tweet from Kaitlin Monte.](
Credit: Screen grab from Twitter
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In case you missed it on The World
- [Thailand taboo](
- [Irelandâs highest court rules Subway break too sugary to be considered bread](
- [In Nagorno-Karabakh, violence between Armenia and Azerbaijan is in day five](
- [French minister campaigns to stop retailers from using Uighur forced labor](
- [Human rights lawyers sue Trump administration](
- [How a Danish energy company went from black to green](
- [New Zealand debate focuses on issues, not personal attacks](
- [Anti-Semitic hack](
- [Global âinfodemicâ](
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