Spain

They are the European countries with the most outbreaks recorded at the end of June, but their strategies to tackle Covid-19 could not be more different.
La Marina is the second region in the country to re-enter lockdown, after a fresh outbreak saw more than 100 people test positive for coronavirus.
As Spain reopens to holidaymakers, these snaps show Mallorca's glamorous heyday, before the boozy hordes.
What are they? Which countries could we travel to first? And what about the 14-day quarantine?
Ministers plan so-called "air bridges" or "travel corridors" with countries potentially including France, Spain and Greece from around July 6.
UK citizens will be able to travel to Spain without facing quarantine, Spain's foreign minister has announced.
Could quarantine exemptions for Spain and Green make a summer holiday possible?
Maria Branyas, 113, said, "I won’t be able to help you.... But believe me, you need a new order."
Expect masks, social distancing and working from home to become a standard part of life for the foreseeable future.
US president Donald Trump took to Twitter with a series of confusing Tweets that included threatening to sue news organisations and calling himself the “hardest working president in history”. The social media posts come as Trump says he will no longer attend press briefing after he was heavily criticised for suggesting medical professionals look into injecting disinfectant and using ultraviolet heat to fight covid-19. In Spain children were allowed outside for the first time in six weeks. The european country, which has the highest number of infections next to the US, is allowing children under 14 one hour of supervised time outdoors each day. Italy is also set to start loosening restrictions as well, starting on May 4th parks will reopen, restaurants will offer takeaway and funerals will be allowed with under 15 people in attendance. New Zealand’s tough lockdown restrictions, which have been in place for more than four weeks, are ending and will see shops, restaurants and schools open on a smaller scale and it’s expected that one million people will return to work on Tuesday. And British war veteran Tom Moore is being honoured with a special postmark by Royal Mail who will stamp all letters with a message for the 99-year-old. Moore raised £29 million for the National Health Service by walking laps in his garden.