Here are the latest developments in the coronavirus crisis:
China Locks Down Nine Million
The north-eastern Chinese city of Changchun and its nine million people are locked down as the country records the worst spike in new cases in two years.
Only one person from every household will be allowed out every two days to buy "daily necessities", officials in Changchun said.
Shanghai Shuts Schools
Economic hub Shanghai shuts its schools, with other cities using targeted lockdowns and mass testing to contain the outbreak driven by the highly-contagious Omicron variant.
Beijing Brings In Rapid Tests
Beijing says it will introduce rapid antigen tests for the first time.
Hong Kong Care Homes Hit
The virus is tearing through Hong Kong's care homes, with some 60 percent of the nearly 3,000 virus deaths there in the last two months occurring in the facilities.
WHO: Nations Didn't Take Notice
Exactly two years after the World Health Organization (WHO) declared a pandemic, it says it was frustrated that countries didn't sit up when it sounded the alarm six weeks earlier.
US Cracks Down On COVID Fraud
The United States (US) Justice Department appoints a special prosecutor to crack down on pandemic fraud, which is estimated to have cost Washington more than US$8 billion (7.3 billion euros).
EU Airlines Want End To Restrictions
European airlines and airports call for an end to pandemic measures for flights in the bloc as most countries begin to relax mask and vaccine requirements.
Unjabbed US Air Crews Go Back To Work
America's United Airlines says it will allow its unvaccinated employees who had an exemption from a jab to return to work.
Mainz Game Off
An outbreak of 20 cases at the German club Mainz leads to their second consecutive Bundesliga game being postponed.
Six Million Dead
The coronavirus has killed at least 6,026,306 people since the outbreak emerged in China in December 2019, according to an AFP tally based on official sources on Friday.
The US has recorded the most COVID deaths with 965,464, followed by Brazil on 654,086 and India with 515,714.
Taking into account excess mortality linked to COVID, the WHO estimates the true death toll could be two to three times higher.