We’re covering new spikes in cases in Asia, China’s hesitation on stimulus and criticism of the World Health Organization. | | A new wave of coronavirus cases in Hong Kong, Taiwan and Singapore has been largely fueled by infections coming from elsewhere. | | Singapore is also seeing a rise in community cases, with more than 400 in the past week linked to migrant worker dormitories. | | None of these places had a single day with more than 10 new cases until March, but that changed in the past two weeks. | | Students or expatriates returning from Europe or the U.S. account for a large share of the imported cases. | | Related: New research indicates that the coronavirus began to circulate in the New York area, the epicenter of the U.S. outbreak, weeks before the first confirmed case, and that travelers brought the virus mainly from Europe, not Asia. U.S. travel restrictions were placed first on China, and on Europe weeks later. | | ■ In India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi told government ministers that a complete lifting of the country’s lockdown was “not possible,” signaling that the measure would be extended beyond the initial 21-day period, which expires on April 15. | | ■ Mumbai and New Delhi have made face masks mandatory in public. European nations, and even the U.S., are starting to adopt masks, too, a practice long established in Asia. | | ■ Prime Minister Boris Johnson of Britain was moved out of intensive care on Thursday but remained in the hospital for treatment for the coronavirus. The news offered some relief in the country as it faces several more weeks under lockdown and a death toll nearing 8,000. | | ■ U.S. stocks climbed after the Federal Reserve announced an expansion of its emergency lending powers, but the gains faded after oil prices fell. The S&P 500 was up less than 1 percent. Shares in Europe were sharply higher. | | ■ The authorities in Australia are investigating how infected passengers from the cruise ship Ruby Princess were allowed to disembark last month. Hundreds of them have tested positive and 15 have died, in the deadliest single source of infection in Australia. | | A shopping street in central Shanghai in February. Yuyang Liu for The New York Times | | China, the world’s second largest economy after the U.S., is helping companies keep workers and pushing its state-run banks to lend more. But so far, the country’s leaders have held back from huge cash injections to shore up the economy. | | In contrast, the U.S., Japan and European countries have opted for giant stimulus packages during the coronavirus pandemic. | | European finance ministers were holding a second videoconference meeting to take another stab at joint measures to cushion the blow of the outbreak. A major question is whether they can agree to issue joint bonds — the E.U. has never yet agreed to share debt. | | A proposal: Prominent economists are calling on Beijing to take similar action, and many suggest distributing vouchers nationwide that must be spent quickly or expire. That would force consumers to spend immediately to stimulate demand. | | Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus heads the World Health Organization. Denis Balibouse/Reuters | | Taiwan has been frozen out of the W.H.O. after pressure from Beijing, and like Japan and India, is critical of the organization’s perceived bias toward China and its slowness in documenting human-to-human transmission of the coronavirus and declaring a global pandemic. | | Dr. Tedros said that he didn’t care about personal attacks, but that “when the whole black community is insulted, when Africa is insulted, then I don’t tolerate it.” African leaders have come to his defense. | | Taiwan’s president, Tsai Ing-wen, responded to Dr. Tedros’s complaint that the government had not distanced itself from the criticism, writing on Facebook: “Taiwan has always opposed all forms of discrimination. For years, we have been excluded from international organizations, and we know better than anyone else what it feels like to be discriminated against and isolated.” | | Carolyn Kaster/Associated Press | | The Times’s Opinion section is starting an ambitious project to envision how the U.S. can eventually come out of the current moment stronger, fairer and more free. | | In an introduction, our editorial page editor, James Bennet, writes: “This pandemic offers the same opportunity that Americans have seized during past crises: to set aside petty differences, recognize national priorities and set to work again on creating a more perfect union. We’re launching this initiative in hopes of supporting that national instinct.” | | PAID POST: A MESSAGE FROM CAMPAIGN MONITOR | TEST: Email Marketing 101: Never Sacrifice Beauty for Simplicity | A drag-and-drop email builder, a gallery of templates and turnkey designs, personalized customer journeys, and engagement segments. It's everything you need to create stunning, results-driven email campaigns in minutes. And with Campaign Monitor, you have access to it all, along with award-winning support around the clock. It's beautiful email marketing done simply. | | Learn More | | | U.S. presidential election: Having become the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, former Vice President Joe Biden is now aiming to win over Bernie Sanders’s younger, more liberal voters and unify the party. | | Northern Ireland abortion: New laws making abortion freely available went into effect on March 31, but women continue to be denied access to services and are instead enduring an eight-hour ferry ride to Liverpool, England, despite the coronavirus lockdown. The regional power-sharing government is still debating how to roll out the new services. | | Turkey imprisonment: Osman Kavala, the country’s most prominent political prisoner, is a philanthropist who has been accused of espionage, links to terror groups and trying to overthrow the Erdogan government — which distrusts him particularly because he embodies Turkey’s leftist-leaning, secular elite. | | Victor J. Blue for The New York Times | | Snapshot: Above, a bodega in Brooklyn, N.Y., last week. Millions of New Yorkers are turning to the corner stores for basics like toilet paper, hand sanitizer and a little sense of community. | | Weird Al Yankovic: After 40 years, the renowned comedy musician is “no longer a novelty, but an institution — a garish bright patch in the middle of America’s pop-cultural wallpaper, a completely ridiculous national treasure, an absurd living legend,” according to The Times Magazine’s profile. | | What we’re checking out: The Social Distancing Festival, a calendar of live-streamed events. “You’ve probably already exhausted your Netflix and HBO options,” writes our national correspondent Michael Wines, “so here are some different video offerings to fill those lonely hours.” | | Cook: Matzo brei is the traditional Passover breakfast, which some prefer sweet and others savory. Our food writer Melissa Clark goes for savory — topped with golden fried onions. | | You can stay safe at home and still find lots of things to do. Here’s our At Home page, with a full collection of ideas on what to cook, read, listen to, watch, and do. | | It turns out, Times journalists had joined them: “Not The New York Times” was also an inside job. | | Andrew Sondern/The New York Times | | The parody featured three full sections, 24 joke advertisements, 73 spoof articles and 155 fake news briefs, all meticulously edited to mimic The Times’s style. Even the font used on the front page and the spacing of the headlines exactly replicated those of the real paper. | | The writer of one column praised Genghis Khan for his ability to “get things done,” and an in-depth investigation by a team of 35 Not The Times reporters found that cocaine “appears popular.” | | “We all had a lot of time on our hands,” said designer Richard Yeend. | | After the strike ended, the Times journalists went back to work and kept quiet about their satirical moonlighting. | | That’s it for this briefing. See you next time. | | Thank you To Theodore Kim and Jahaan Singh for the break from the news. The Back Story was based on reporting by Alex Traub. You can reach the team at briefing@nytimes.com. | | P.S. • We’re listening to “The Daily.” Our latest episode is about how Mardi Gras in New Orleans may have played a role in the spread of the coronavirus. • Here’s our Mini Crossword, and a clue: Old saying (five letters). You can find all our puzzles here. • In the latest episode of The Times’s new podcast “Sugar Calling,” the best-selling author Cheryl Strayed speaks to Margaret Atwood about what she’s reading in these days of isolation. | | Were you sent this briefing by a friend? Sign up here to get the Morning Briefing. | | |