
Week in Pictures
The Week in Pictures: Lockdown protests and a window wedding
More than 170,000 people have died of the COVID-19 disease globally with the death toll in the U.S. topping 48,000 by Thursday evening.


New York City
Gravedigger Thomas Cortez accompanies a casket as it's brought to the plot for burial at Hebrew Free Burial Association's Mount Richmond Cemetery on Staten Island on April 8.
The group serves indigent Jews. A century ago, it buried garment workers killed in the Triangle Shirtwaist fire and those who fell to the Spanish flu. More recently, it was Holocaust survivors who fled Europe. And now, those dying of the coronavirus.




Australia
People watch the Ruby Princess cruise ship depart Port Kembla in Wollongong, on April 23.
Authorities have ordered the ship to leave Australian waters as two separate inquiries continue over how 2,700 passengers were allowed to disembark in Sydney in March without adequate health checks.

California
Clerk Recorder Erika Patronas marries Natasha and Michael Davis at the Honda Center parking lot in Anaheim, Calif., on April 21. The county implemented social distancing techniques to safely issue licenses and marry couples during the pandemic.
Photos: Portrait of a California neighborhood under lockdown

Great Britain
Bryony Blant and her daughter Alice, who celebrated her second birthday on April 24, admire Welsh mountain pony "Annie's Wizz" outside their home in Twickenham, London. Park Lane Stables is hoping to spread cheer during the lockdown in an initiative called "Tiny Pony at Your Window."



Brazil
A cross with the date 22-4-20 marks the burial site of Edenir Rezende Bessa, who is suspected to have died of COVID-19, in Rio de Janeiro on April 22.
After visiting 3 primary care health units, Bessa was accepted in a hospital that treats new coronavirus cases, where she died on Tuesday.



Bosnia
A man disinfects the ceiling lamp in the Cobanija mosque in Sarajevo on April 21.
Disinfection began in mosques in the Bosnian capital and throughout the country, in order to limit the spread of the COVID-19 infections, ahead of the holy month of Ramadan. Prayers will only be attended by clerics as the rest of the community observes government restrictions on public gatherings and religious ceremonies.





Colorado
Spaced eight feet apart, United States Air Force Academy cadets celebrate their graduation as a team of F-16 Air Force Thunderbirds fly over the academy on April 18 in Colorado Springs.
After senior cadets spent more than a month on lockdown in the Air Force Academy's dorms, Saturday's graduation, which was moved up by six weeks, marks the first time a military academy is graduating a class early since WWII.


New York City
FDNY paramedic Elizabeth Bonilla sprays herself with disinfectant after responding to an emergency call in the Bronx on April 15.
"Emotionally, you have to be strong for the families that are going through it," she said. "You don't want to cry in front of them. You want to show them that you're strong and you're there to support them."
This image was released on April 20




Florida
People walk along the Duval County beach during open hours in Jacksonville on April 19.
Florida’s governor gave the green light for some beaches and parks to reopen if it can be done safely, and north Florida beaches became among the first to allow people to return since closures because of the coronavirus.


New York City
A raccoon comes out to play in an almost deserted Central Park in Manhattan on April 16.
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