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Coronavirus: What’s happening around the world Tuesday | CBC News

Byindianadmin

Jun 10, 2020
Coronavirus: What’s happening around the world Tuesday | CBC News

As many countries gingerly start lifting their lockdown measures, experts worry that a further surge of the coronavirus in under-developed regions with shaky health systems could undermine efforts to halt the pandemic, and they say more realistic options are needed.

A person is sprayed with disinfectant inside a chamber before entering a shopping mall in Jakarta, Indonesia, on Tuesday. (Dita Alangkara/The Associated Press)

The latest:

As many countries gingerly start lifting their lockdown measures, experts worry that a further surge of the coronavirus in under-developed regions with shaky health systems could undermine efforts to halt the pandemic, and they say more realistic options are needed.

Brazil, Mexico, South Africa, India and Pakistan are among countries easing tight restrictions, not only before their outbreaks have peaked but also before any detailed surveillance and testing system is in place to keep the virus under control. That could ultimately have devastating consequences, health experts warn.

“Politicians may be desperate to get their economies going again, but that could be at the expense of having huge numbers of people die,” said Dr. Bharat Pankhania, an infectious diseases expert at the University of Exeter in Britain.

He said re-imposing recently lifted lockdown measures was equally dangerous.

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“Doing that is extremely worrying because then you will build up a highly resentful and angry population, and it’s unknown how they will react,” Pankhania said.

And as nearly every developed country struggles with its own outbreak, there may be fewer resources to help those with long overstretched capacities.

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization, said Monday the pandemic was “worsening” globally, noting that countries on Sunday reported the biggest one-day total: more than 136,000 cases. Among those, nearly 75 per cent of the cases were from 10 countries in the Americas and South Asia.

Wealthy countries in Europe and North America hit first by the pandemic are training armies of contact tracers to hunt down cases, designing tracking apps and planning virus-free air travel corridors.

Flight attendants wearing personal protective equipment are seen during a flight from Vancouver to Calgary on Tuesday. (Jonathan Hayward/The Canadian Press)

But in many poor regions, where crowded slums and streets mean even basic measures, such as hand-washing and social distancing, are difficult, the coronavirus is exploding now that restrictions are being removed. Last week, Brazil, Mexico, South Africa, India and Pakistan all saw one-day records of new infections or deaths as they reopened public spaces and businesses.

Clare Wenham of the London School of Economics described the situation in Brazil as “terrifying,” noting the government’s decision to stop publishing a running total of COVID-19 cases and deaths.

“We’ve seen problems with countries reporting data all over the world, but to not even report data at all is clearly a political decision,” she said. That could complicate efforts to understand how the virus is spreading in the region and how it’s affecting the Brazilian population, Wenham said.

COVID-19 patients are seen at field hospital built inside a gym in Santo Andre, Brazil, on Tuesday. (Andre Penner/The Associated Press)

Rio de Janeiro allowed surfers and swimmers back in the water, and small numbers of beach-goers were defying a still-active ban on gathering on the sand.

Relaxing restrictions “is dangerous because we’re still at the peak, right? So, it’s a little dangerous,” said Alessandra Barros, a 46-year-old cashier on the sidewalk next to Ipanema beach. “Today, it’s calm, but this weekend will be crowded.”

Bolivia has authorized reopening most of the country. Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro also recently unwound restrictions. Ecuador’s airports have resumed flights, and shoppers have returned to some of Colombia’s malls.

A security guard takes the temperature of a customer at the entrance of an electronics inside a reopened mall in Bogota, Colombia, on Monday. (Fernando Vergara/The Associated Press)

In Mexico, President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador urged the country to stay calm after officials last week reported rising numbers of deaths that rivaled those in Brazil or the U.S.

Across Latin America, countries that cracked down early and hard, such as El Salvador and Panama, have done relatively well, although some of that has come at the expense of human rights and civil liberties, Wenham said.

“Countries willing to take the short-term hit are the ones coming out better,” she said. But poor countries weren’t entirely without options, she said, noting early, pre-emptive actions by Sierra Leone and Liberia.

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“They learned from the Ebola outbreak and moved quickly when they decided their economy couldn’t cope with community transmission,” she said. So far, numbers have been relatively low in both West African countries.

Dr. Nathalie MacDermott, a clinical lecturer

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