The Phnom Penh Post

Europe urges better pandemic plan

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EUROPE’S most powerful countries urged the EU to better prepare for the next pandemic after chaotic responses to the coronaviru­s, as Moscow emerged from lockdown despite Russia still being in the grip of a surging epidemic.

There should be a “common European approach” to challenges like Covid-19 in future, leaders including French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel wrote in a letter and policy paper to the EU’s top official.

Europe has been the hardesthit continent with nearly 185,000 people killed, and the leaders said a lack of coordinati­on had left nations short of crucial medical equipment when the coronaviru­s arrived.

Worldwide, Covid-19 deaths have passed 407,000, with more than seven million infections.

The US recorded 819 deaths in the past 24 hours, bringing its own grisly toll to more than 111,000 out of 1.9 million cases – leaving it the country hardest hit by the pandemic in terms of both the number of fatalities and the number of cases.

And the crisis continued to esca late i n Lat i n A merica, which by late on Tuesday had a lmost 1.4 million cases and nearly 70,000 deaths.

Brazil’s health ministry cited figures late on Tuesday indicating the death toll had risen by 1,272 to over 38,400 killed by the virus – the third highest toll in the world after the US and Britain.

President Jair Bolsonaro’s government had stopped publishing the total number of virus deaths on Friday, saying

it was adopting new methodolog­y.

However, the government was forced into a U-turn by a Supreme Court ruling on Monday that it must return to the old format, which government critics said is more transparen­t.

On Tuesday Peru, second only to Brazil as the region’s worst-hit country, announced it had passed 200,000 cases of the virus, adding more than 4,000 cases in a single day.

In Nicaragua, at least eight public health doctors were sacked for criticisin­g the lack of a serious response to the crisis from the government of President Daniel Ortega, an independen­t medical body said.

Nicaragua has been criticised for an almost complete absence of measures to contain the virus.

Europe’s Exit

Despite Europe’s dire record, most countries on the continent continued to exit their punishing lockdowns on Tuesday, with Cyprus welcoming its first tourist flights in almost three months and French officials announcing the Eiffel Tower will reopen on June 25.

Residents of the Moscow flocked to parks after officials lifted restrictio­ns in place since March 30, even though 8,595 new cases were registered in Russia on Tuesday and the death toll passed 6,000.

“It’s nice out and there are a lot of people on the streets,” said marketing manager Olga Ivanova, walking in the Russian capital. “It’s a beautiful day, in every sense of the word.”

Russia has the third-highest number of confirmed infections in the world after the US and Brazil, but officials say this is due to a huge testing campaign and point to a relatively low mortality rate.

However, critics say the death rate is being under-reported and accuse officials of rushing to lift restrictio­ns for political reasons.

In further signs that a new normal is taking hold in Europe, officials in Spain said maskwearin­g in public would be compulsory until an effective treatment or vaccine can be found.

Britain, which on Tuesday announced its death toll had passed 50,000, has imposed a two-week quarantine for anyone coming into the country, British nationals included.

Life-saving lockdowns

TheWorld Health Organisati­on (WHO) has warned that complacenc­y is the biggest threat in countries where the pandemic seems to have abated.

Globally, it does not appear to be abating at all – the WHO said a record number of new coronaviru­s cases were recorded worldwide on Monday, the majority of them in South Asia and the Americas.

Underlinin­g the warning, deaths and infections continue to climb sharply in India even as the government lifted some curbs after a 10-week lockdown.

Authoritie­s in the capital Delhi warned on Tuesday that cases in the city could shoot up almost 20 times to more than 500,000 in the coming weeks.

The disease emerged late last year before sweeping the globe, subjecting billions to some form of lockdown that paralysed economies.

Those restrictio­ns prevented 3.1 million deaths in 11 European countries alone, said an Imperial College London study published on Monday.

 ?? AFP ?? Rescue workers recover a body after an explosion at a well run by state-owned Oil India Ltd in Tinsukia, the northeaste­rn state of Assam, on Wednesday. Two workers have been found dead near the site of a huge fire ignited by gas that has been spewing from an oil field in India for two weeks.
AFP Rescue workers recover a body after an explosion at a well run by state-owned Oil India Ltd in Tinsukia, the northeaste­rn state of Assam, on Wednesday. Two workers have been found dead near the site of a huge fire ignited by gas that has been spewing from an oil field in India for two weeks.

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