Cape Breton Post

Global cases surpass 90 million

- ROSHAN ABRAHAM ANURAG MAAN

Worldwide coronaviru­s cases surpassed 90 million on Monday, according to Reuters tally, as nations around the globe scramble to procure vaccines and continue to extend or reinstate lockdowns to fight new coronaviru­s variants.

The new COVID-19 variants discovered initially in the United Kingdom and South Africa are rapidly spreading globally.

The novel coronaviru­s has picked up pace in the past few months with about one-third of total cases registered in the last 48 days, according to a Reuters tally.

Europe, which became the first region to report 25 million cases last week, remains the worst-affected area in the world, followed by North and Latin Americas with 22.4 million and 16.3 million cases respective­ly.

Europe has reported around 31 per cent of about 1.93 million coronaviru­s-related deaths globally.

The United Kingdom, the worst-affected European country, crossed 3 million cases last Friday.

The nation is on course to have immunized its most vulnerable people against COVID-19 by mid-February and plans to offer a shot to every adult by autumn.

To control the spread of new coronaviru­s variant, countries across the globe have started to extend movement and business restrictio­ns.

In Germany, Chancellor Angela Merkel and state premiers last week agreed to restrict non-essential travel for residents of hard-hit areas all over Germany for the first time, after a lockdown decreed in December failed to significan­tly reduce infection numbers.

French authoritie­s imposed a stricter evening curfew in Marseille after authoritie­s said the new variant of the COVID-19 virus initially found in the U.K. had been discovered in the Mediterran­ean city.

The United States, world’s worst affected country, reported its highest death toll on Wednesday, with over 4,000 fatalities in a single day.

The nation has recorded more than 22 million cases since the pandemic started, reporting on average 245,000 new infections a day over the last seven days, according to a Reuters analysis.

In Asia, India crossed 150,000 deaths last Tuesday, becoming the third nation to reach the grim milestone.

The south Asian nation has approved two COVID-19 vaccines and will start its vaccinatio­n drive from Jan. 16 with priority given to about 30 million healthcare and frontline workers.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A Sadhu or a Hindu holy man gets his temperatur­e measured at a base camp where pilgrims gather before heading for an annual trip to Sagar Island for the one-day festival of “Makar Sankranti” in Kolkata, India on Friday.
REUTERS A Sadhu or a Hindu holy man gets his temperatur­e measured at a base camp where pilgrims gather before heading for an annual trip to Sagar Island for the one-day festival of “Makar Sankranti” in Kolkata, India on Friday.

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