Belfast Telegraph

Outbreaks tamed in Asia but infections rise again in Russia

- BY JILL LAWLESS

COUNTRIES including China and South Korea have marked major milestones in taming coronaviru­s, even as infections rose sharply again in Russia.

South Korea reported only three new cases of the virus, its lowest total since February 18, and schools will be reopened in phased steps, starting with high school seniors on May 13, but the highlight yesterday was the resumption of the baseball season.

Cheerleade­rs danced beneath rows of empty seats and umpires wore protective masks as one of the world’s first major profession­al sports returned to action in games broadcast to starved sports fans around the world.

In China, it has been three weeks since any new deaths have been reported in the country where the pandemic began late last year. Just one new infection was confirmed, and fewer than 400 patients are still being treated for Covid-19, health officials said.

Other places in the Asia-pacific region have also suppressed outbreaks, including Hong Kong, Taiwan, Vietnam, Thailand, Australia and New Zealand, which has had no new cases for two days. But experts say India, a nation of 1.3bn people, has yet to see the peak of its outbreak.

In Russia, the number of infections rose sharply again, with Moscow reporting more than 10,000 new cases for three days in a row.

At the same time, many European countries that have relaxed strict lockdowns after new infections tapered off were watching their virus numbers warily.

“We know with great certainty that there will be a second wave — the majority of scientists are sure of that. And many also assume that there will be a third wave,” said Lothar Wieler, the head of Germany’s national disease control centre.

In the US, moves to reopen some states came even as daily new infections continue to exceed 20,000 and daily deaths were over 1,000, according to figures from Johns Hopkins

University. Yesterday, New York state reported more than 1,700 previously undisclose­d deaths at nursing homes and adult care facilities. Government­s around the world have reported 3.5m infections and more than 251,000 deaths, including nearly 69,000 in the US. Deliberate­ly concealed outbreaks and low testing rates mean the true scale of the pandemic is undoubtedl­y much greater.

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