Arab Times

UK pass Italy with virus deaths

‘Massive tragedy’

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LONDON, May 6, (AP) : Britain now has Europe’s highest official coronaviru­s death toll after the latest round of daily figures Tuesday showed it overtaking Italy. Only the United States has recorded more virus-related deaths.

The British government said another 693 people died in hospitals, nursing homes and other settings after testing positive for COVID-19, taking the total to 29,427 – above Italy’s 29,315.

Though the U.K.’s coronaviru­s-related death toll, when measured on a seven-day rolling basis, has been falling consistent­ly for the past three to four weeks, the country is around two weeks behind Italy in terms of the pandemic. The tallies are likely underestim­ates because they do not include suspected coronaviru­s deaths.

Taking into account countries’ population­s, the U.K.’s per capita death rate is below those in Italy, Spain and Belgium. And the U.S. is below them all even though it has the highest number of registered COVID-19 deaths with more than 70,000.

British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said the number of deaths was a “massive tragedy,” but added that it was too soon to make reliable internatio­nal comparison­s, partly because of apparent difference­s in the way countries report deaths.

“I don’t think we’ll get a real verdict on how well countries have done until the pandemic is over and particular­ly until we’ve got comprehens­ive internatio­nal data on all-cause mortality,” he said.

Pope Francis

Growing

There is a growing consensus among scientists and statistici­ans that the best way to assess deaths eventually will be to measure how many more people died than would normally have been expected to die in any particular year.

Professor David Spiegelhal­ter, a leading statistici­an at the University of Cambridge, said one certain thing is that all the official death numbers are “substantia­l underestim­ates” of those dying directly from the virus and those who died as a result of the epidemic and the measures taken in response.

“I think we can safely say that none of these countries are doing well, but this is not (the) Eurovision (Song Contest) and it is pointless to try and rank them,” he said.

“I believe the only sensible comparison is by looking at excess allcause mortality, adjusted for the age distributi­on of the country,” he said. “And even then it will be very difficult to ascribe the reasons for any difference­s.”

Regardless of how deaths are recorded,

loans are Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovin­a, Georgia, Kosovo, Moldova, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Ukraine. (KUNA)

15 police face probe on killer:

Cyprus’

Jong-un

the trends in most of the virus-related numbers in the U.K., such as the number of people requiring hospitaliz­ation with coronaviru­s, are heading in the right direction - but not enough to prompt the government to ease the lockdown, in place since March 23, when it is reviewed on Thursday.

Government advisers have voiced worries about the number of new cases still being recorded. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who has recovered from COVID-19 himself, has warned of a second spike in the epidemic and that the U.K. is at the moment of “maximum risk.”

The government has come under increasing criticism over the past couple of weeks for being too slow in putting the country into lockdown, in testing for the virus and in getting critical protective gear for medical workers.

The hope in government circles is that it can pivot to a new approach in keeping a lid on the virus until a vaccine is found - more than 100,000 people can be tested each day.

Outbreak

A pilot program started Tuesday on the Isle of Wight, off England’s south coast, with a mobile phone app that authoritie­s hope will help contain the outbreak once the lockdown restrictio­ns are eased. The government wants the app, which warns people who have been near an infected individual, to be rolled out across the country this month.

Angela McLean, the government’s deputy chief scientific adviser, said the U.K. was now trying to emulate the success of the contact tracing policy adopted by South Korea.

“I think they are a fine example to us and we should try to emulate what they have achieved,” she said.

Meanwhile, as the coronaviru­s continues to infect people across Britain in what will likely turn out to be Europe’s worst outbreak, the government has come under criticism from scientists, who say it has neglected the fundamenta­ls of epidemic control.

Hundreds of outbreak experts have questioned the U.K’s pandemic response, ridiculing the government’s claim of “following the science.”

“There was a sense of fatalism and I think the government ruled out containmen­t options that should not have been ruled out,” said Martin McKee, a professor of European public health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. “And now we have to deal with the fall-out.”

The fallout includes a death rate that has now reached 28,446. That is only slightly less than Italy, Europe’s worst-hit nation with 28,884 confirmed deaths. top lawyer said Tuesday he has ordered a criminal probe into how police handled the country’s first serial killer investigat­ion, which led to the conviction of an army officer for the murders of seven foreign women and girls.

Attorney General Costas Clerides said in a statement that 15 members of the force may have breached the law or been negligent in their duty.

Clerides said he launched the investigat­ion after examining an Independen­t Police Complaints Authority report. The authority found some police actions went beyond mere oversights on the part of some police force members and “constitute­d the basis” for establishi­ng that a criminal offense may have been committed. (AP)

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