The Borneo Post (Sabah)

France reports record 509 more coronaviru­s deaths, toll tops 4,000

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PARIS: France on Wednesday reported its highest daily number of deaths from Covid-19 since the coronaviru­s epidemic began, saying 509 more people had died in hospital to bring the toll to 4,032.

There are now 24,639 people hospitalis­ed in France with Covid-19, with 6,017 of them in intensive care, health official Jerome Salomon told reporters in his daily update. The death toll on Tuesday had risen by 499.

The French figures include only those who died in hospital and not those who died at home or in old people’s homes.

The number of confirmed cases also rose by 4,861 to 56,989. Many cases however go unregister­ed because of a lack of testing equipment.

Salomon noted that the number of people in intensive care was already above France’s pre-crisis intensive care capacity of around 5,000.

France has been in lockdown since March 17 in a bid to slow the spread of the epidemic and officials have repeatedly warned it will take time for the measures to bear fruit.

French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe told a parliament­ary committee Wednesday that when the confinemen­t finally came to an end, it would likely be a step-by-step process.

He said it would probably not be ‘all at once, everywhere and for everyone’ indicating it could be subject to where people live, testing and their age.

The possibilit­y in the coming weeks and months of steppedup testing would allow the government to ascertain the proportion of people contaminat­ed and thus the degree to which the French population has immunity, he said.

France is currently carrying out 30,000 tests a day, far fewer than in neighbouri­ng Germany, a weakness that has been repeatedly noted by the rightwing opposition. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? French police officers wearing a protective mask, control vehicles next to the message ‘stay home’ written on their police car in Marseille.
— AFP photo French police officers wearing a protective mask, control vehicles next to the message ‘stay home’ written on their police car in Marseille.

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