The Star Malaysia

Virus cases top nine million

WHO urges global solidarity as pandemic gains more traction

-

Global coronaviru­s infections topped nine million as the World Health Organisati­on warned that the pandemic was accelerati­ng.

Europe has steadily eased its travel lockdowns in recent weeks, and France on Monday took its biggest step back to normality by allowing children to return to school.

But many parts of the world, including Latin America and South Asia, are only beginning to feel the full force of the pandemic, while other regions are being hit with second waves.

“The pandemic is still accelerati­ng,” the WHO’s director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s told a virtual health forum in the United Arab Emirates.

Tedros said the greatest threat was not the virus itself, which has now killed over 470,000 people, but “the lack of global solidarity and global leadership”.

“We cannot defeat this pandemic with a divided world,” he said. “The politicisa­tion of the pandemic has exacerbate­d it.”

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro is one of the leaders to have repeatedly played down the threat, comparing the virus to a “little flu” and arguing the economic impact of shutdowns is worse than the virus.

More than 50,000 people have been confirmed to have died from the virus in Brazil, with the true number believed to be far higher.

Brazil’s official death toll is second only to the United States, which has recorded 120,000 fatalities, and President Donald Trump’s handling of the crisis has been widely criticised as erratic and chaotic.

Mexico, Peru, Chile and Argentina are also coping with crises – Mexico City being forced to delay plans for a broad reopening of the economy as the country’s death toll raced past 20,000.

 ?? — aFP ?? Cake walk: a ‘cake’ walking along a street in Montevideo, uruguay, after being delivered to a girl for her birthday. The idea came from a man who began a quarantine­d birthday business amid Covid-19 curbs.
— aFP Cake walk: a ‘cake’ walking along a street in Montevideo, uruguay, after being delivered to a girl for her birthday. The idea came from a man who began a quarantine­d birthday business amid Covid-19 curbs.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia