Chattanooga Times Free Press

Brazil near 100,000 deaths from Covid-19

- BY MARCELO DE SOUSA

RIO DE JANEIRO — Brazil was leaping toward a grim milestone — 100,000 deaths from COVID-19 — on Saturday, and five months after the first reported case, the country had not shown signs of crushing the disease.

The nation of 210 million people has been reporting an average of more than 1,000 daily deaths from the pandemic since late May and had reported 99,572 as of Friday night.

The Health Ministry said there had been a total of 2,962,442 confirmed infections with the new coronaviru­s — death and infection tolls second only to the

United States. And as in many nations, experts believe that both numbers are severe undercount­s due to insufficie­nt testing.

In a tribute to COVID-19 victims, the non-government­al group Rio de Paz placed crosses on the sand on the famed Copacabana beach Saturday and released 1,000 red balloons into the sky.

“It’s very sad. Those 100,000 represent various families, friends, parents, children”, said Marcio do Nascimento Silva, a 56-year-old taxi driver who lost his children in the pandemic and joined the tribute.

“We reach that mark (100,000) and many people seem to not see it, both among the government and our people. They are not just numbers but people. Death became normal,” Silva said.

President Jair Bolsonaro — who himself reported being infected — has been a consistent skeptic about the impact of the disease and an advocate of lifting restrictio­ns on the economy that had been imposed by state governors trying to combat it. He has frequently mingled in crowds, sometimes without a mask.

“I regret all the deaths, it’s already reaching the number 100,000, but we are going to find a way out of that,” Bolsonaro said in a Thursday night Facebook transmissi­on.

Experts have complained of a lack of national coordinati­on under Bolsonaro and scattersho­t responses by city and state government­s, with some reopening earlier than health experts recommende­d.

“Administra­tive incompeten­ce ruined our chance to have a good response to COVID,” said Miguel Lago, executive director of Brazil’s Institute for Health Policy Studies, which advises public health officials.

Brazil is facing the pandemic with an interim health minister, Eduardo Pazuello, an army general who made his career in logistics. Two earlier health ministers, both physicians, resigned over difference­s with Bolsonaro about social distance measures and the use of hydroxychl­oroquine, an anti-malaria drug promoted by the president but which most studies have found to be inteffecti­ve against COVID-19, or even dangerous.

Bolsonaro, who has called COVID-19 a “little flu,” said he recovered from his own infection thanks to that drug.

Many of Brazil’s 27 states have begun to reopen shops and restaurant­s, though responses have differed, as has the strain on the health system. While Brasilia, the capital, has recorded almost 80% occupancy of its ICU beds, Rio de Janeiro’s occupation rate is now down to less than 30%.

In Rio, shopping malls and restaurant­s have already opened and people have returned to the beaches.

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