Houston Chronicle Sunday

Mexico No. 3 in deaths as global cases surge

- By John Leicester, Rod McGuirk and Arno Pedram

Mexico now has the third most COVID-19 deaths in the world, behind Brazil and the United States.

Mexican health officials on Friday reported 688 new deaths, pushing the country’s confirmed total to over 46,600. That put Mexico just ahead of the United Kingdom, which has more than 46,100, according to the tally by Johns Hopkins University.

Some countries are seeing hopeful signs: China reported a more than 50 percent drop in newly confirmed cases in a possible indication that its latest major outbreak in the northweste­rn region of Xinjiang may have run its course.

However, in Hong Kong and elsewhere, infections continue to surge. Hong Kong reported more than 100 new cases as of Saturday among the population of 7.5 million. Officials have reimposed dining restrictio­ns and mask requiremen­ts.

Tokyo on Saturday saw its third day straight of record case numbers, the metropolit­an government said. Nationwide, Japan’s daily count of cases totaled a record 1,579 people Friday, the health ministry said.

South Africa on Saturday surpassed 500,000 confirmed COVID-19 cases, representi­ng more than 50 percent of all reported coronaviru­s infections in Africa’s 54 countries. Health Minister Zwelini Mkhize announced 10,107 new cases Saturday night, bringing the country’s cumulative total to 503,290, including 8,153 deaths.

And Vietnam, a former success story, is struggling to control an outbreak spreading in its most famous beach resort. A third person died there of coronaviru­s complicati­ons, officials said Saturday, a day after it recorded its first-ever death as it wrestles with a renewed outbreak after 99 days with no local cases.

All three died in a hospital in Da Nang, a hot spot with more than 100 cases in the past week. Thousands of visitors had been in the city for summer vacation and are now being tested in Hanoi and elsewhere.

Twelve additional cases were confirmed on Saturday, all linked to Da Nang Hospital. Officials tightened security and set up more checkpoint­s to prevent people from leaving or entering the city, which has been in lockdown since Tuesday.

A makeshift hospital was set up, and doctors have been mobilized from other cities to help.

“I want to be tested, so I can stop worrying if I have the virus or not,” said Pham Thuy Hoa, a banking official who returned to the capital from Da Nang.

In South Korea, prosecutor­s arrested the elderly leader of a secretive religious sect linked to more than 5,200 of the country’s approximat­ely 14,300 confirmed cases. He has denied charges of hiding members and underrepor­ting gatherings to avoid broader quarantine­s.

The global pandemic has affected nearly every aspect of this year’s Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca, with as few as 1,000 pilgrims already residing in Saudi Arabia taking part, down from 2.5 million last year.

Poverty brought on by the pandemic is also making it harder for many to join in the four-day Eid alAdha, or “Feast of Sacrifice,” in which Muslims slaughter livestock and distribute the meat to the poor.

“I could hardly buy food for my family,” Somali civil servant Abdishakur Dahir said. “We are just surviving for now. Life is getting tougher by the day.”

The Saudi Health Ministry said there have been no cases of COVID-19 among this year’s pilgrims. All were tested, their movements monitored with electronic wristbands and required to be quarantine­d before and after.

Meanwhile, India recorded its steepest spike of 57,118 new cases in the past 24 hours, taking its coronaviru­s caseload close to 1.7 million, with July alone accounting for nearly 1.1 million infections.

The country’s Civil Aviation Ministry delayed resumption of internatio­nal flights by another month until Aug. 31. But it will continue to allow several internatio­nal carriers from the United States, Europe and the Middle East to operate special flights to evacuate stranded nationals.

In France, travelers entering from 16 countries where the virus is circulatin­g widely now must undergo virus tests upon arrival at airports and ports. The country is not permitting general travel to and from the countries, which include the United States and Brazil. The testing requiremen­t therefore only applies to people entering under limited circumstan­ces, including French citizens who live in these countries.

As autumn approaches, nations around the world are grappling with how to safely reopen schools.

A scientist advising the British government on the coronaviru­s pandemic says pubs in England may have to be closed to allow schools to reopen in September. Graham Medley, a member of the government’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s, told the BBC that there may have to be a “trade off.”

On Friday, the head of the World Health Organizati­on predicted the effects of the pandemic will be felt for “decades to come.”

“Most of the world’s people remain susceptibl­e to this virus, even in areas that have experience­d severe outbreaks,” Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said in London. “Although vaccine developmen­t is happening at record speed, we must learn to live with this virus.”

 ?? Oded Balilty / Associated Press ?? Muslim worshipper­s offer Eid al-Adha prayers at a park in Jaffa, Israel, since mosques have been limited to 10 people under government orders.
Oded Balilty / Associated Press Muslim worshipper­s offer Eid al-Adha prayers at a park in Jaffa, Israel, since mosques have been limited to 10 people under government orders.
 ?? Marco Ugarte / Associated Press ?? Vendors in Mexico City prepare tortas de chilaquile­s. The country on Friday reported 688 new deaths.
Marco Ugarte / Associated Press Vendors in Mexico City prepare tortas de chilaquile­s. The country on Friday reported 688 new deaths.

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