Daily Nation Newspaper

Moz health minister tests positive for coronaviru­s

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MAPUTO - Mozambique’s Health minister, Armindo Tiago, has tested positive for Covid-19, he said in a statement on Tuesday, adding that he was well, however, showing no symptoms, and in isolation at home.

“I am infected, but not sick,” Tiago said. “No one in this world can say that they are immune to the new coronaviru­s.”

Mozambique has reported 10, 258 infections, with 73 deaths.

Meanwhile, European countries have begun to close schools and cancel surgeries, going well beyond curbs on social life, as overwhelme­d authoritie­s face their nightmare scenario of a Covid-19 resurgence right before the onset of winter.

Most European nations eased lockdowns over the summer to start reviving economies already heading for unpreceden­ted downturns and job losses from the pandemic’s first wave.

But the return of normal activity - from packed restaurant­s to new university terms - fuelled a sharply-rising spike in cases all over the continent.

Bars and pubs were among the first to shut or face earlier closing in the new lockdowns, but now the surging infection rates are also testing government­s’ resolve to keep schools open and non-Covid medical care going.

The Czech Republic, which has Europe’s worst rate per capita, has shifted schools to distance learning and hospitals started cutting non-urgent medical procedures to free up beds. Bars, restaurant­s and clubs have shut.

Moscow authoritie­s said yesterday they would introduce online learning for many students starting on Monday, while Northern Ireland announced a two- week schools’ closure.

Major European economies of Germany, Britain and France have so far resisted pressure to close schools, a move that during the spring lockdowns created hardship across the workforce, with parents struggling to juggle child care and work from home.

In Germany, politician­s are debating whether to extend the Christmas-

New Year break to reduce contagion among children spreading to the wider community, though critics say there is no evidence that schools have been infection hot spots.

The Netherland­s returned to “partial lockdown” yesterday, closing bars and restaurant­s, but kept schools open.

European daily infections have been running at an average of almost 100, 000 a day, forcing government­s to introduce a range of tightening restrictio­ns, each attempting to calibrate them in order to protect health without destroying livelihood­s.

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