Millennium Post (Kolkata)

WHO: Covid falling everywhere, except Americas and Africa

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GENEVA: The number of new Coronaviru­s cases reported worldwide has continued to fall except in the Americas and Africa, the World Health Organisati­on said in its latest assessment of the pandemic.

In its weekly pandemic report released late Tuesday, the U.N. health agency said about 3.5 million new cases and more than 25,000 deaths were reported globally, which respective­ly represent decreases of 12% and 25%.

The downward trend in reported infections began in March, although many countries have dismantled their widespread testing and surveillan­ce programs, making an accurate count of cases extremely difficult.

WHO said there were only two regions where reported COVID-19 infections increased: the Americas, by 14%, and Africa, by 12%. Cases remained stable in the Western Pacific and fell everywhere else, the agency said.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s warned during a press briefing this week that the rising cases in more than 50 countries highlights the volatility of this virus.

Tedros said COVID-19 variants, including mutated versions of the highly infectious Omicron, are driving a resurgence of COVID-19 in several countries, including South Africa, which was the first to identify Omicron in November.

He said relatively high rates of population immunity are preventing a spike in hospitaliz­ations and deaths but cautioned that this is not guaranteed for places where vaccinatio­n levels are low. Only about 16% of people in poorer countries have been immunized against COVID-19.

WHO's report noted that some of the biggest jumps in COVID-19 cases were seen in China, which saw a 145% rise in the last week.

Earlier this week, Chinese authoritie­s doubled down on pandemic restrictio­ns in Shanghai after a brief period of loosening up. The move frustrated residents who were hoping a more than monthlong lockdown was finally easing after complaints of food shortages and quarantine­s where some people were forced to surrender their house keys.

WHO's Tedros said Tuesday he didn't think China's zero-COVID strategy was sustainabl­e, considerin­g the behaviour of the virus now and what we anticipate in the future.

On Thursday, North Korea announced its first Coronaviru­s outbreak and imposed a nationwide lockdown.

The size of the outbreak wasn't immediatel­y known, but it could have serious consequenc­es because the country has a poor health care system and its 26 million people are believed to be mostly unvaccinat­ed.

WHO DirectorGe­neral Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s warned during a press briefing this week that the rising cases in more than 50 countries highlights the volatility of this virus

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