Daily Observer (Jamaica)

One million dead

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each other.

“What I have a hard time accepting is that I saw my father walking out of the house, getting into the ambulance, and all I could say to him was ‘goodbye’,” said Chiodi, 50.

“I regret not saying ‘I love you’ and I regret not hugging him. That still hurts me,” he told AFP.

With scientists still racing to find a working vaccine, government­s are again forced into an uneasy balancing act: Virus controls slow the spread of the disease, but they hurt already reeling economies and businesses.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) earlier this year warned that the economic upheaval could cause a “crisis like no other” as the world’s gross domestic product (GDP) collapsed.

Europe, hit hard by the first wave, is now facing another surge in cases, with Paris, London and Madrid all forced to introduce controls to slow cases threatenin­g to overload hospitals.

Masks and social distancing in shops, cafes and public transport are now part of everyday life in many cities.

Mid-september saw a record rise in cases in most regions and the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) has warned virus deaths could even double to two million without more global collective action.

“One million is a terrible number and we need to reflect on that before we start considerin­g a second million,” the WHO’S emergencie­s director Michael Ryan told reporters on Friday.

“Are we prepared collective­ly to do what it takes to avoid that number?

The SARS-COV-2 virus which causes the illness known as COVID-19 made its first known appearance in the central Chinese city of Wuhan, ground zero of the outbreak.

How it got there is still unclear but scientists think it originated in bats and could have been transmitte­d to people via another mammal.

Wuhan was shut down in January as other countries looked on in disbelief at China’s draconian controls, even as they went about their business as usual.

By March 11, the virus had emerged in over 100 countries and the WHO declared a pandemic, expressing concern about the “alarming levels of inaction”.

Patrick Vogt, a family doctor in Mulhouse, a city that became the outbreak’s epicentre in France in March, said he realised coronaviru­s was everywhere when doctors started falling ill, some dying.

“We saw people in our surgery who had really big breathing problems, young and not-so-young who were exhausted,” he said. “We didn’t have any therapeuti­c solutions.”

Nor did the virus spare the rich or famous this year.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson spent a week in hospital. Madonna tested positive after a tour of France as did Tom Hanks and his wife who recovered and returned home to Los Angeles after quarantine in Australia.

The Tokyo Olympics, Rio’s famed carnival and the Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca are among the major events postponed or disrupted by the pandemic. Premier League football has restarted but with empty stadiums. The French Open tennis tournament is limiting its audiences to 1,000 a day.

Israel has gone into full lockdown again and Moscow’s vulnerable have been ordered to stay home.

As the restrictio­ns tighten, protests and anger are rising as businesses worry about their survival and individual­s grow frustrated about their jobs and families in the face of another round of lockdown measures.

Anti-lockdown protesters and police clashed in central London on Saturday as officers dispersed the thousands at a demonstrat­ion.

“This is the last straw — We were starting to get back on our feet,” said Patrick Labourrass­e, a restaurant owner in Aix-enprovence, a French city near Marseille which is again being forced to close down bars and restaurant­s.

Along with the turmoil, though, lies some hope.

The IMF says the economic outlook appears brighter now than it had been in June, even if it remains “very challengin­g”.

Crucially, nine vaccine candidates are in last-stage clinical trials, with hopes some will be rolled out next year though questions remain about how and when they will be distribute­d around the world.

 ?? (Photo: AFP) ?? MADRID, Spain — A couple walks among thousands of Spanish flags, representi­ng the Spanish victims of COVID-19, at the Roma park in Madrid, yesterday. Over the past week, Spain has registered the highest number of new cases within the EU with a rate of nearly 300 per 100,000 inhabitant­s — but in the Madrid region, the figure is currently more than 700 per 100,000. The global death toll has now passed one million.
(Photo: AFP) MADRID, Spain — A couple walks among thousands of Spanish flags, representi­ng the Spanish victims of COVID-19, at the Roma park in Madrid, yesterday. Over the past week, Spain has registered the highest number of new cases within the EU with a rate of nearly 300 per 100,000 inhabitant­s — but in the Madrid region, the figure is currently more than 700 per 100,000. The global death toll has now passed one million.
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