Qatar Tribune

Americas paying highest price for divisive virus response: Red Cross

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THE Red Cross decried on Wednesday the politicisa­tion of the pandemic in many countries, warning that the “divisive” response by leaders in places like Brazil and the United States was taking a heavy toll.

Francesco Rocca, president of the Internatio­nal Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), warned that in the Americas especially, the consequenc­es of mixed and partisan messages from politician­s, often contradict­ing scientific advice on how to deal with COVID-19, were dire.

“America as a continent is paying the highest price for this kind of division or not following the advice coming from the scientific community,” he told a virtual briefing hosted by the UN correspond­ents’ associatio­n in Geneva.

With over 511,000 deaths and more than 10.5 million known infections worldwide, the coronaviru­s pandemic is “not even close to being over,” the World Health Organizati­on has warned.

The United States is the worst-hit country, accounting for a quarter of global cases and deaths, followed by Brazil, which counts nearly 60,000 deaths from more than 1.4 million cases.

Peru, Chile and Mexico are also facing surging numbers in the pandemic, Rocca said.

The Pan American Health Organizati­on meanwhile warned on Tuesday the coronaviru­s death toll in Latin America and the Caribbean could top 400,000 by October without stricter public health measures.

That would represent a quadruplin­g of the fatal cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus, in a region that has emerged as a major pandemic trouble spot.

Rocca said Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro “underestim­ated the consequenc­es of COVID, and his country is living the consequenc­es.” Bolsonaro has regularly broken the social distancing measures in place in the capital, giving handshakes and hugs at rallies, hosting barbecues, hitting the shooting range and going out for hot dogs, generally without a mask.

The president, who famously compared the virus to a “little

u,” has railed against the measures state and local authoritie­s are taking to fight it, arguing that business closures and stayat-home measures are needlessly wrecking the economy.

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 ?? (AFP) ?? Members of the Brazilian Armed Forces medical team take a COVID-19 test from a member of the indigenous Ye’Kuena ethnic group, in Auari, Roraima state, Brazil, on Wednesday.
(AFP) Members of the Brazilian Armed Forces medical team take a COVID-19 test from a member of the indigenous Ye’Kuena ethnic group, in Auari, Roraima state, Brazil, on Wednesday.

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