Cape Times

Brazil resumes publishing Covid-19 data

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A JUDGE at Brazil’s supreme court has ordered the government to again start publishing full Covid-19 infection figures, ruling that it was necessary to protect public health.

Judge Alexandre de Moraes’ decision was made public on Tuesday, after the government stopped releasing cumulative figures at the weekend, limiting itself to daily figures.

It had previously pushed back the publicatio­n of Covid-19 statistics by three hours past the main evening news programme. The health ministry resumed publishing the cumulative figures on Tuesday.

President Jair Bolsonaro has downplayed the importance of the pandemic, despite Brazil having confirmed more than 700 000 infections, the second-largest number worldwide after the US. The government’s moves on the statistics sparked a storm of criticism from lawmakers, health and legal experts.

Moraes stressed the seriousnes­s of the pandemic and said it required the authoritie­s “to put into effect the protection of public health”, according to a statement on the supreme court’s website.

The judge said the health ministry must “fully re-establish the daily disclosure of epidemiolo­gical data on the Covid-19 pandemic”, including on its website. He highlighte­d “the disastrous consequenc­es for the population if internatio­nally recognised measures are not adopted, such as the collection, analysis, storage and disseminat­ion of relevant epidemiolo­gical data”.

A group of media outlets had meanwhile started publishing full Covid-19 figures based on regional informatio­n.

According to up-to-date figures published by the ministry of health on Tuesday, 1 272 more patients had died in connection with the virus since the previous day, bringing the total death toll to 38 406.

Since the beginning of the virus outbreak 739 503 people have been infected, the ministry said.

Bolsonaro, who has threatened to pull his country out of the World Health Organizati­on, meanwhile said it had “largely lost its credibilit­y”.

He also criticised restrictio­ns on the economy to protect people from the virus.

“We must not take away the right to come and go from the citizen who wants to earn their daily bread. Hunger kills, and if the world continues to adopt this type of isolation (measures), the number of deaths will be much greater than (those caused by) the virus itself,” news portal UOL quoted the president as saying. | dpa

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