The Herald (South Africa)

Virus resurfaces in China, New Zealand

● Beijing records 106 infections as Covid-19 surges in India, Latin America

-

More than two dozen new coronaviru­s cases in China and the first New Zealand infections in almost a month underlined the immense challenges still ahead in containing the deadly pandemic, even as some EU nations reopened their borders to fellow Europeans.

More than eight million people have now been infected with the virus worldwide since it first emerged in China late last year — with more than 435,000 deaths — and the tolls are still surging in Latin America and South Asia.

Caseloads have declined across Europe, however, and government­s are keen to ease lockdowns that have saved lives but devastated economies — despite experts warning that restrictio­ns will be required until a vaccine or effective treatment is developed.

The latest reminder of the threat came yesterday from China, which had largely brought its outbreak under control, as 27 new infections were reported in Beijing, where a new cluster linked to a wholesale food market has sparked mass testing and neighbourh­ood lockdowns.

“The epidemic situation in the capital is extremely severe,” Beijing city spokespers­on Xu Hejian warned, as the number of confirmed infections soared to 106.

And New Zealand reported its first cases in almost a month — two recent arrivals from Britain — prompting authoritie­s to start tracing their movements.

The South Pacific nation had declared last week that it had ended community transmissi­on of the virus.

Though these cases have caused concern about the possibilit­y of a full-blown resurgence in countries that have suppressed their outbreaks, the disease is gaining a worrying momentum in other regions with huge population­s.

Known infections in India have crossed 330,000, and authoritie­s already stretched by the Covid-19 outbreak are bracing for the monsoon season, which causes outbreaks of illness such as dengue fever and malaria every year.

With more than three decades as a doctor in India’s chronicall­y underfunde­d public health-care system, Vidya

Thakur — medical superinten­dent at Mumbai’s Rajawadi Hospital — is used to managing “heavy burdens”.

But now, she says, “Covid-19 has left us helpless ... and the monsoon will make things even more difficult.”

In Latin America, countries are struggling to contain the disease while trying to ease the crushing economic blow dealt by widespread lockdowns and social distancing measures.

Peru reported its economy shrank by more than 40% yearon-year in April, while Chile extended its state of emergency by three months as it struggles with a controvers­y over how it is counting Covid-19 deaths.

In the US, the world’s worsthit nation, there have been flare-ups in some states.

But President Donald Trump’s administra­tion insists there will be no new economic shutdown even if a second wave hits.

A return to normal still looks distant, however, with the Oscars postponed by two months, the latest casualty of an already interrupte­d sports and entertainm­ent calendar.

After a gradual drop in new cases, European nations including Belgium, France, Germany and Greece lifted border restrictio­ns hoping to boost tourism and travel over the summer months.

In Spain, a planeload of German tourists flew to the Balearic Islands in an experiment­al pilot project.

In Brussels, Joy Kamel, a student travelling to join her father in France, waited to board a flight to Marseille.

“It’s been five months since I’ve seen him,” she said.

“I’m in the middle of exams, but since I’m taking them online, I might as well take advantage. ”—

 ?? Picture: NOEL CELIS/AFP ?? VIRUS LINGERS: Passengers on a subway train during rush hour in Beijing on Monday
Picture: NOEL CELIS/AFP VIRUS LINGERS: Passengers on a subway train during rush hour in Beijing on Monday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa