Global COVID-19 Cases Worldwide near 20mln


TEHRAN (Tasnim) – Five months since the World Health Organization declared the coronavirus crisis a global pandemic, the number of coronavirus cases globally is nearing 20m, with almost 730,000 known deaths.

The current number of confirmed infections stands at 19,792,519, according to data from Johns Hopkins University, with total new cases daily averaging more than 250,000, The Guardian reported.

The bleak milestone approached as Australia recorded its deadliest day of the pandemic, with 19 deaths. The nation is dealing with an outbreak in its second largest city, Melbourne, where authorities have struggled to contain the spread of the virus, which began in quarantine facilities.

Metropolitan Melbourne is one week into a strict lockdown expected to last until 13 September, with the rest of the state of Victoria under stage-three restrictions. On Monday, the state saw its biggest decrease in the number of new daily cases – at around 300 after highs of 700 - with Premier Daniel Andrews saying the drop could signify “greater stability that is a result of the cumulative impact of stage three.”

Australia is among several countries which had appeared to have controlled the virus, but are battling fresh outbreaks.

Global coronavirus cases have doubled in just six weeks, and have risen 200-fold since mid-March. Deaths have increased from more than 4,000 globally at the time of the WHO declaration to more than 730,000 now.

The United States, which on Sunday passed 5m infections, accounted for a quarter of the global case total and one in five deaths worldwide. It is the worst-affected country in both the number of cases and fatalities.

One in every 65 Americans has tested positive for coronavirus, while one in 2,000 has died from COVID-19 since the start of the pandemic.

Brazil, with over 3m infections, is the next worst-affected. On Sunday, the country passed its own somber milestone, as the death toll climbed past 100,000.

Both the Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro and the US president Donald Trump have in the last five months sought to downplay the danger of the virus, with Bolsonaro calling it “a little flu” and Trump repeatedly promising the disease would disappear under his leadership.

Last week, Trump repeated that he believes coronavirus will “go away”, despite his top public health expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, warning that it could take most of 2021 or longer to get the pandemic under control and that it is “unlikely” the virus can ever be eradicated.

Both Bolsonaro and Trump have sidelined health experts, with Bolsonaro losing two health ministers and Trump repeatedly criticizing Fauci, the US’s top infectious diseases expert and a member of the White House’s coronavirus taskforce.

Meanwhile in China, the country where the virus first emerged in late December 2019, new locally transmitted cases fell to just 14 in the past 24 hours, the National Health Commission reported on Monday. The low figure was offset, however, by 35 cases brought into the country by Chinese travelers from overseas arriving in seven different cities and provinces across the country. All the cases of local transmission were in the northwestern region of Xinjiang, whose main city Urumqi is the centre of China’s latest outbreak.

There are now 29 countries with higher cases than China, which has 88,793 confirmed infections and fewer than 5,000 deaths.

Britain, which has 312,574 cases and the fourth-highest number of deaths globally, with 46,659, saw cases rise by 1,062 on Sunday, going over 1,000 for the first time since late June. As cases rose in the country, new local lockdowns have been implemented in some areas and worries over a second wave of infections were rife.

Here are the other key developments from the last few hours:

In Greece, authorities announced a record daily number of 203 new coronavirus cases, with one death. The total number of cases is now 5,623, with 212 deaths. Greece introduced an early lockdown in mid-March which buffered the country from the devastating effects of the pandemic seen in many of its European counterparts.

US Health Secretary Alex Azar is in Taipei, Taiwan for a three-day visit to promote shared democratic values and the island’s success in taming the coronavirus. Azar said: “Taiwan’s response to COVID-19 has been among the most successful in the world, and that is a tribute to the open, transparent, democratic nature of Taiwan’s society and culture.”

New Zealand has reported its 101st day in a row with no recorded community transmission of COVID-19 from an unknown source. All 21 active cases of the coronavirus have been diagnosed in travelers returning to New Zealand from other countries; all of them are in quarantine at the government’s managed isolation facilities. There were no new cases of the coronavirus recorded in the quarantine hotels on Monday.

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