Latin America cases pass 2 million as Trump rally defies virus

Monday, 22 June 2020 00:13 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

Honduran workers bury a COVID-19 victim. Infections have surged in Latin America and the Caribbean, which now have 2,007,621 confirmed cases


 

 

TULSA, AFP: Coronavirus infections in Latin America surged past two million on Saturday, with worst-hit Brazil home to nearly half of the cases as the virus accelerates its spread in the region.

Europe, which has endured months of lockdowns to slow the virus but at a crippling economic cost, was set to further ease restrictions with Spain reopening to tourists on Sunday and Italy enjoying its first Serie A soccer match in 103 days.

In the US, which has been taking stuttering steps to reopen even as 20 states have reported a rebound in infections, President Donald Trump Saturday claimed his measures had “saved millions of lives” as he addressed his first rally in months.

“Now it’s time to open up, get back to work,” he told the crowd in Tulsa, Oklahoma, even as six members of his advance team tested positive for COVID-19. The world’s largest economy is taking a beating in a year when Trump seeks re-election. Trump had downplayed the risk that the evening rally might trigger a coronavirus outbreak, ignoring danger warnings by Tulsa health and municipal officials. After the president had boasted on Twitter that “almost one million people” had requested tickets for the rally, the 20,000-capacity arena was far from full, with many upper deck seats empty. The United States remains the country hardest-hit by the pandemic with 119,719 deaths out of 2,254,630 official cases, according to a tally Saturday by Johns Hopkins University.

With nearly 50,000 deaths and more than one million cases, Brazil is the second worst-affected.

In total Latin America and the Caribbean have 2,007,621 confirmed cases, according to an AFP tally based on official tallies. The figures were particularly alarming in Chile, where the death toll nearly doubled to more than 7,000 under a revised tallying method, and passed 20,000 in Mexico.

Europe meanwhile chalked up more than 2.5 million cases. Although the spread has slowed, Europe is still the worst-affected continent.

The continent is easing its way out of strict lockdowns, even as the World Health Organisation warns against giving in to isolation fatigue.

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