Virus cases soar in Russia amid Delta resurgence

Published July 5, 2021
A couple sits at a cafe in central Moscow on July 4 amid the crisis linked with the Covid-19 pandemic caused by the novel coronavirus. — AFP
A couple sits at a cafe in central Moscow on July 4 amid the crisis linked with the Covid-19 pandemic caused by the novel coronavirus. — AFP

MOSCOW: Russia on Sunday counted more than 25,000 new daily infections after a week of record death tolls as the highly contagious Delta variant propels a global resurgence of the pandemic.

The coronavirus has killed nearly four million people worldwide, forcing numerous nations to reimpose restrictions well over a year after the outbreak of the pandemic.

Moscow has so far ruled out a new lockdown, but Sunday’s 25,142 infections were the biggest figure since January 2.

Record virus deaths were registered five days in a row rising to 697 on Saturday, before dropping to 663 for Sunday.

Widespread scepticism and a sluggish rollout has seen only 16 percent of Russia’s 146 million people vaccinated.

President Vladimir Putin is urging Russians to get vaccinated and “listen to experts” rather than rumours.

Asia is on the frontline again with Bangladesh’s 168 million population under a strict week-long nationwide lockdown patrolled by police and troops.

The city of Khulna, bordering India, has become Bangladesh’s virus hotspot in a dire new Delta surge with hospitals barely able to cope.

Mohammad Siddik leaned against empty oxygen cylinders tearfully telling relatives in phone calls that his 50-year-old brother had died.

The businessman brought him to hospital as his condition deteriorated, only to find no bed and no oxygen, he said. “He passed away gasping for air in the hospital corridor,” said Siddik.

Indonesia imposed a partial lockdown on Saturday, a day after also reporting more than 25,000 cases and 539 deaths, both new daily records.

Mosques, restaurants and shopping malls were shuttered in the capital Jakarta, across the main island of Java and on Bali after the daily caseload quadrupled in less than a month.

The Delta variant accounts for more than 80 percent of new cases in some areas, Indonesia’s health ministry has said.

“The stricter restrictions came too late,” said Jakarta resident Maya Puspita Sari.

“Before, people who got Covid-19 were strangers, but now it’s also the people closest to me who are infected... The virus is getting so much closer and it’s terrifying.”

The Middle East has not been spared with Iran, fighting the region’s deadliest outbreak, warning it could be about to be hit by yet another wave of infections.

“It is feared that we are on the way to a fifth wave throughout the country,” President Hassan Rouhani told Iran’s anti-virus taskforce, warning the public to be careful as “the Delta variant has spread” in southern provinces.

The variant, first identified in India and now present in at least 85 countries, has driven outbreaks in places that had previously been able to escape the pandemic’s ravages.

Fiji, which went an entire year without recording any community coronavirus cases until Delta arrived in April, recorded its biggest-ever infection increase on Saturday.

Authorities reported two deaths and warned of more to come as the virus threatens to overwhelm the South Pacific nation’s health system.

Published in Dawn, July 5th, 2021

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