Saturday, January 18, 2025
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Virus hope in Europe; drop in number of deaths

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London: Europe’s hardest-hit nations saw some tentative signs of hope in the fight against the coronavirus on Monday but the United States braced for its “Pearl Harbour moment” as the country’s death toll raced towards 10,000. The virus has infected virtually every corner of the planet, confining nearly half of humanity to their homes and turning life upside down for billions on a deadly march that has claimed nearly 70,000 victims.
There was cause for cheer in some European hotspots, with Italy reporting its lowest death toll in two weeks, Spanish fatalities dropping for the third straight day and France seeing its fewest dead in a week. “The curve has started its descent and the number of deaths has started to drop,” said top Italian health official Silvio Brusaferro, adding the next phase could be a gradual easing of a strict month-long lockdown.
In Spain, nurse Empar Loren said: “The situation is more stable. The number of patients in intensive care is not growing much anymore, and we are starting to discharge quite a few.” At a field hospital set up at a Madrid conference centre, staff applauded whenever a patient was healthy enough to be sent home.
But while the curve was bending in Europe, there was little sign of let-up in the US, where the death toll approached 10,000 and authorities warned worse was around the corner. “This is going to be the hardest and the saddest week of most Americans’ lives, quite frankly,” US Surgeon General Jerome Adams told Fox News. “This is going to be our Pearl Harbour moment, our 9/11 moment, only it’s not going to be localised.”
The death toll in hardest-hit New York state rose to 4,159, Governor Andrew Cuomo said, up from 3,565 a day prior. It was the first time the daily toll had dropped but Cuomo said it was too early to tell whether that was a “blip”. Images from New York showed medics in protective gear wheeling bodies on stretchers to refrigerated trailers repurposed as makeshift morgues. The city that never sleeps was quiet, the streets around Time Square deserted as neon lights continued to flicker, one reading: “2020. To those fighting for our lives. Thank you.”
In an empty Saint Peter’s Square, Pope Francis, head of the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics, appealed for people to show courage in the face of the pandemic. The elderly pontiff, who himself has been tested twice for the virus, celebrated his Palm Sunday mass by livestream. Other religious leaders went to more extraordinary lengths to deliver the traditional Palm Sunday blessing, with Archbishop Jose Domingo Ulloa of Panama celebrating from a helicopter.
The effective mothballing of the global economy is beginning to hit hard with analysts warning poverty levels will spike with millions of jobs lost despite unprecedented stimulus programmes.
Iran, whose economy has suffered the double blow of the virus and punishing US sanctions, said it would allow “low-risk” economic activity to resume as daily infection rates fell for a fifth straight day. But some in poorer countries are already chafing against curfews destroying their livelihoods. “How can anyone stay home without anything to eat?” asked Garcia Landu, a motorcycle taxi driver in Angola’s bustling capital Luanda. “Better to die of this disease or gunshot than to starve to death,” he said.
UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres urged governments to protect women from rising domestic violence. “For many women and girls, the threat looms largest where they should be safest. In their own homes,” he said. Describing a rise in abuse as “horrifying,” he said authorities should “make the prevention and redress of violence against women a key part of their national response plans for COVID-19.” (AFP)

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