NIGERIA’S VIRUS TALLY PASSES 44,000, COVID-19 CRAWLS TO PRESIDENT’S DOORSTEP IN ZIMBABWE

Africa Coronavirus (COVID-19) World

Tue 04 August 2020:

More than 20,600 COVID-19 patients have recovered, according to Nigeria Centre for Disease Control

ANKARA (AA) – Nigeria’s coronavirus case count is now over 44,000, with the death toll just shy of 900, authorities said on Tuesday.

According to the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), 288 more infections and eight fatalities were recorded in the country over the past 24 hours.

“Till date, 44,129 cases have been confirmed, 20,663 cases have been discharged and 896 deaths have been recorded in 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT),” the NCDC said in its latest update.

With more than 15,300 infections, commercial capital Lagos remains the area hit hardest in Nigeria, the data showed.

It is followed by the FCT, which includes the capital Abuja, where almost 4,000 cases have been confirmed to date, and the southwestern Oyo state with over 2,770 cases.

At least 192 COVID-19 patients have died in Lagos, 42 in FCT, and 28 in Oyo, according to the NCDC figures.

Nigeria is among the three worst-hit countries in Africa, where the total case count is now over 968,000, including more than 20,600 fatalities.

Zimbabwe: COVID-19 crawls to president’s doorstep

The son of Zimbabwe’s president has announced that he had contracted the novel coronavirus, according to local media reports.

“It is with great dismay that I have to deliver this news to you, my friends and colleagues,

“I have tested positive for coronavirus (COVID-19) and I am appealing to everyone who has been in contact with me to take precautionary measures and get tested,” President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s son, Tongai Mnangagwa, told reporters in a statement late on Monday.

Tongai is also a member of parliament, becoming the third legislator to test positive for the coronavirus.

Parliament had been abruptly closed last week after the infection of the two other lawmakers as cases of locally transmitted COVID-19 continue to increase in the Southern African country.

The announcement comes amid reports that the president’s cook also died of the virus, in a claim neither confirmed nor denied by the State House.

Last week, Zimbabwean Minister of Lands and Agriculture, Perrence Shiri died of the coronavirus, becoming the first top government official to succumb to the disease. 

Shiri’s death was followed by the death of Peter Muchakazi, 56, an army procurement officer and Colonel Overson Mugwisi the military’s spokesman.

“It’s a painful road, having to get up each day and hope to make it to the next, I sometimes experience pain that is so excruciating that I feel like letting go,” Tongai related.

Zimbabwe is experiencing a spike if COVID-19 cases at a time when the health delivery system has collapsed while doctors and nurses are on strike due to poor salaries.

As of Aug. 3, the country had recorded 4,075 confirmed cases, including 80 deaths and 1,057 recoveries.

No silver bullet

Across the world, COVID-19 has claimed nearly 694,000 lives in at least 188 countries and regions since last December.

More than 18.28 million cases have been reported worldwide, with the highest number of infections in the US, Brazil, India, and Russia, according to figures compiled by the US’ Johns Hopkins University.

The data shows more than half of all patients in the world – over 10.91 million – have recovered so far.

Despite recent progress on several vaccines, the head of the World Health Organization has said there may never be a “silver bullet” for COVID-19.

“A number of vaccines are now in phase three clinical trials and we all hope to have a number of effective vaccines that can help prevent people from infection,” Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on Monday.

“However, there’s no silver bullet at the moment – and there might never be.”

By John Cassim Reporting from Zimbabwe | Felix Tih Reporting from Nigeria | Anadolu agency

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