Coronavirus cases exceed 1 million, wreaking world havoc
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[April 03, 2020]
By Cate Cadell and Lisa Shumaker
BEIJING/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Global cases
of the new coronavirus have shot past 1 million with more than 53,000
fatalities, a Reuters tally showed on Friday, as death tolls kept
soaring in the United States and western Europe while the world economy
spiralled disastrously.
Just in the previous day, there were 6,095 new deaths - nearly double
all fatalities in China, where the COVID-19 disease originated.
In a list based on officially-reported data, Italy leads with 13,915
deaths, followed by Spain with 10,935 deaths. But the United States was
becoming the new epicentre, with 243,635 cases - by far the most of any
nation - and 5,887 deaths.
Outside the West, China's epidemic has stabilized after draconian
containment measures and it was planning to mourn its "martyrs" on
Saturday with a three-minute silence.
The outbreak in badly-hit Iran still raged while it sparred with
traditional foe the United States on the geopolitical stage.
With Europe accounting for more than half of cases around the world,
France and Britain were also struggling to prop up health services under
massive strain.
Though the official figures were shocking enough, health experts and
even some governments acknowledge they do not capture the full spread of
the virus. It often goes undetected in people with minor symptoms or
none at all.
With airlines largely grounded, businesses closed, layoffs mounting and
millions of people at home under lockdowns, the economic fallout was
shaping into worse than the 2008 financial crisis.
Rather, comparisons were being drawn with such traumatic periods as
World War Two or the 1930s Global Depression.
DEPRESSING DATA
In the world's biggest economy, the U.S. government has pumped in
unprecedented aid, but still weekly jobless claims jumped to a record
6.6 million - double the previous week that was also a first.
Morgan Stanley predicted the U.S. economy will shrink 5.5% this year,
the steepest drop since 1946.
European stocks sank further.
Morgues and hospitals in New York City struggled to treat or bury
casualties, as state governor Andrew Cuomo predicted similar misery for
the rest of the country.
Staff at one medical centre in Brooklyn were seen disposing of gowns,
caps and other protective wear in a sidewalk trash can after loading
bodies into a refrigerated truck.
Spain and Italy were also counting their daily dead, but prayed they
were plateauing as data at least showed a slowdown in daily increases.
Some 900,000 Spanish workers have lost jobs.
Criticised for unpreparedness, Britain promised a tenfold increase in
testing. That is crucial to enable frontline healthcare workers to carry
on knowing they are uninfected or potentially for people to return to
work if they have had the virus and gained immunity.
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Municipality workers wearing rain coats as protective gears bury a
victim of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at a cemetery area provided
by the government in Jakarta, Indonesia, April 3, 2020.
REUTERS/Willy Kurniawan
But Prime Minister Boris Johnson's continued self-isolation, after
testing positive, was a reminder of the risk.
DISASTER FOR DEVELOPING WORLD
While prosperous Western nations are reeling, there is concern about
potentially far worse impact in nations already sturggling with
poverty, insecurity and weak health systems.
In Iraq, three doctors involved in the testing, a health ministry
official and a senior political official said there were thousands
of cases of COVID-19, many times more than publicly reported.
In India, many poor labourers were desperate after losing jobs in a
three-week lockdown ordered by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Food
was low in slums.
"I'm very sure that he works only for the big people and not for a
man like me," said former Modi supporter Ravi Prasad Gupta, a worker
laid off from a pipe plant.
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro further played down the pandemic,
saying it is "not all it's being made out to be" and denying that
any hospital had reached full capacity. But with his closest aides
refusing to support his plan to relax coronavirus rules to keep the
economy going, according to sources with knowledge of the dispute,
Bolsonaro was looking increasingly isolated.
Though there was little cause for cheer anywhere, one positive
offshoot of the crisis has been a massive drop in pollution. One
expert said carbon dioxide emissions could fall this year by the
largest amount since World War Two.
Authoritarian governments from China to Venezuela have been rebuked
for repressing people speaking out on the coronavirus. In the United
States, too, the U.S. Navy relieved an aircraft carrier of his
command in punishment for the leak of a scathing letter seeking
stronger measures for an outbreak on his ship.
New Google data from 131 counties showed the extraordinary decline
in human movement. For example, in Italy, visits to retail and
recreation locations, including restaurants and cinemas, plunged 94%
in March.
(Data tallied by Catherine Cadell in Beijing; Reporting by Reuters
bureaux worldwide; Writing by Daniel Wallis and Andrew Cawthorne;
Editing by Howard Goller and Angus MacSwan)
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