Delta variant rampant in Asia; Tokyo, Thailand, Malaysia post record
COVID infections
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[July 31, 2021]
(Reuters) - The Olympics host city
Tokyo, as well as Thailand and Malaysia, announced a record number of
COVID-19 infections on Saturday, mostly driven by the highly
transmissible Delta variant of the disease.
Cases surged in Sydney as well, where police cordoned off the central
business district to prevent a protest against a strict lockdown that
will last until the end of August.
Police closed train stations, banned taxis from dropping passengers off
downtown and deployed 1,000 officers to set up checkpoints and to
disperse groups. The government of New South Wales reported 210 new
infections in Sydney and surrounding areas from the Delta variant
outbreak.
Tokyo's metropolitan government announced a record number of 4,058
infections in the past 24 hours, topping 4,000 for the first time.
Olympics organisers reported 21 new COVID-19 cases related to the Games,
bringing the total to 241 since July 1.
The record comes a day after Japan extended its state of emergency for
Tokyo to the end of August, expanding it to three prefectures near Tokyo
and the western prefecture of Osaka in light of the recent spike in
infections.
Olympics organisers said on Saturday they had revoked accreditation of a
Games-related person or people for leaving the athletes' village for
sightseeing, a violation of measures imposed to hold the Olympics safely
amid the pandemic.
The organisers did not disclose how many people had their accreditation
revoked, if the person or people involved were athletes, or when the
violation took place.
Malaysia, one of the hotspots of the disease, reported 17,786
coronavirus cases on Saturday, a record number of infections.
More than 100 people gathered in the centre of the capital Kuala Lumpur,
expressing dissatisfaction with the government's handling of the
pandemic and calling on Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin to quit.
Protesters carried black flags and held up placards that read “Kerajaan
Gagal” (failed government) – a hashtag that has been popular on social
media for months.
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People queue at the Central Vaccination Center as Thailand begins
offering first doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine to at-risk groups
amid the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak in Bangkok, Thailand, July
26, 2021. REUTERS/Soe Zeya Tun
Thailand reported a daily record of 18,912 new
coronavirus infections, bringing the country's total accumulated
cases to 597,287. The country also reported 178 new deaths, also a
daily record, taking total fatalities to 4,857.
The government said the Delta variant accounted for more than 60% of
the cases in the country and 80% of the cases in Bangkok.
The Delta variant is not necessarily more lethal than other
variants, but much more transmissible, Supakit Sirilak, the
director-general of the Medical Science Department, told Reuters.
China is also battling an outbreak of the Delta variant in the
eastern city of Nanjing, traced to airport cleaners who worked on a
flight from Russia.
COVID-19 infections have increased by 80% over the past four weeks
in most regions of the world, WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom
Ghebreyesus said on Friday.
"Hard-won gains are in jeopardy or being lost, and health systems in
many countries are being overwhelmed," Tedros told a news
conference.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control said the variant, first
detected in India and now dominant across the globe, is as
contagious as chickenpox and far more contagious than the common
cold or flu. It can be passed on even by vaccinated people, and may
cause more serious disease than earlier coronavirus strains.
(Reporting by Panarat Thepgumpanat, Chayut Setboonsarng and Orathai
Sriring in Bangkok, A. Ananthalakshmi in Kuala Lumpur, Lidia Kelly
in Sydney, Makiko Yamazaki in Tokyo, Yew Lun Tian in Beijing;
Writing by Raju Gopalakrishnan. Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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